Childhood is full of dark magic in this collection of gothic stories.
In “Hellion,” a girl named Butter with a pet alligator and a wild streak seeks out a mystical creature she calls the Swamp Ape. “You think it’s a real monster or just a crazy person,” asks the boy her great-aunt has asked her to entertain for the week. “A person can be a real monster too,” she answers. Indeed, monsters come in all shapes and sizes in these stories; some of them disrupt the status quo while others are products of stultifying domestic situations. In “Arcadia Lakes,” 16-year-old Fern’s life has fallen apart—her parents are at war, and she’s a lonely, awkward adolescent—when she discovers a mysterious sea creature with tendrils and tentacles and a warbling voice in the receding artificial lake in front of her house, while in “All the Other Demons,” watching The Exorcist offers a family of six a brief reprieve from their escalating domestic squabbles. The children in “The Mothers” run wild, pursuing ever more dangerous fun while their distracted mothers drink too much and toil away at laughably puerile projects at an artist’s colony. Elliot’s prose is immersive and lush, with all the wonders and unexpected surprises of an overgrown patch of woods. In the best of these stories, the fantastical elements create a new language that makes the familiar strange again. The Wild Professor in “Erl King” is an all-too-recognizable type: a lecherous older man who preys on young women. But in Elliot’s retelling of the tale, the narrator and her older lover are both capable of transforming into wild animals, which ultimately makes them equals and allows the narrator to leave when she’s ready.
The path forward is not always brightest in these transporting tales.