Vancouver Sun

shriver is a brilliant satirist and virtuosic writer, but too many of these stories read like fables designed to illustrate a point. Still, it’s a diverting enough place to spend an afternoon or two.

Reviewer Ann Levin on novelist Lionel Shriver’s new collection of stories,

- ANN LEVIN

Property: Stories Between Two Novellas Lionel Shriver HarperColl­ins

If Lionel Shriver wasn’t such a terrific writer, she might have had a glorious career as a sociologis­t. In her latest book, Property, she explores a host of contempora­ry social issues including freeloadin­g young U.S. tourists abroad (Kilifi Creek), adult children who won’t leave home (Domestic Terrorism) and, in a story titled Negative Equity, the housing debt that forces some divorcing couples to stay together under the same roof because they can’t afford to sell.

The common denominato­r of the 10 stories and two novellas is property, both the spaces in which we live and the stuff that we fill them with, including kooky art projects such as the one at the centre of The Standing Chandelier. It’s the best of the bunch, investigat­ing what happens when Jillian Frisk’s best friend, longtime tennis partner and former lover Weston Babansky, a.k.a. Baba, decides to marry another woman, Paige Myer, and Paige lays down an ultimatum: her or me.

Baba is stricken. When Paige accuses him of still harbouring feelings for Frisk, he undertakes some soul-searching. “He supposed that, looked at a certain way, some of his girlfriend’s accusation­s were sort of true. Frisk was a little self- ... selfcentre­d, self-involved, self-absorbed? But who wasn’t self-something? It might not have been obvious, but he himself was wholly and unapologet­ically self-absorbed.”

Later, playing tennis with Frisk, he considers Paige’s accusation that he’s still attracted to her. He thinks not, then reconsider­s. “He treasured her presence. He was accustomed to her presence, at ease in her presence, and her appearance was utterly inseparabl­e from the whole of her: the whooping laugh, the zany ideas, the unreliable cross-court backhand. So the answer to his point of inquiry was a worthless I don’t know.”

With extraordin­ary precision and uncanny perceptive­ness, Shriver charts the aftermath of Baba’s proposal and Frisk’s impulsive wedding gift of the artwork that lends the story its name. It’s sad, sweet and funny, qualities sometimes missing in the other stories.

Shriver, whose works include 2003’s We Need to Talk About Kevin which was made into a movie starring Tilda Swinton, is a brilliant satirist and virtuosic writer. But too many of these stories read like fables designed to illustrate a point. Too many characters are empty vessels, engineered to deliver sneering diatribes on modern life.

Still, even if Property isn’t your dream house, it’s a diverting enough place to spend an afternoon or two.

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