We're Flying
In his new collection We鈥檙e Flying, Swiss author Peter Stamm weaves together a multitude of perspectives with the ghostly fiber of loss. This fascinating set of short stories centers around the general theme of the 鈥渉uman condition鈥—joy and sadness, birth and death, couples and families, work and school. However, a generous majority of these tales unfold against a subconscious background of grief, whether real or imagined: the widow that learns posthumously of her husband鈥檚 affair; the toddler abandoned by his parents at preschool; the frustrated artist. Yet the book isn鈥檛 a blurred mess of sympathy; rather, it鈥檚 a sharp analysis of life鈥檚 chronic pain and beauty. Precise, disquieting, and high-impact, Stamm鈥檚 new collection slices away surface tissue to reveal the downright messiness of human life
Stamm鈥檚 stories are surprisingly fleshed-out with minimum verbage. Like the artist in one of his stories, Stamm writes surgically: 鈥淵ou paint what you see with the maximum of precision, but you don鈥檛 care about the precision of the depiction . . . What counts is decisiveness.鈥 His characters are quickly but sharply sketched; his story-world is modeled on the one at hand, but as though seen through a microscope, with fine-grained crystals of detail. Stamm shows, instead of tells—in 鈥淪weet Dreams,鈥 a newly-cohabiting girl reflects on the meaning of family while imagining an old black-and-white photo of relatives:
Lara could see the pictures, big family get-togethers in a garden in the north of Italy, pictures full of people she didn鈥檛 know, even her mother didn鈥檛 know some of the names. Thereafter the family had fallen apart . . . When Lara had visited Italy with her parents, there hadn鈥檛 been any more big reunions, only visits in darkened homes with old people who smelled funny and served dry cookies and big plastic bottles of lukewarm Fanta.
Rather than directly stating Lara鈥檚 isolation in her new romance, Stamm instead gives us vivid objects to evoke the feeling: a faded photograph. Dry cookies and lukewarm Fanta. Old people whose homes are lonely and 鈥渇unny鈥-smelling. Later on, we get 鈥渁 barely used coffee machine that Laura found on eBay, a chest for their shoes, a whole stack of yellow bath towels that were on offer鈥—objects that carry a false connotation of stability, but which are really as destructible and transient as her new relationship.
There鈥檚 an uncanny equanimity and composure in Stamm鈥檚 voice as he makes us privy to frequent scenes of psychological pain. When Angelika brings home a forgotten child from her daycare job, her boyfriend Benno is both warm and insensitive: he plays with the child, making droning noises like an airplane—鈥淲e鈥檙e flying!鈥 he yells—but later begins to unbutton her blouse in front of the boy. 鈥淚鈥檓 not going to let that runt spoil my fun,鈥 he snarls, engrossed in a cop show. After the boy鈥檚 parents come to pick him up, Angelika is confronted with the reality of Benno鈥檚 revealed selfishness and lack of care. 鈥淪he freed herself and said she would have a quick shower too. She locked the bathroom but didn鈥檛 undress. When Benno knocked on the door, she was still sitting on the toilet, with her face in her hands.鈥
Heavy, shocking endings like these cap off many of Stamm鈥檚 stories, but not all of them are as tragic. In 鈥淪even Sleepers,鈥 a lonely vegetable farmer finds his first love; in 鈥淭he Suitcase,鈥 an elderly man surreptitiously slips a suitcase beneath his dying wife鈥檚 hospital bed with her necessary items—and a bar of chocolate.
We鈥檙e Flying is eerily readable—perhaps due to how much of ourselves we recognize in his characters. In a varied and colorful array of stories, Stamm manages to portray human life as the emotional mishmash that it really is, full of misery and beauty, full of falling and flying.

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