A reader might think he’s got himself into a picaresque and then Wham-O (like the slingshot young Evan Blaine probably lusted after when he read the ads in Popular Science), some brace of characters lurches onto the stage and we’ve “got ourselves a situation.” Against backdrops that Glen Larum clearly knows down to their aromatic essence, Waltz Against the Sky takes us into that setting where someone is knitting a sleeve of the sweater in the bedroom, someone else is working on the collar in the kitchen, there’s a sleeve half done in the garage and who knows what’s going on out on the patio? It’s a luscious array of variegated characters who are presented not in a condescending paragraph but rather in little bits, inched out onto the work table then carefully moved aside as we ponder another part of the knitting endeavor. Hint: It does end up as a sweater, but you gotta be there. Read it. It’s not a galloper that will keep you up half the night. It’s more something to be savored, reflected upon, and then picked up again. We await Mr. Larum’s next work.

Lee Barker
creator of the Barker Bass
Redmond, Oregon