rev. of The King of Limbo by Adrianne Harun

Issue #89
Winter 2002-03

The King of Limbo
Stories by Adrianne Harun. Mariner, $12.00 paper. Reviewed by Don Lee.

The ten stories in Harun’s first collection,
The King of Limbo, tend toward the elliptical tinged with mystery and occasionally fable, populated by loners who are estranged from loved ones. Haunted, grieving, the characters fitfully reach for solace, sometimes to precarious effect: a woman who loses her newborn baby crashes her car into an elderly couple’s home; another woman’s husband, a divinity student, plays Good Samaritan one too many times and exposes them to a serial killer; a reclusive widower writes a series of letters to a faraway newspaper, pretending to be a former resident, and becomes the town celebrity.

Harun’s prose is lyrical, and she has a particular gift for piquant description, able to sum up a character with a single line, evidenced, for example, by the sixteen-year-old girl who possesses “the pink rheumy eyes and frail blondness of an old woman on her way to bone and ash.”