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Beth Ann Fennelly

A Soul-Satisfying Alternative: Review of Beth Ann Fennellys泭Heating & Cooling

Brenna Lemieux

Cover of Beth Ann Fennellys Heating & Cooling

Reviewed:Heating & Cooling泭by Beth Ann Fennelly (W. W. Norton & Company, 2017)

Whats the proper literary form to capture the anecdote? Beth Ann Fennellys newest collection,泭Heating & Cooling, makes the case that it is the micro-memoirthat is, the personal essay that ranges from a single line to about six pages. If the full-length memoir is akin to the studio portrait, this collection, which contains 52 literary anecdotes, offers something like a handful of skillfully rendered charcoal sketches.

Theres a lot to love here, but one of my favorite things is that泭Heating & Cooling泭is a kind of Trojan horse of poetry; the micro-memoir form, it turns out, has plenty of room for prose poems. If theres a reader in your life who is skeptical about poetry, this collection might be the gateway drug they need.

Though perhaps gateway drug isnt fair; whats in these pages is heavy stuff. Fennellys lilting narratives usher the reader along smoothly, then punch like poems in their last words: you never see the turns coming but are walloped by them again and again. Thats what struck me most about泭Heating & Cooling, in fact: Fennelly makes this form look easy. She deftly weaves summary and scene (as in I Survived the Blizzard of 79), zooming in and out to offer just enough that we get the essence of the story and feel its emotional resonance. These pieces feel conversational, as if youre sitting across from a friend drinking coffeebut as it turns out, the friend is a wildly talented storyteller who knows exactly which details to include and when for maximum impact (see Bad Break).

The collection jumps in time and subject matter, but the first-person narrator is consistent throughout: charmingly flawed and self-aware (Their avarice was so unabashed that it was difficult to keep despising them, but I, large of righteousness and small of diamond, persevered all the way to Denver), funny (see Your Turn and the Married Love series), and able to capture complex human relationships in just a few striking lines (I didnt want to suffer because the last time I saw my father, I didnt tell him I loved him. I could hear my own future voice,泭If only Id told him I loved him. I wanted to spare my future me, whom I did love. So I told him I loved him and I left). Someone, in other words, with whom youd happily spend more time than the 100-some pages of this book.

While Fennellys skill is magnificent throughout, I had favorites and less-than-favoritesbut I think every reader will. Part of the fun of the collection is discovering those that resonate most. And because the book is small and lighteasily carried in a pocket or purseyou can do that, piece by piece, waiting in lines or for lights to changea soul-satisfying alternative to scrolling through Twitter. Its a charming way to discover a book, and one of the many gifts泭Heating & Cooling泭offers its readers.

Amie Whittemore standing by a pond in the woods

泭has been lucky enough to live and write in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Paris, and Galway. She has published two poetry collections and a handful of short stories. She currently lives in Chicago, where she's at work on a novel.

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