'What do you do when you don't know what you want to do anymore?' asks Orion, a disenchanted photojournalist in 'Peru,' the first story in this impressive collection, winner of the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction. Many of McNally's characters are young adults searching for meaning in a world that has already left them disillusioned. 'We spend our lives looking for signs—for thin, brief moments of direction,' observes Ruth in 'The Anonymity of Flight.' Gradually the reader observes that the characters in the stories are connected—as siblings, childhood friends, ex-lovers. In 'Jet Stream' Ruth and Betsy are teenagers in Phoenix; in 'The Future of Ruth,' Ruth is living with Orion. This interrelatedness sometimes frustrates attempts to locate a unifying perspective, and McNally's occasionally intellectualized commentary ('We can only know what we once didn't know') is distancing. But his prose is lean and powerful, and the brief scenes—strung together with little formal structure—effectively convey the desolation of lost dreams.