
Walter and Lucas open the box and discover Claire, finding that she is dead but eerily fresh. They decide to take her home, hoping for some kind of reward. After a few weeks Claire is still fresh as a daisy and the brothers decide to sell her to a freak show/fair that is passing through. Meanwhile, Annie discovers a cache of dirty magazines in her family's basement and the reader finds that Father is just a bit off base, perhaps even obsessed with a certain sort of woman. He lusts after an image and ignores his willing wife. And readers are also given the unique perspective of the dead woman's take on things...life, buses, being the star of the freak show. These chapters and parts of others are written in an almost poetic manner, with incomplete sentences creating a feel for details rather than spelling them out in context.
"Claire" is a somewhat disturbing tale of chance happenings, circumstance, and the desperate needs of people. It is a short book that might leave some wondering what the heck they've just read. Entertaining in its own way this book addresses some real life dilemmas - poverty, family commitment, and secret desires. Jim Meirose has written a strange book. It wouldn't be at all surprising if sometime down the road an independent film is made in its image.
"Claire" is available on Amazon.com, search "Meirose".
###


.jpg)



Comment Preview