Monday Morning Required Reading. In my spare moments - before bed, on lazy weekend mornings - I've been meandering through Carol Shields's collection of short stories
Dressing Up for the Carnival. I was introduced to Shields by way of her novel
The Stone Diaries in an undergraduate class called The Self and the Novel. The class was wonderful, and many of the books we read have stuck with me.
The Stone Diaries was no exception. It didn't so much stick with me because I loved it from the first time I read it as because I grew to feel affectionately toward it. There is something about it that I find captivating, although I never really have been able to define why or what this is. Out of curiosity I decided to pick up something else by Shields and opted for a collection of short stories for goodness knows what reason since short stories and I have a tenuous relationship in many ways. That was about a year ago. The book sat on my shelf, moved across the country with me, and then sat on a shelf again. Until now. I have suddenly found myself devouring short stories. Having finished a collection by Lorrie Moore, I decided to pull
Dressing Up for the Carnival off the shelf and give it a try. I've been finding the same strange phenomenon of inexplicable and gradually growing affection is holding true for these stories as well. So, today I present you with "Mirrors," an interesting story from this collection. Let me know if you like it, and why or why not. Perhaps hearing others articulate their opinions will help me understand mine.
When he thinks about the people he's known in his life, a good many of them seem to have cultivated some curious strand of asceticism, contrived some gesture of renunciation. They give up sugar. Or meat. Or newspapers. Or neckties. They sell their second car or disconnect the television. They might make a point of staying home on Sunday evenings or abjuring chemical sprays. Something anyway, that signals dissent and cuts across the beating heart of their circumstances, reminding them of their other, leaner selves. Their better selves.
He and his wife have claimed their small territory of sacrifice, too. For years they've become "known" among their friends for the particular deprivation they've assigned themselves: for the fact that there are no mirrors in their summer house. None at all. None are allowed.
[KEEP READING]
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