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Archive for the ‘Short Story’ Category

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[READ: December 9, 2022] “Le Cochon”

This year, S. ordered me The Short Story Advent Calendar.  This is my fifth time reading the Calendar.  I didn’t know about the first one until it was long out of print (sigh), but each year since has been very enjoyable.  Here’s what they say this year

Like we always do at this time: the Short Story Advent Calendar is back for 2022. We had such a great time last year working with our first-ever guest editor, the one and only Alberto Manguel. This year, however, we’re bringing things back to basics. No overarching theme or format, just 25 top-class short stories, selected in-house, by some of the best writers in North America and beyond. It’s December 12. Jasmine Dreame Wagner, an American writer and interdisciplinary artist, once received a stuffed unicorn from Tim Curry. (This one is true!)

This is a story of exaggerated possible deliberate misunderstanding.

Honey Vienna is an actress.  She is hanging out of a window of a flat in New York City.  She is calling for attention from everyone including her younger sister, Ingrid, whom she literally sent a letter to to come and see her.

In typical fashion she had even called the cops on herself.

She yelled that Lew called her a hack-voiced, freaked-out pig, a mass of psychotic confusion, infantile and heartbreaking. (more…)

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[READ: December 11, 2022] “Odam on Till”

This year, S. ordered me The Short Story Advent Calendar.  This is my fifth time reading the Calendar.  I didn’t know about the first one until it was long out of print (sigh), but each year since has been very enjoyable.  Here’s what they say this year

Like we always do at this time: the Short Story Advent Calendar is back for 2022. We had such a great time last year working with our first-ever guest editor, the one and only Alberto Manguel. This year, however, we’re bringing things back to basics. No overarching theme or format, just 25 top-class short stories, selected in-house, by some of the best writers in North America and beyond. It’s December 11. Ruby Cowling, author of This Paradise, wonders whether you have any smaller bills.

This story is a puzzle from the start.  

Odam is working the till (the cash register) in the store.  He has been promoted from the sweltering kitchen.  He arrived just three months ago, so it’s all a little new to him.

Odam is from someplace else–he doesn’t need food or shelter.  He absorbs nutrients from his surroundings. He wonders if it was a good idea for them to send him here at all–did they know what they were doing?  What about his new physical body? (more…)

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SOUNDTRACK:

[READ: December 10, 2022] “Masculine”

This year, S. ordered me The Short Story Advent Calendar.  This is my fifth time reading the Calendar.  I didn’t know about the first one until it was long out of print (sigh), but each year since has been very enjoyable.  Here’s what they say this year

Like we always do at this time: the Short Story Advent Calendar is back for 2022. We had such a great time last year working with our first-ever guest editor, the one and only Alberto Manguel. This year, however, we’re bringing things back to basics. No overarching theme or format, just 25 top-class short stories, selected in-house, by some of the best writers in North America and beyond. It’s December 10. Mathilde Merouani, a writer and translator in Paris, never splits infinitives.

This is a very sad story about a girl who has moved  to France with her mother.  (more…)

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SOUNDTRACK:

[READ: December 9, 2022] “Night Flight”

This year, S. ordered me The Short Story Advent Calendar.  This is my fifth time reading the Calendar.  I didn’t know about the first one until it was long out of print (sigh), but each year since has been very enjoyable.  Here’s what they say this year

Like we always do at this time: the Short Story Advent Calendar is back for 2022. We had such a great time last year working with our first-ever guest editor, the one and only Alberto Manguel. This year, however, we’re bringing things back to basics. No overarching theme or format, just 25 top-class short stories, selected in-house, by some of the best writers in North America and beyond. It’s December 9. Diane Schoemperlen, author of Forms of Devotion, remembers not to pit stop at the Lake of Indifference.

This story is accompanied by collages that go with the story.

It is told in eight parts (with eight pictures).  I wonder if you could see the pictures in a larger (and color) format if they would be more impactful. 

I didn’t really get a lot out of this story, but I feel like the author is right in this comment about her story:

A curious combination of text and image that meanders and circles back on itself again and again with repeated motifs including knitting, maps, New York City, patience, fortitude, and darkness. I like to think that each reading of the story will reveal something new as the words and the collages intersect and intertwine on various levels.

In part two she takes a night flight to New York City.  Part three discusses the New York Public Library.

Parts four and five discuss maps.  As with many stories that I don’t like in total, in parts, I found this wonderful.  Like these lines: “Maps are so noncommittal.  This can either be infuriating or liberating.”

And

“Think of everything that you have ever lost, by accident or on purpose…. They are still back there somewhere, like  trail of bread crumbs stretched out behind each and every one of us.”

But the ending is just not an ending.  

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SOUNDTRACK:

[READ: December 8, 2020] “Parnassus on Wheels” [excerpt]

This year, S. ordered me The Short Story Advent Calendar.  This is my fifth time reading the Calendar.  I didn’t know about the first one until it was long out of print (sigh), but each year since has been very enjoyable.  Here’s what they say this year

Like we always do at this time: the Short Story Advent Calendar is back for 2022. We had such a great time last year working with our first-ever guest editor, the one and only Alberto Manguel. This year, however, we’re bringing things back to basics. No overarching theme or format, just 25 top-class short stories, selected in-house, by some of the best writers in North America and beyond. It’s December 8. Christopher Morley, author of The Haunted Bookshop and Parnassus on Wheels (from which this story is drawn), died in 1957 and was unavailable for comment.

As I started this story I thought, why do people write stories in an old-fashioned dialect?  It seems weird and out of character with contemporary writers.  I didn’t realize until a bit of the way through the story that was, indeed, an old story (over 100 years old!).  

It is also an excerpt from what I expect is a long book, so it was frustrating to have it build up and then just end. However, it does end in a strangely satisfying way as well. (more…)

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SOUNDTRACK:

[READ: December 7, 2022] “Lexapro”

This year, S. ordered me The Short Story Advent Calendar.  This is my fifth time reading the Calendar.  I didn’t know about the first one until it was long out of print (sigh), but each year since has been very enjoyable.  Here’s what they say this year

Like we always do at this time: the Short Story Advent Calendar is back for 2022. We had such a great time last year working with our first-ever guest editor, the one and only Alberto Manguel. This year, however, we’re bringing things back to basics. No overarching theme or format, just 25 top-class short stories, selected in-house, by some of the best writers in North America and beyond. It’s December 7. To officially kick off the 2022 Short Story Advent Calendar, here is a story about faith and carbs from the author of The Prince of Mournful Thoughts.

This story had interesting components but overall I felt uncomfortable about it. (more…)

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SOUNDTRACK:

[READ: December 6, 2022] “Milk”

This year, S. ordered me The Short Story Advent Calendar.  This is my fifth time reading the Calendar.  I didn’t know about the first one until it was long out of print (sigh), but each year since has been very enjoyable.  Here’s what they say this year

Like we always do at this time: the Short Story Advent Calendar is back for 2022. We had such a great time last year working with our first-ever guest editor, the one and only Alberto Manguel. This year, however, we’re bringing things back to basics. No overarching theme or format, just 25 top-class short stories, selected in-house, by some of the best writers in North America and beyond. It’s December 6. To officially kick off the 2022 Short Story Advent Calendar, here is a story about faith and carbs from the author of The Prince of Mournful Thoughts.

I really like this kind of story that seems very grounded in reality but which ha a kind of fantastical element.

Essentially the narrator of the story is a wet nurse.  She has been the wet nurse for every baby in the King’s castle for decades.  (more…)

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SOUNDTRACK:

[READ: December 5, 2022] “The Hole”

This year, S. ordered me The Short Story Advent Calendar.  This is my fifth time reading the Calendar.  I didn’t know about the first one until it was long out of print (sigh), but each year since has been very enjoyable.  Here’s what they say this year

Like we always do at this time: the Short Story Advent Calendar is back for 2022. We had such a great time last year working with our first-ever guest editor, the one and only Alberto Manguel. This year, however, we’re bringing things back to basics. No overarching theme or format, just 25 top-class short stories, selected in-house, by some of the best writers in North America and beyond. It’s December 5. To officially kick off the 2022 Short Story Advent Calendar, here is a story about faith and carbs from the author of The Prince of Mournful Thoughts.

I really enjoyed this story of familial conflict.  The conflict is between two sisters.  One who has done everything correctly and one, Nikki, who, has been digging a hole for herself her whole life.  

Nikki has come to live with the narrator. She has also stopped drinking (sober for the first time in thirty years).  But the narrator is not perfect either (far from it).  She is divorced and her daughter is not talking to her.

The narrator, Sisi, is, to be blunt, really uptight. 

They’ve even got the CN Tower decorated with ridiculous multi-coloured lights now, and every night they shine as a beacon for degenerates and deadbeats.

(more…)

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SOUNDTRACK:

[READ: December 4, 2020] “Guided Tour”

This year, S. ordered me The Short Story Advent Calendar.  This is my fifth time reading the Calendar.  I didn’t know about the first one until it was long out of print (sigh), but each year since has been very enjoyable.  Here’s what they say this year

Like we always do at this time: the Short Story Advent Calendar is back for 2022. We had such a great time last year working with our first-ever guest editor, the one and only Alberto Manguel. This year, however, we’re bringing things back to basics. No overarching theme or format, just 25 top-class short stories, selected in-house, by some of the best writers in North America and beyond. It’s December 4. Please enjoy this interview (from Fail Better) with Steven Millhauser, author of Martin Dressler, responsibly..

I have read a lot of stories by Millhuaser, although I had not read this one before.  I tend to like his stories although I have noticed that sometimes there’s something about them that really sticks out for better or worse).

This one didn’t really have a component like that exactly.  It was just so singularly fascinating as to make me wonder what made him think of it.

So the guide tour of the title is a tour of the route that the children of Hamelin took when the pied piper came back to get them–after the adults of Hamelin refused to pay him for ridding the town of the rats. (more…)

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SOUNDTRACK:

[READ: December 3, 2022] “Bread of Lifers”

This year, S. ordered me The Short Story Advent Calendar.  This is my fifth time reading the Calendar.  I didn’t know about the first one until it was long out of print (sigh), but each year since has been very enjoyable.  Here’s what they say this year

Like we always do at this time: the Short Story Advent Calendar is back for 2022. We had such a great time last year working with our first-ever guest editor, the one and only Alberto Manguel. This year, however, we’re bringing things back to basics. No overarching theme or format, just 25 top-class short stories, selected in-house, by some of the best writers in North America and beyond. It’s December 3. Robert McGill, author of A Suitable Companion for the End of Your Life, is just going to wait and see how long it takes you to notice.

It seems risky to write a story about one of Canada’s most treasured short story writers.  But, as it turns out, this story, with a character who is rather sick of Alice Munro, is a tribute to Munro is more ways than one.  I’m including some of McGill’s interview here:

RM: As someone who grew up just north of Huron County, Ontario, where Munro has spent most of her life, I long wanted to write a story about a young writer who meets her, but I never got around to it.  Then, last year, I decided to try writing a story with an overarching constraint governing every sentence. Once I realized that I could write my Munro story that way, and once I realized that the constraint would send things in a comic direction, the story came pouring out over the course of one weekend in a way was unprecedented for me.
What kind of research went into this story?
RM: I confess: I wrote a master’s thesis on Alice Munro. And I once met her in Bayfield, Ontario.

It amuses me that he “confesses” this information. 

There a two main characters in this story.  A PhD candidate, Nessa, who is writing her thesis on Munro and a poet, Hadi, who is her best friend (occasionally with benefits).

Nessa talks about Alice Munro all the time (as one would if one was writing a thesis about her, but Hadi has had it.  “always Alice Munro! How long will it be before a day goes by without you mentioning Alice Munro?”

Hadi’s father owns a pharmacy, but Hadi is somewhat estranged from him.  We learn that Hadi’s father left his wife (Hadi’s mother) and Hadi some time ago and things have been tense between Hadi and his father ever since.

But they do still talk and he does still go to his father’s pharmacy.

While Hadi is in the pharmacy, Nessa is sure that Alice Munro is standing outside of it.  She approaches the woman, but of course it is not her.  The woman does know Hadi though, and they have a brief chat.  When the woman leaves, Hadi informs Nessa that Alice Munro is a customer at his father’s pharmacy (she lives in the next town over but uses this pharmacy for privacy) and  his father has invited Munro over for dinner. Nessa is going to meet her.

They arrive at Hadi’s father’s house.  The second part of the story switches to the second person singular.  With Hadi addressing his father.  The story shifts gears and become incredibly personal, whereas the first section was more comical.

Hadi sees his father’s humanity (he has a wound from a recent surgery) and sees that his father is trying to hide things from Hadi as well.

The final section returns to the third person as the reality of the evening settles in on everyone–and both Nessa and Hadi have questions they need to ask themselves.

I really enjoyed this story, too.

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