"A deeply enjoyable book . . . atmospheric with fear and shock, threat and disorientation . . . Through the power of her vision, Scanlan takes hold of the world and gives it to the reader with an intensity that is, paradoxically, both strange and familiar . . . Scanlan requires that the reader remain sharply vigilant: a feeling that lingers long after finishing the book and will, perhaps, be part of what draws people back." David Hayden, The Guardian (Book of the Day)
"[The stories] are short, but their mood and imagery are lasting, and reflective of brutal truths of the commerce of human civilization . . . chilling, finely tuned pieces on power and survival." Jessica Ferri, Los Angeles Times
"Every word is precise and brutal . . . [A] sense of metamorphosis, combined with the fact that no technology is mentioned throughout, gives her stories a timeless, fable-esque quality . . . [The stories] are enigmatic, unsettling and tinged with body horror; funny, cruel and minutely repulsive in places. But they are also cinematic, with strange images that are as ephemeral as they are memorable . . . a brilliant, unsettling collection." Lucy Watson, Financial Times
"[Scanlan's] sentences are whittled down and polished to some kind of perfection without the work that went into them ever being the point. They are not, mercifully, a display of self-consciously fine writing, but are matter of fact, underwritten rather than over, and often, carefully, and most precisely, unsettling . . . Most need reading more than once, and some remain ambiguous, even on occasion seemingly incomplete, from time to time frustratingly so, a device, conceivably, to reinforce and prolong the reader’s disquiet, to ensure it lingers in the mind." Andrew Stuttaford, The New Criterion
"Lean and meanwhittled down to their very viscerathe 40 stories assembled in The Dominant Animal are certainly close to the bone . . . The young American author's audacious deployment of lacunae is a measure of her singular artistry . . . These are sentences written in stoneto be read out loud or learned by heart." Andrew Gallix, The Irish Times
"[Scanlan's] work offers its own canted mix of eroticism and absurdism, its own gnarled comedy of gender and class . . . At their best, her stories make other writers’ work seem fatty and uptight . . . Scanlan’s stories tell you almost nothing—which, in these cacophonous times, is the mark of a true radical." Jeremy Lybarger, 4Columns
"Scanlan is challenging our norms and pushing our boundaries, making a story do more than perhaps we previously thought possible." JA Tyler, Ploughshares
"In an age of ever-increasing activity, with the deification of efficiency and progress, it is difficult to see anything without seeing everything, and everything is too much to really see. We are all the more at the mercy of writers like Scanlan who provide new ways of seeing." Stephen Mortland, Full Stop
"Kathryn Scanlan writes sentences so delicious that you want to roll them around your mouth like an expensive chocolate. Each of the pristine, compact stories in her debut collection, The Dominant Animal, links one ingenious grammatical construction to another in a chain of virtuosic prose . . . With their bizarre scenarios, vibrant imagery, and insightful metaphors, the stories in The Dominant Animal operate as exquisite specimens of high literary art." Wilson McBee, Southwest Review
"Scanlan's sentences are sharp . . . These aren’t stories meant to satisfy, they are ones that punch you in the gut." Brendan Buck, Newcity Lit
"Scanlan craftily makes the stuff of everyday life seem strange and rare in this collection . . . Scanlan has a knack for subtly bending the ordinary into the uncanny . . . Reading Scanlan is akin to looking at two “spot the difference” images, but not knowing what, exactly, is off. This is a delightful, mischievous, and mysterious collection that’s perfect for fans of Lydia Davis and Mary Ruefle." Publishers Weekly (starred)
"A quick glimpse of a weird world, with the readers as passengers just catching a startling tableau only to find it vanished when we turn to see it closer, leaving us to ponder what it might mean . . . much to admire in these fleeting pieces." Kirkus
"Kathryn Scanlan comes to us as an oracle when we have never before been so desperately in need. The truths of our human affliction divulged in these icily precise, immaculately impolite, genius-spooked stories will undo you for your own good." —Gary Lutz, author of Stories in the Worst Way
"Kathryn Scanlan's The Dominant Animal is a collection full of bright, weird, funny, bizarre yet familiar vignettes, each casting its own shadow. With equal parts unease and delight, I felt as if I were wandering through strangers' homes, seeing their private faces, listening in on their hushed or clipped or pleading conversations. This is a book that pretends to be unassuming only to explode in your hands." —Lindsay Hunter, author of Eat Only When You're Hungry
“Kathryn Scanlan whittles sentences into weapons. The stories in The Dominant Animal are not cuddly; the dog jaws the baby like a bone; and humans, just as easily, gnaw at animals and other humans. Just as easily, the stories turn into poems, the wind blows through them and ‘scatters’ us.” —Christine Schutt, author of Pure Hollywood
2020-01-13
Microstories offer glances of the unsettling power dynamics at the heart of every relationship.
In "The First Whiffs of Spring," the opening story of this experimental collection, the narrator, riding a public bus on her way to a get-together, spots a sign featuring a cartoon cow, lipsticked and bonneted. The image echoes in the human performances of her day: She recalls it at the celebration she attends where she herself is dressed up, in the overdecorated house, and in the helpless baby, "the cause of our celebration," with "its swollen face, its unseeing eyes." (If the rest of Scanlan's stories are anything to go by, that baby is lucky it can't see much yet.) As a good first story should be, this one is emblematic of Scanlan's (Aug 9—Fog, 2019) book as a whole: a quick glimpse of a weird world, with the readers as passengers just catching a startling tableau only to find it vanished when we turn to see it closer, leaving us to ponder what it might mean. This lightning-fast vision means that Scanlan jettisons traditional story elements in favor of tone and image, which are almost always disquieting. In "Mother's Teeth," a daughter spends the day with her cancer-riddled mother and reflects on their bitter relationship. In the title story, the narrator's observations of the man next door and his dogs prompt her recollection of her own ill-fated stint as a dog owner. In "Vagrants," an impoverished couple drives through wealthy neighborhoods; indeed, many of Scanlan's stories focus on couples floating through often grotesque circumstances, as in "Please," in which a woman is tormented by her husband's constipation.
Readers with a high tolerance for ambiguity will find much to admire in these fleeting pieces.