Impressionistic and dreamlike, the stories in Cake explore the
complexities of love and relationships in contemporary society. Linked
by a sense of regret, these characters are at the mercy of their desires
and uncertain longings, often with disastrous results. A young couple
experiences town politics, group dynamics, and their own insecurities
through a seemingly innocuous holiday ritual in "Snowflake." "Talent
Show" introduces us to a series of unnamed women, their dreams and
aspirations summed up in a few deceptively simple lines. One life leads
into another, until we return to where we began, like a cinematic pan
across a landscape of ambition gone awry.
The imagery in these compact and highly visual stories ranges from the
everyday to the surreal. "Buena Vista Notebook" deftly blends language
and word play with the story of doomed love affairs, culminating in a
chance meeting that is random yet somehow not unexpected. And "Job"
relates the story of what is perhaps the most unusual meeting of two
naked people in recent fiction. Comic and yet sad, its hero experiences
a moment of painful clarity in the most unlikely of circumstances.
Questions of identity, love, and the nature of existence may never be
answered fully (in life or in fiction), but each of these stories
presents a psychological turning point, often just a fleeting moment,
sometimes more bitter than sweet. And in that moment the characters are
brought that much closer to the answers to some of those questions.
Emotionally taut and infused with poetic imagery, Cake is a bold debut
and a portrait of the crisis of the modern relationship.