Populating a small town in the Pacific Northwest, the characters in
Lucia Perillo's story collection all resist giving the world what it
expects of them and are surprised when the world comes roaring back.
An addict trapped in a country house becomes obsessed with vacuum
cleaners and the people who sell them door-to-door. An abandoned woman
seeks consolation in tales of armed robbery told by one of her fellow
suburban housewives. An accidental mother struggles to answer her
daughter's badgering about her paternity. And in three stories readers
meet Louisa, a woman with Down syndrome who serves as an accomplice to
her younger sister's sexual exploits and her aging mother's fantasies of
revenge.
Together, Happiness Is a Chemical in the Brain is a sharp-edged, witty
testament to the ambivalence of emotions, the way they pull in
directions that often cancel one another out or twist their subjects
into knots. In lyrical prose, Perillo draws on her training as a
naturalist and a poet to map the terrain of the comic and the tragic,
asking how we draw the boundaries between these two zones. What's funny,
what's heartbreaking, and who gets to decide?