This work by Diane Williams delves into the strange relationships of men
and women. From marital betrayal to spousal abuse and unrelenting
desire, Williams illuminates the lives of her characters in prose as
sparse and stark as it is beautiful. These stories are as short as prose
poems and as complex as novels. In them, meanings remain ambiguous and
consequences seem uncertain. In the novella "On Sexual Strength" she
describes the intense and sometimes strange relationship between two
neighboring couples and the rage that comes with adultery, and a
narrator whose social inadequacies and lack of inhibitions lead to
destruction. The world Williams creates is a sensual place where quiet
epiphanies--such as the one that occurs after an extramarital affair--
are also possible: "It was like My Trying to Have a Tender-Hearted
nature. This is how love can be featured." Such flashes of insight and
emotion glue together the fragments of life Williams lays before the
reader, and the reader rejoices at the revelations.