5/26/2023 0 Comments Bliss montage review“Radisson like the hotel chain,” Ma writes. To get a former boyfriend to stop calling her, a character lies that she has a new partner, pulling his name from thin air: Mark Radisson. In more than one story, characters dream the most banal of dreams: dreams of their exes. In “Tomorrow,” a woman dozes off, again at an airport, awaiting her flight home. In “Returning,” a woman wakes after an overseas flight to discover that her husband has already deboarded and left the airport, taking with him her passport and luggage. In “Office Hours,” a student enjoys naps-not a euphemism-on her professor’s sofa, while he works at his desk. The feeling of entering and exiting a dream recurs in each of Bliss Montage’s stories.
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