Allegiance and Betrayal
ISBN: 9780815652113
Platform/Publisher: Project MUSE / Syracuse University Press
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Chapters; Download: Chapters

Makuck's third story collection (after Costly Habits) possesses a quiet sense of assurance, a whiff of earned nostalgia, and familiar, identifiable characters. The conventional narrative arcs are reminiscent of television sitcoms, providing a gentle charm as if from a bygone era. They are, as a character in "A Perfect Time" describes the novel he's reading, "pleasantly boring". There is nothing here to offend or provoke; just routine observations by the protagonists as they catalogue their inner thoughts on a normal day. Behind this quietude lurks the possibility of tragedy, but when tension rises to the point of crisis, the moment dissipates as Makuck eagerly sets things right. In "Ghost of Thanksgiving" the ferocious dog attacking a young child at a mall is subdued by a whack on the snout; in "Distance" the angry stranger in a traffic jam turns out to be a fellow immigrant from Poland, and in "Lights at Skipper's Cove" the malfunctioning boat stranded at sea is found and towed safely back to shore. Each time a conflict arises the narrative swells and then, "like a bad thought, it [is] gone." As the sun sets, the protagonists are buoyed to a safer, happier place than where they began. (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Peter Makuck is Distinguished Professor Emeritus at East Carolina University, and he was the founder and editor of Tar River Poetry from 1978 to 2006. His Long Lens: New & Selected Poems, released in 2010, was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. He has published two collections of short stories, Breaking and Entering and Costly Habits ; the latter was nominated for the PEN/Faulkner Award and was listed by The Dictionary of Literary Biography in the "Top Ten Story Collections of 2002." His poems, stories, essays, and reviews have appeared in the Georgia Review, the Hudson Review, Poetry, the Sewanee Review, the North American Review, the Gettysburg Review, and The Nation.
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