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Synopsis:
The kaleidoscopic follow-up to the bestselling Detransition, Baby
In this collection of one novel and three stories, Torrey Peters’s keen eye for the rough edges of community and desire push the limits of trans writing.
In Stag Dance, the titular novel, a group of restless lumberjacks working in an illegal winter logging outfit plan a dance that some of them will volunteer to attend as women. When the broadest, strongest, plainest of the axmen announces his intention to dance as a woman, he finds himself caught in a strange rivalry with a pretty young jack, provoking a cascade of obsession, jealousy, and betrayal that will culminate on the big night in an astonishing vision of gender and transition.
Three startling stories surround Stag Dance: “Infect Your Friends and Loved Ones” imagines a gender apocalypse brought about by an unstable ex. In “The Chaser,” a secret romance between roommates at a Quaker boarding school brings out intrigue and cruelty. In the last story, “The Masker,” a party weekend on the Las Vegas strip turns dark when a young crossdresser must choose between two guides: a handsome mystery man who objectifies her in thrilling ways, or a cynical veteran trans woman offering unglamorous sisterhood.
Acidly funny and breathtaking in its scope, with the inventive audacity of George Saunders or Jennifer Egan, Stag Dance provokes, unsettles, and delights.
Review:
At first glance, I thought Stag Dance had an interesting structure as it is a book with four distinct stories with the title story third in order. “Stag Dance” is the center piece, much longer than the other three stories, and some of the others have been published as stand alone publications, but I guess am used to the title story being the first story, not the penultimate. Or maybe it is something I have not noticed before now. Either way, this does not reflect on the quality of the stories, like how a writer sometimes leads and names a story collection after their best one, but it is a statement that with only two books published, Torrey Peters can already do whatever she wants.
The four stories vary so much that they could have been written by different authors and landed in four different collections. The first, “Infect Your Friends And Loved Ones,” is a post apocalyptic story about a transwoman who previously lived in Seattle, and how her ex, Lexi, is unpredictable, a little crazy, and decides she is going to infect everyone with a drug that will block the body’s hormone release so everyone will have to take pharmaceutical hormones. She decides the narrator, her ex-girlfriend who has good things going for her, will make a good patient to start this global gender transition. The story feels earnest with honest feelings about being transgender in society, and even though Lexi is a little unstable, there are reasons in her behavior, underlying feelings in her actions, and they make complete sense.
The completely different second story, “The Chaser” is about two teenage boys who attend boarding school. When they are roommates, they learn about love and desires but also about their weaknesses. The sadness in the conflict and in both of these young men’s decisions is palpable. This is a story I did not want to end, even though everything about their lives knowing each other is difficult.
“Stag Dance,” is the longest story in the collection, and it it the story about Babe Bunyan, a large, strong, ugly man who cuts trees in an illegal timber camp and volunteers to be one of the female participants at a stag dance, where everyone will be drinking and dancing. The love triangle between Babe, a slight, beautiful man (his complete opposite), and the camp foreman develops. I found this interesting, with a tone much different from the first two stories. The voice in this story, narrated by Babe, with his insecurities of being a big man who wants to take the female role at the dance and the anger of everyone else making fun of him is completely believable. This feels like a queer version of Train Dreams by Denis Johnson.
The final story, “The Masker” is about a convention of crossdressers and transwomen in Las Vegas that is infiltrated by a “masker”, a man who is wearing a latex or silicone mask to look like a female doll. One of the other attendees, a trans ex-DEA agent befriends the narrator, wants to protect her, and also wants to get the masker arrested because to her, the masker is a dangerous fraud. This is another story with a different narrator, this time a person who is new to the crossdressing and trans scene outside of their apartment and the lure of the dangerous masker versus the overly protective friendship of the ex-cop puts them in a very tough situation.
The stories are distinctive in the material and in the writing. If someone told me this is four different stories by four different authors, I would believe it. Instead Torrey Peters really dives deep into these characters, so much so that it feels like these stories come from personal experience, that the narrators are people Peters has been in her life, even the one dealing with the gender apocalypse and the one working in a timber camp. These stories feel like they are written from a place of memory and not just story. I do not get this feeling very often with a writer (even in some of the memoirs I have read), and I find the writings as interesting as the plot. More than once while I was reading, I thought “How is she doing this? How is she writing like this?” Regardless of whether or not you like the stories or the subject matter of the stories, there is no doubt that the writing of each story in top notch. Again this is proof that Torrey Peters is a writer that can do whatever she wants. Her writing and stories are that good.








