Oh Baby
By Kim Chinquee
Ravenna Press Books
88 pp
$13.95
GUEST REVIEW BY JIM RULAND
Kim Chinquee's remarkable debut collection of short stories is next to impossible to classify. Many magazines designate short stories under 1,000 words as "short-shorts" or "flash fictions," while those that are considerably shorter than 1,000 words are called "micro fictions."
The stories in Oh Baby fit all of these categories: nuggets of prose that are difficult to penetrate, short fictions that gush onto the page, stories structured in the traditional mode but in an abbreviated way. So what do we call it?
Perhaps a clue to Chinquee's preference can be found in the name of her online writing group: Hot Pants. A garment that is neither skirt nor pants, shorter than short so as to be barely there at all, but leaves a distinct impression.
There are two things that strike me about Chinquee's stories: they always feel real and they always feel complete. The completeness is impressive because most of her stories are extremely short, anywhere from a few hundred words to a few dozen, and it's really difficult to convince readers that you've said everything that needs to be said with so few words.
For example, in a story called "Hoe" a woman pulls weeds from a lover's ex-wife's garden. The final line is "She thought it was dead, but it wasn't" can mean a dozen different things (about the weeds, the marriage, things flowering where they ought not to, the narrator's own heavy heart), but does anything else need to be said after a line like that?
As for the realness in Chinquee's fiction, this is, of course, an authorial fallacy, but there's an intimacy at work that carries the potential to comfort and shock. The tension comes not so much from the unexpected but our dread of the inevitable.
There's another word for fictions that feel real but thankfully, devastatingly are not: our dreams.
QUIZTUNES FOR KIM CHINQUEE
TEV: When did you start writing flash fiction?
KC: My first piece was in Mary Robison's workshop at the University of Southern Mississippi. She asked us to write flashes for one of the classes and I wrote a piece called "Pure Gold," which was later retitled "The Top Shelf," and was my first piece published in NOON. That was in early 2000.
TEV: What draws you to the form? Is it a case of the form defining they way your stories are expressed or does the story dictate its shape?
KC: I like the efficiency of the form. I think it's a case of both: the form both defines the way my stories are expressed and the story dictates the shape. Many times the stories are longer, and I get down to the essence of the story through cutting, and that's where I find the core, and in some ways I feel only the core is necessary in certain pieces. The form allows me to get rid of the extra, so to speak.
TEV: You've been in just about every issue of Noon. What is your relationship with Diane Williams like?
KC: NOON's first issue was in 2000, and my first appearance was in 2002, and I've been in every issue since that. I admire Diane Williams! Her work inspires me. And I've really learned a lot by seeing the ways in which she edits my work, and also through our conversations. We once had a phone session, where she took me through a few of my stories word-for-word, and she told me why each word worked for her or didn't. That taught me a lot. I study her edits and they teach me a lot--they're gifts and I'm grateful. She doesn't accept mediocrity and I appreciate that.
TEV: Over the course of Oh Baby, images repeat, themes recur, scenarios are revisited. Would you say your work is unabashedly autobiographical or do certain ideas return again and again because you want to add, develop, expand?
KC: I'd say all of the above--the work is somewhat autobiographical--I grew up on a farm, I was in the military, I'm a single mom, etc. I draw upon my experiences, and sometimes I make things up and then get certain ideas from my make-believe, and then return to them in pieces. Sometimes my prompt words will take me back to a certain story or experience and I'll draw from those and write another piece. I like working that way--it doesn't commit me to a certain idea or experience, and it allows me to make the autobiographical unreal.
TEV: Establishing the order in which the stories will appear in a collection is one of the secret torments of publishing a book of short stories. What was it like organizing over 40 stories? Did you work with publisher?
KC: I'll have to credit Cooper Renner for that. I didn't put the stories in any particular order--I did that more on instinct. And then Cooper wrote and asked: How about we put this one there, or that one in this spot? He thought "Batter" would be good as the first story, since it set up a lot of the themes of the book. It sounded good to me and I went with it.
TEV: The cover image is striking and unsettling. At first glance, it looks almost medieval. Then one takes note of the American flag, which makes it more mysterious. What's going on here?
KC: Pier Rodelon designed the book and he found the image and I loved it. I like the masks because they speak to me of repression, of a covering up of sorts. And I liked the flag because it symbolizes something. And the women there are working. The image seems to represent many themes of the book.
TEV: You are masterful at crafting endings. How do you approach the last line? Is it something you have in mind when you're writing and you work towards it? Do you intentionally re-shuffle so that the strongest images and words appear that the end? What makes a good ending in your opinion?
KC: Thanks! Endings are hard for me. I do intentionally re-shuffle, and never have the ending in mind when I'm working toward it. Usually it gets sliced, like after the first draft I'll shave lots of extras from the ending until I cut it to an image. Or I'll take a sentence from an earlier part of the story and tack that onto the end and see how that works. A good ending, in my opinion, leaves the reader with an image or a sense that provokes, that doesn't give all the answers.
TEV: Lastly, do you have a favorite in the collection? A least favorite?
KC: That changes all the time. There are stories in the book I've revisited and am dying to edit again, mostly endings. I think my favorites are "Olives and Fruit," and probably "Oh Baby." Least favorite? Maybe "Viral" or "They Took Deep Breaths." I'm happy with them, but they're still nagging at me, like there's something more to say.
Another great pick! I'm happy to see these underrepresented writers get some real estate on a high-traffic lit blog like this one.
Posted by: Shya | May 14, 2008 at 10:04 AM
geez, shya. you and i love all the same people. again i echo your sentiment. kim's collection is amazing.
Posted by: elizabeth ellen | May 14, 2008 at 12:59 PM