Available Formats
Little Miseries a novel: This is not a story about my childhood
By (Author) Kimberly Fakih
Delphinium Books, Inc
Delphinium Books, Inc
2nd January 2024
United States
General
Fiction
Family life fiction
Narrative theme: Sense of place
Contemporary lifestyle fiction
Narrative theme: Coming of age
813.54
Paperback
256
Width 139mm, Height 209mm
299g
Set in Iowa and Minnesota in the 60s and 70s, Little Miseries is a Midwestern Gothic where sometimes the misery is just that-little-and sometimes it is epic and yawning, capable of swallowing every childhood memory. There are the miseries the Castles will talk about-old family lore about a great, great, great uncle who was split in two by connecting railroad cars-and the misery none of them will face. There are days at the lake, placid except for inexplicable tension the parents won't address and the three Castle children don't have names for. There are stories about sex and gore at cocktail parties, around bonfires, at sleepovers, in classrooms, and in the newspaper. Everyday growing pains are shadowed by the abduction of a local girl, reports of a massacre of nurses, and the harm done by strangers and by those who are charged to care for children. To survive childhood is to survive all of these miseries and tragedies, because growing up means waking up to a world that can be random and brutal. With some thematic overlap with Rick Moody's The Ice Storm or if Sally Draper from Mad Men got to tell her side of the story, Little Miseries is set in a time and place when parents didn't talk much to their children but they certainly talked around them-while dipping into whiskey or rum punch, whether on a long drive, on the beach, or in the comfort of their own home. Little Miseries is a tribute to what it means to come into awareness, to be a part of a family unit, and to bear responsibility for those you loved and who have been harmed along the way.
"The book shows how catastrophic the secret world of grown-ups can truly be on the delicate web that is a family it shows Fakih as a gifted chronicler of childrens helplessness and familial angst."
"Kimberly Olson Fakihs Little Miseries is a lively and energetic account of growing up in the Midwest in the last century, in a variegated family assailed by disasters great and small."
"Little Miseries, indeed. But first theres joy, wonder and resiliency. Fakih lovingly captures the rapture and mysteries of childhood en reroute to a loss of innocence that is heartbreaking yet triumphant."
BeforeLittle Miseries,Kimberly Olson Fakihwrote two works of fiction for children,High on the Hog(1992) andGrandpa Putter & Granny Hoe(1991), as well as the lexicon,Off the Clock(1994) and The Literature of Delight, a guide to funny books for kids. She worked in publishing for many years, as a freelance reviewer atThe New York Timesand elsewhere, later atKirkus Reviews, and currently as a senior book review editor atSchool Library Journal. She is an Iowa-born, Minnesota-raised, and permanent New Yorker.