Breakfast's boiled egg, the overhead hum of fluorescent lights, the midmorning coffee break��aily routines keep the world running. But when people are pushed��y a coworker's taunt, a
face-to-face encounter with a woman in free fall from a bridge��racks appear, revealing alienation, casual cruelty, madness, and above all a simultaneous hunger for and fear of the
unknown. Daniel Orozco leads the reader through the hidden lives and moral philosophies of bridge painters, men housebound by obesity, office temps, and warehouse workers. He reveals
the secret pleasures of late-night supermarket trips for cookie binges, exceptional data entry, and an exiled dictator's occasional piss on the U.S. embassy. A love affair blooms
between two officers in the impartially worded pages of a police blotter; a new employee's first-day office tour includes descriptions of other workers' most private thoughts and
actions; during an earthquake, the consciousness of the entire state of California shakes free for examination. Orientation introduces a writer at the height of his powers, whose
work surely invites us to reassess the landscape of American fiction.
Orientation�is a Kirkus Reviews Best of 2011�Short Story Collections�title.