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Landlocked mermaids and a twisted Camp Fire Girl troop who will do anything to sell the most P-Nuttles in history. A beautiful mother who will not give up her coyote fur or cat's-eye sunglasses, even in the worst of times. A rock idol who had always wanted to be buried in his 1953 Cadillac Eldorado convertible. These and many other characters grace the ten stories in this collection.N.M.Kelby is the author of The Constant Art of Being a Writer, and several novels, including the best seller In the Company of Angels. She is working on the movie Whale Season with Dwight Yoakam.Praise for A Travel Guide for Reckless Hearts"N. M. Kelby has long been one of my favorite writers, and her new story collection, A Travel Guide for Reckless Hearts, is the sweet, pure, hilarious, sneakily profound essence of her. We ache and we laugh: this is the experience of reading N. M. Kelby just as it is the experience of living in the 21st century." —Robert Olen Butler, Pulitzer Prize winning author of A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain, and the novel, Hell"This is a collection of love stories, each and every one of them true to what goes on between us when our hearts collide. Beautiful, sweet, and a little sad: love, exactly. N. M. Kelby knows a thing or two." —Daniel Wallace, author of four novels including Big Fish, which was also a film of the same name"Kelby peeks into the hidden places of the heart, the sweet spot where love dwells." —Patti Callahan Henry, author of six novels, including Between the Tides
Stories, mostly set in Florida, with a recurrent theme of loss of ties between children and parents, by death, divorce or estrangement. One of the characters has "a thing for exotic women" and the same might be said of the author. Eccentricities and odd physical characteristics abound. The action is often seen though a child's eye. There's a deadpan satirical touch as the bizarre actions of grownups are described in the voice of innocence. Sometimes the motives of characters are obscured by an overly elliptical narrative style. For example in the story "Relative Victories" the reason for Mason's alienation from her son is conveyed only in one ambiguous sentence.