In this scary, funny, and slyly political short story collection, Kate
McIntyre conjures a fever dream of contemporary Kansas. Boundaries
between fantasy and reality blur, and grotesque acts birth strange
progeny. A mother must choose between her children and her personal
safety when her husband steadily excavates a moat around their country
home, his very own little border wall. A Kansas politician grapples with
international notoriety after an accident traps salt miners hundreds of
feet underground--in the same salt mine where his brother was murdered.
A bigot's newly transplanted liver gives him a taste for upbeat 1980s
dance tracks while nudging him toward darker plans. And across several
stories, we follow Miriam, a young overachiever hell-bent on leaving her
home state who is lured back after college to teach elementary school in
a rural community. In Culvert, Kansas, Miriam finds closed mouths and
big secrets: the toxic waste storage for the battery factory leaches
into the soil; the hog farm waste lagoons have sprung leaks; and her
students, at turns psychic, lethargic, and aggressive, might not be
human.