āAnn Beattie at her most magnificentā¦Her first new collection in ten years...These tales explore the range of emotional states the author is famous for: longing, disaffection, ambivalence, love, regret. Itās nice to hear her voice againā (People).
āA peerless, contemplative page-turnerā (Vanity Fair), The State Weāre In is about how we live in the places we have chosenāor been chosen by. Itās about the stories we tell our families, our friends, and ourselves, the truths we may or may not see, how our affinities unite or repel us, and where we look for love.
Many of these stories are set in Maine, but The State Weāre In is about more than geographical location. Some characters have arrived in Maine by accident, others are trying to escape. The collection is woven around Jocelyn, a wry, disaffected teenager living with her aunt and uncle while attending summer school. As in life, the narratives of other characters interrupt Jocelynās, sometimes challenging, sometimes embellishing her view.
āAnn Beattie slips into a short story as flawlessly as Audrey Hepburn wore a Givenchy gown: an iconic presentation, each line and fold falling into place but allowing room for surpriseā (O, The Oprah Magazine). āSplendid...memorable...every pageā¦fitted out with the blessed finery of hypnotic storytellingā (The Washington Post), these stories describe a state of mind, a manner of being. The State Weāre In explores, through womenās voices, the unexpected moments and glancing epiphanies of daily life.