**Equal parts speculative and satirical, the stories in *Why Visit America* form an exegesis of our current political predicament, while offering an eloquent plea for connection and hope.** * * * ** * *The citizens of Plainfield, Texas, have had it with the broke-down United States. So they vote to secede, rename themselves America in memory of their former country, and happily set themselves up to receive tourists from their closest neighbor: America. Couldn’t happen? Well, it might, and so it goes in the thirteen stories in Matthew Baker’s brilliantly illuminating, incisive, and heartbreaking collection* Why Visit America*. The book opens with a seemingly traditional story in which the speculative element is extremely minimal–the narrator has a job that doesn’t actually exist–a story that wouldn’t seem much out of place in a collection of literary realism. From there the stories get progressively stranger: a young man breaks the news to his family that he is going to transition–from an analog body to a digital existence. A young woman abducts a child–her own–from a government-run childcare facility. A man returns home after committing a great crime, his sentence being that his memory–his entire life–is wiped clean. As the book moves from universe to universe, the stories cross between different American genres: from bildungsroman to rom com, western to dystopian, including fantasy, horror, erotica, and a noir detective mystery. Read together, these parallel-universe stories create a composite portrait of the true nature of the United States and a *Through the Looking-Glass* reflection of who we are as a country.
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