Sáenz's moving collection of short stories hinges on the intergenerational clientele of the titular borderland watering hole just south of the U.S.-Mexican divide on Avenida Juárez...there's much to enjoy in these gritty, heartfelt stories. –
Publishers Weekly Seven excellent stories ... [by] a versatile writer ... Sàenz writes prose that is tender, occasionally fierce, and always engaging. Read every word of his stories lest you miss some clever twist, some subtle irony, some gentle nuance of poetic imagery that he has labored to create. –
Booklist Seven stunningly evocative short stories ... a haunting tableau of characters wrestling with the boons and burdens of existence ... Saenz, with these masterfully hewn stories, presents this hardscrabble yet tenacious city as beautiful in its contradictions, disquieting in its ambiguities, and heartbreaking in its quotidianness. Filtered through this book are the lives of its singular people: doomed, broken, resourceful, and, above all else, faithful–to the city and to the parts they play in its intricate dimensions. –
Texas Books in Review Though the prolific Benjamin Alire Sáenz has been writing books in every genre for the past two decades,
Everything Begins and Ends at the Kentucky Club is only his second short-story collection. But the wait was definitely worth it ... [The story He Has Gone to Be with the Women] is nothing short of a masterpiece ... In one story, a school counselor says the following about his troubled charges: They came to me with a thirst in their eyes, a thirst, such a thirst and I knew that I could never give them the rain they deserved, the rain they so desperately needed. That might as well be The Kentucky Club speaking, since every protagonist in this heartbreaking collection of stories finds his way to a confession stool at the bar. They find no solutions to their ills, just a sensitive ear that has heard it all before but is willing to listen once again. – Rigoberto González, former president of the executive board of directors of the National Book Critics Circle, special to the
El Paso Times