Changes

From TheBookbag
Jump to navigationJump to search
no edit summary
Clothes also serve as flashpoints for deeper conflict in Stephanie Tillotson's ''A Handbag to Die For'' or Sue Fortune's evocative ''The White Sandals''. The strange and the familiar clang uneasily in Claudia Rapport's creepy ''The Communion Dress'' and Jo Lloyd's beautiful ''Flicker'', with layers in both that run deep with the emotional connections between mothers and daughters. In a poignant offering from Eloise Williams, jumper ''Ed'' personifies an outgrown childhood for a young woman with learning difficulties.
Underneath the clothes , of course, lay skin and body image. Being happy in one's own skin can be tricky, as Mr Price finds out on his naturist summer holiday. Alys Conran has teenage girls, ''… boobs eyeing the sky …'' and as insensitive to others as 'twas ever thus. The characters in Kerry Steed's ''I am Wearing no Make-up'' and Jean Lyons' ''The Green Guernsey'' take body image one step further. Clothes can provide disguise or security, so nakedness strips back to the real person beneath. As the mourning widow tells her diary:
''… I suppose I have to find out if there's still a separate me.''
A macabre story from Sarah Taylor takes borrowed feathers as the 'what if' starting point to ''Plumage''. Even as she stretches credibility out to the far blue yonder, the story is impossible to put down. In my favourite story, ''Black Cherries,'' a black singer's visit to a Midlands hotel coincides with Enoch Powell's infamous Rivers of Blood speech and precipitates a young man's discovery of his sexuality. Lindsay Ashford's little beauty is packed with insights.
Of course , it's not all heavyweight material. ''Dear Joanna'' is surely Hilary Cooper's spoof of the nursery song, 'There was an old woman who swallowed a fly' and Lorraine Jenkin delivers ''On the run from the Fashion Police'' with her trademark humour and twist in the tail. From haute couture to granny-knit, there's plenty to please in all shapes and sizes. As editor Stephanie Tillotson promises, this selection has ''something for every reader''.
I'd like to thank the publishers for sending this thoroughly enjoyable book. At a guess, this collection was selected from an open submissions process and it's great to see such diverse Welsh talents being spotted and promoted by Honno.
Suggestions for further reading:
If you enjoyed the older, anecdotal stories, [[Struggle or Starve by Carole White and Sian Williams]] recounts real lives in South Wales. Two books of short stories by and mainly about women are [[Taking Pictures by Anne Enright]] and [[The Complete Novellas by Agnes Owens]]. And if you like the sound of a small co-operative Welsh Women's Press, check out the best of other Honno fiction titles by using The Bookbag's search box. You might also enjoy [[Any Other Mouth by Anneliese Mackintosh]] and [[The Breathing by Mary-Ann Constantine]].
{{amazontext|amazon=1906784132}}

Navigation menu