Esquire Ball is a debut collection of thirteen linked short stories orbiting a fictional law firm and a young female attorney navigating ambition and power in a traditionally white male sphere. Set in 1980s Northwest Ohio—a region once known as the Great Black Swamp—the stories explore the buried violence of drained land and lives altered by ambition, loss, and transformation. In this surreal terrain, men marry frog wives; souls are trapped in farmhouse windows; a woman shares cosmic truths through an improbable threesome; a lawyer stalks her client for a keepsake; and a law student glimpses the future in a museum of medieval torture. Blending fairytale, myth, and a Midwestern Gothic sensibility, Esquire Ball nods to Borges, Kafka, and du Maurier, delivering a drifting, grotesque mosaic of stories slightly askew.
Advance Praise for ESQUIRE BALL
Toledo, Ohio takes on a dark, mythic quality in this fantastic debut collection by Lisa Slage Robinson. She pries open, sludges through, dresses up and dresses down the complex lives of her characters living in what was once the great black swamp. I can’t say enough good things about this fabulous fabulist collection. Here is a writer moonwalking through the shoulder-padded minefield of the 1980s with wit and grace.
–Sherrie Flick, author of I Have Not Considered Consequences
Lisa Slage Robinson’s ESQUIRE BALL is rooted vividly and brilliantly in a particular place but veined through with human universals: avarice and exultation, meanness and passion, lust and love and rage. There’s a realism in these stories that has both breadth and depth, and there are slides into the strange that happen suddenly yet entirely logically; in every register this collection thrums with life. I loved it with my whole heart and my whole mind.
–Clare Beams, author of The Garden
Who wouldn’t keep reading a story that began “Trevor needed a wife?” Lisa Slage Robinson has a great gift for making readers care about her characters; we want what they want; we dread what they dread. And she is an expert in bad behaviour. Many of her women are not as nice as they seem. Esquire Ball: Stories from the Great Swamp is a dazzling and irresistible collection.
–Margot Livesey, author of The Road from Belhaven
In Esquire Ball: Stories from the Great Black Swamp, Lisa Slage Robinson spins a set of stories that are not just linked but entangled: a sister blessed and saddled with a darling brother dumped on her doorstep by her absentee father; a lawyer who finds himself trying to con his colleagues to aide an ailing widow and her unofficial granddaughter; a young man on the verge of professional success who takes to the swamps to replace the fiancée who abandoned him. Though many of the stories take place in courtrooms and law offices, these are characters who are at heart lawless, irrepressible, who resist the world’s efforts and even their own desperate desires to become respectable and instead lead the reader through twisted, intriguing paths.
–Anjali Sachdeva author of All the Names they Used for God