How It Works Out
"Audacious, breathtaking, and inspiring." --GEORGE SAUNDERS
"Madcap, delirious, exhilaratingly good." --KELLY LINK
"A delightfully bizarre and unabashedly queer revelation." --TEGAN and SARA QUIN
"A beautifully brilliant, hilariously sad stunner of a debut that never forgets about the heart." --NANA KWAME ADJEI-BRENYAH
What if you had the chance to rewrite the course of your relationship, again and again, in the hopes that it would work out?
When Myriam and Allison fall in love at a show in a run-down punk house, their relationship begins to unfold through a series of hypotheticals: What if they became mothers by finding a baby in an alley? What if the only cure for Myriam's depression was Allison's flesh? What if they were B-list celebrities, famous for writing a book about building healthy lesbian relationships? How much darker--or sexier--would their dynamic be if one were a power-hungry CEO, and the other her lowly employee? From the fantasies of early romance to the slow encroaching of violence that unravels the fantasy, each reality builds to complete a brilliant, painfully funny portrait of love's many promises and perils.Equal parts sexy and profane, unsentimental, and gut-wrenching, How It Works Out is a genre-bending, arresting, uncanny exploration of queerness, love, and our drive for connection, in any and all possible worlds.
Author: Myriam LaCroix
Publisher: Overlook Press Publishing
Published: 05/07/2024
Pages: 240
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 0.90lbs
Size: 8.51h x 5.81w x 0.90d
ISBN: 9781419773518
Review Citation(s):
Publishers Weekly 03/11/2024
Kirkus Reviews 04/15/2024
About the Author
Myriam Lacroix was born in Montreal to a Québécois mother and a Moroccan father, and currently lives in Vancouver, British Columbia. She has a BFA in creative writing from the University of British Columbia and an MFA from Syracuse University, where she was editor in chief of Salt Hill Journal and received the New York Public Humanities Fellowship for creating Out-Front, an LGBTQ+ writing group whose goal was to expand the possibilities of queer writing.