In Bleachers, the debut short fiction collection by award-winning poet
Joseph Mills, fifty-four stories take place during two youth soccer
games, capturing the thoughts, concerns, realizations, and perspectives
of the parents on the sidelines and in the stands. As these spectators
watch (or don't watch) the players on the field, their narratives
interweave to form a portrait of community and of parenting--always
unpredictable, often complicated, and rarely what it seems. From A to Z
("Aging" to "Zidane"), Bleachers can be read as a primer on parenting
and family, as well as a paean to sports. If, as Dr. King said, Sunday
morning is the most segregated hour in America, then Saturday morning
may be the most integrated as families gather to experience the
victories and losses, both great and small, of the game that brings them
together, "forming, then breaking apart, then reforming . . . .
temporarily cohering" as a team.