In these seven stories spanning the Midwest to California, Charles
McLeod brings us characters estranged from their homelands and
locked in conflict with their past and present selves. In 'How to
Start Your Own Midwestern Ghost Town,' an unnamed narrator hatches
a plan to capitalize on rural decay. A porn star trying to
transition to the mainstream does an interview with a German
reporter in 'The Subject of Our First Issue Is Art.' In the title
story, a closeted heroin dealer follows a ghostly girl into an
Oakland graveyard. And in 'Rancho Brava,' the conductor of a focus
group about corporate salsa keeps getting interrupted by visitors
from the Old West. Alternating between the comic, the tragic, and
the neurotic� and often all three at once� McLeod's second
collection transports readers from the American mainstream to the
dark edges of cities and the heartland's lost, forgotten towns,
into the lives of people trying to decipher if they can escape
their pasts, and at what cost.