Ann Beattie’s advent in the 1970s as the voice of a generation helped create a global short story renaissance. Her explorations of the subtle cruelties and desires of the heart have continually sustained and advanced the story form, and she has been honored with the PEN/Malamud Award and the Rea Award for the Short Story. She is the author of numerous books, including the collections Onlookers (Scribner, 2023), Follies, The State We’re In, and The Accomplished Guest, as well as the novels Chilly Scenes of Winter, Another You, Mrs. Nixon: A Novelist Imagines a Life, and A Wonderful Stroke of Luck. Beattie lives in Maine and Key West.

Photograph by Sigrid Estrada.

Keep Away

A Story

by Ann Beattie

Elizabeth took the book from the shelf and flipped through. She was in her friend’s aunt’s converted garage adjacent to the big house, and the books were a bit moldy and uninviting. Even in books, though, Elizabeth often found things: unnoticed bookmarks of some kind—a fragile leaf, a yellowed flyer advertising a local parade. She also had luck finding things hidden in motel rooms: dirty magazines tucked under the mattress (what everybody looked for who knew about traveling salesmen and the way they always requested the same room), but she’d also found bedbug residue once and checked out immediately. More happily, she’d found, hidden in the folds of the plastic insert of a wastebasket, a mermaid swizzle stick that she used to prop up the stem of her orchid and another time, tangled in the cord of the blinds, a little horse charm she’d tried to convince herself brought good luck.

People on couch
To continue reading please sign in.
Join for free
Already a reader? Sign In