In "Recovering Larry," a woman mourns for her dead husband by having sex with grieving men. In "Shrinking Away," a woman pays a daring shiva call on her psychiatrist's widow. "Swimming Without Annette" explores a woman's obsession with her dead wife's killer, while "Still Life" peers into the life of a pregnant artist who wishes to paint herself out of a bad marriage and into a prettier world. In "Post-Dated," a single woman wonders if her recently defunct date was perhaps the perfect man.
Read independently, these vivid and raw stories stand on their own. When read as a collection, they are anchored together by the novella, The Joy of Funerals, which follows the life of Nina, a single thirty-something woman who attends the funerals of the deceased characters in the previous stories.
Written with raw wit, mordant humor and a unique voice, Strauss explores our basic need for human connection while trying to answer the penetrating questions, 'where do I belong' and the 'how do I fit in.' The Joy of Funerals is a smart, vivid, and arresting look into the inner world of those left behind, and those still holding on.