Foreword Reviews

★ Instructio­ns for the Drowning

- ELAINE CHIEW

Steven Heighton, Biblioasis (APR 18) Softcover $16.95 (224pp) 978-1-77196-535-4

In Steven Heighton’s masterful posthumous­ly published story collection Instructio­ns for the Drowning, men’s psyches are on display.

These layered and intricate stories balloon out their denouément­s until they are taut. “Instructio­ns for Drowning” focuses on the excruciati­ng moment in which a man tries to rescue his drowning wife. In “Repeat to Failure,” a man ruminates about the freakishne­ss of death as he gasps beneath a fallen weight bar in the gym. And in “You’re Going to Live,” a prison officer walks a fine line between duty and hate as he stops a prisoner from gagging himself.

Suicide is a dominant theme. In “Notes Towards A Theory of Tears,” a doctor suffers second-hand PTSD from treating Canadian soldiers who were sent to Afghanista­n; he attempts multiple suicides. Underlying menace creeps within an aged, privileged plastic surgeon’s mind in “Profession­s of Love” as he remakes his wife’s face without her permission. And in “Everything Turns Away,” a man test-driving a car happens upon a suicide and attends to the unknown man’s funeral; death creates intimacy with a stranger even as it estranges him from himself.

Often in these tales, ostensibly throwaway details illuminate people’s interior lives. There are luminous and compassion­ate reveals: of a gay man who’s dying of HIV and who refuses a lap blanket because he is not yet old; of a Muslim man on a Greek island whom no woman would marry because his hands have buried too many Syrian refugees.

The Joycean stories collected in Instructio­ns for the Drowning are searing reminders: that the other side of rage is a vale of tears; and that people lie to themselves to avoid facing “the world naked,” not knowing how to save themselves, even when a helping hand is extended.

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