【Dear Utol (2025): Chick! Episode 47】
The Dear Utol (2025): Chick! Episode 47Subtractionist
From the Archive
Our complete digital archive is available now. Subscribers can read every piece—every story and poem, every essay, portfolio, and interview—from The Paris Review’s sixty-three-year history. Subscribe now and you can start reading 0ur back issues right away. You can also try a free ten-day trial period.
In the famous Mary Robison story “Yours,” an elderly man and his young wife carve pumpkins on their porch for Halloween. Hers are messy and mediocre, while the husband, a retired doctor and “Sunday watercolorist,” creates inventive, expressive faces. Later, after a startling turn in this very short story, the old man wishes he could tell his wife his truth, “that to own only a little talent, like his, was an awful, plaguing thing; that being only a little special meant you expected too much, most of the time, and liked yourself too little.”
It’s a fascinating idea to consider in relation to Robison, one of the enormous talents (and great practitioners) of the short story in America. Maybe it speaks to her deep knowledge of the various ways life tears at us, that there are monstrous crushings—death, abandonment—and then there are constant abrasions. Most people learn to live with both. Most people, Robison’s people, also, while maybe waiting around for the pain to subside, or at least turn briefly amusing, laugh, console each other, make dinner, sit on a bench, and try new tricks for better candlelight.
Many of them also secretly revel in language, in keeping an ear out for the bounties and desolations of speech. Robison not so secretly revels in language, in the odd surprises of everyday utterance, the potentially stirring rhythms. Her prose, often called minimalist curing the 1980s, isn’t. She suggested subtractionist, but another word is exacting. When you are exacting, you are a master of the notes and the space between the notes, as Robison has always been. In “Likely Lake,” when Buddy decides he will “dissuade” Connie, it is as though the strategy could not exist if Buddy had not struck upon the right word. Robison’s stories often depend on the rightness of the word, or the right wrongness.
The wrongness, or awkwardness, is layered into her work. She might not have known that “awkward” would be a national catchphrase someday, but Robison has always understood the emotional power of discomfort, self-consciousness, and the manner in which people, eager for real connection (or sometimes not), slide past each other, shrugging, remonstrating, cracking wise. Robison’s stories and novels illuminate day-to-day confusion, as well as the great hurts that sweep down upon us. They are urgent and elegiac, funny and beautiful. If you begin to read them, they will dissuade you from doing anything else for a long time.
This essay appeared in Object Lessons: ‘The Paris Review’ Presents the Art of the Short Story.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for December 1
2025-06-25 20:25'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for November 30
2025-06-25 20:02England vs Wales livestream: How to watch World Cup Group B live
2025-06-25 19:48What Are Intellectuals Good For?
2025-06-25 18:39Popular Posts
Questions, Questions, Questions
2025-06-25 21:05Elon Musk suspends Kanye West's Twitter account
2025-06-25 20:09This trans teen wants to change the world through storytelling
2025-06-25 20:00Donald Trump Jr.'s worst moments of 2019 (so far)
2025-06-25 19:20Trouble Every Day
2025-06-25 18:31Featured Posts
Morning Star
2025-06-25 21:12Elon Musk's Neuralink could begin human testing in six months
2025-06-25 21:06'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for November 28
2025-06-25 21:05Samuel L. Jackson goes off after spotting mistake in 'Spider
2025-06-25 20:17Illusions of Safety
2025-06-25 19:10Popular Articles
Anthro-washing
2025-06-25 19:12'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for November 28
2025-06-25 19:03YouTubers only get canceled when everyone's bored
2025-06-25 18:51Ryuichi Sakamoto, 1952–2023
2025-06-25 18:49Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (84642)
Travel Information Network
Steering the Fed
2025-06-25 21:07Openness Information Network
Japan vs Spain livestream: How to watch World Cup Group E live
2025-06-25 19:54Reality Information Network
'The White Lotus' Season 2 is nearly ruined by one character
2025-06-25 19:31Inspiration Information Network
YouTube is working on a fix to its crashing iOS app
2025-06-25 19:24Prosperous Times Information Network
Too Damn High
2025-06-25 19:07