Difference between revisions of "Newest Short Stories Reviews"

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[[Category:New Reviews|Short Stories]]
 
[[Category:New Reviews|Short Stories]]
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{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|title=I'll Be Home For Christmas
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|isbn=AllTomorrowsFutureCover
|author=Benjamin Zephaniah and Others
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|title=All Tomorrow's Futures: Fictions that Disrupt
 +
|author=Benjamin Greenaway and Stephen Oram (Editors)
 
|rating=5
 
|rating=5
|genre=Teens
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|genre=Science Fiction
|summary=Publisher Little Tiger and homelessness charity Crisis have got together and produced ''I'll Be Home For Christmas'' - an anthology of short stories from some of the most popular writers on the UK YA scene. The stories are connected by the theme of home. What does home mean to you? Is it your house, the physical place where you live? Is it your family? Your friends? Home can mean different things to different people, can't it? The book opens with a powerful poem by Bookbag favourite, Benjamin Zephaniah. The following stories are disparate - some telling tales of hardship and fear, some warming the cockles of your heart. But all of them are about ''home''.
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|summary=''Opening up new ways of thinking about the shape of things to come.''
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1847157726</amazonuk>
+
 
 +
I've heard it said that 'technology' is what happens after you're eighteen. Well, I must confess that there have been more than a few decades of technology in my lifetime. I've kept up reasonably well with what's advantageous to me but I'm left with the feeling that it's all getting away from me. Some of it is - frankly - quite frightening.  Of course, I could research the possibilities and the probabilities and end up down rabbit holes without really understanding whether I'm reading someone who knows what they're talking about or the latest conspiracy theorist.  I needed people I knew I could trust and who could deliver information in a way I could understand.
 
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{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author= Rebecca Schiff
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|isbn=B0CDZRGT1M
|title= The Bed Moved
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|title=Super Short Stories: Flash Fiction
|rating= 5
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|author=Mark C Wallfisch
|genre= Short Stories  
 
|summary= Rebecca Schiff's collection of short stories was a revelation.  It has everything I want from a collection: humour, (often of the black variety), heartbreaking sadness, and moments of shocking clarity.  These stories feel like the revealing of the inner workings of a young American woman's psyche.  In fact, in the last short piece, entitled ''Write What You Know'', it feels that the narrator/author is telling us the experiences which have led to this collection.  ''I only know about parent death and sluttiness', she tells us.  She goes on to talk about her knowledge of Jewish people who are assimilated, liberal and sexual guilt, and I think it is no exaggeration to say that these are the underlying themes to practically all of the stories here.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>147363184X</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
{{newreview
 
|author= Simon Van Booy
 
|title= Tales of Accidental Genius
 
|rating= 5
 
|genre= Short Stories
 
|summary=A diverse, haunting and humorous collection of short fiction, Simon Van Booy offers a collection of stories highlighting how human genius can emerge through acts of compassion. With characters ranging from an eccentric film director, an aging Cockney bodyguard, the teenage child of Nigerian immigrants, a divorced amateur magician and a Beijing street vendor, ''Tales of Accidental Genius'' takes the reader on many, incredible journeys, and conveys more in a few pages than many authors would struggle to do in a whole novel.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1780749716</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
{{newreview
 
|author= Amnesty International
 
|title= Here I Stand
 
|rating= 5
 
|genre= Teens
 
|summary= Every so often Amnesty International gets together a number of great authors and produces an anthology of writing. This time, they've done it for younger readers with ''Here I Stand''. Twenty-five contributions explore where we are with human rights in today's society: the sacrifices many made to win them; the sacrifices that still need to be made to spread them; how, where and why these rights are under attack and how deep is the need to defend them.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>140635838X</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
{{newreview
 
|author= Anna Metcalfe
 
|title= Blind Water Pass and other stories
 
|rating= 5
 
|genre= Short Stories
 
|summary= Anna Metcalfe's debut collection of short stories is a treasure trove of language, cultures, and beautifully written prose.  The stories are bound together with a loose theme of communication, or miscommunication, across characters and cultures, and the narrators of these stories are as different as human beings themselves.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1473631815</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
{{newreview
 
|author= Wendy Brandmark
 
|title= He Runs the Moon
 
|rating= 3.5
 
|genre= Short Stories
 
|summary= This is the first time I had read any of Wendy Brandmark's fiction, and I was intrigued at the theme of the stories.  She sets out writing short stories about different cities in the US, Denver, Bronx, New York, Cambridge and Boston, but also weaves in setting the stories in different eras.  So we have a collection of stories ranging from the 1950's to the 1970's.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1907320601</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
{{newreview
 
|author= Birgul Oguz
 
|title= Hah
 
|rating= 3
 
|genre= Literary Fiction
 
|summary= I was interested to receive this book for review as I knew it was written in a modern, interesting style, being effectively a collection of short stories, but appearing more in a novel structure.  I was, however, rather disappointed with the book.  Whilst it does have some very fine examples of prose writing within the stories, I felt disconnected from the narrator, who is the daughter of a recently deceased man who was involved in a Turkish military coup in 1980.  There is therefore a lot of examples of the narrator relating the conversations they had shared regarding ''revolution'', and the way this had affected the daughter's upbringing and childhood.  Another 'story' then delves into a seemingly disconnected wander through the town, whereby we see the narrator working at gutting fish, and talking about a man she finds repulsive, but who appears to be in love with her.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>9462380740</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Chuck Palahniuk
 
|title=Make Something Up
 
|rating=5
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|summary=What are we to make of that subtitle-seeming writing on the front cover – ''stories you can't unread''?  Does that not apply to all good fiction?  Clearly it is here due to the reputation of the author, and the baggage his name brings to the page.  We'd expect a dramatic approach from anything Palahniuk writes, and an added frisson, an extra layer, from which we might be forced to shrink back.  But a lot of the contents don't quite go that far.  Yes, things are dramatic, when society starts attaching defibrillators to itself, to create the perfect, simple, care- (''The Price is Right''-, and Kardashian-) free happiness.  A man buys a horse for his daughter – but boy is it the wrong horse to buy.    A man falls in love – yes, sometimes the plot summaries of these stories really are better off for being short (speaking of which, don't turn to the three-page entrant here as a taster, it'll put you off by dint of being, almost uniquely here, a nothing story).  A call centre worker can't convince people he's on the level and even in their country – until someone starts riffing back to him.  A housing estate report conveys bad regulation violations, but not as bad as the happenings at a 'Burning Man'-styled festival, in a very clever couple of tales.  But many too are the instances where that extra step has been taken.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099587688</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Martin Edwards (editor)
 
|title=Murder at the Manor: Country House Mysteries (British Library Crime Classics)
 
 
|rating=4.5
 
|rating=4.5
|genre=Crime (Historical)
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|genre=Short Stories
|summary=I'm not big on short stories, but two factors nudged me towards this book.  Firstly, it's broadly golden age crime, one of my weaknesses and secondly, the editor is [[:Category:Martin Edwards|Martin Edwards]], a man whose knowledge of golden age crime is probably unsurpassed and he's done us proud, not only with his selection, but with the half-page biographies of the writers, which precede each story.  There's just enough there to allow you to place the author and to direct you to other works if you're tempted. It's an elegant selection, from the well known and the less well known, all set in and around the country house.
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|summary=''Got a minute to be amused, entertained, or challenged?''
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0712309934</amazonuk>
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''These 100 stories are super short. None is more than 300 words. You can read one in a flash.''
 +
''Some are funny. Some are poignant. All are short.''
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 +
Question: how do you review flash fiction? How do you give a flavour of a fully rounded little story if that story is told in fewer than three hundred words? Or do you try to draw out themes from all the flash fictions in a book of them? I don't know! Perhaps we could start by explaining that there really isn't a fixed definition of flash fiction but that for this collection, author Mark C Wallfisch has gone for a three hundred word limit. That's about a single page in your average paperback.
 
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{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author=Joe Abercrombie
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|author=Rachel Harrison
|title=Sharp Ends
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|title=Bad Dolls
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
|genre=Fantasy
 
|summary=I often feel that short stories are an indulgence on the part of the author, they get to write down a lot of their ideas that don't really fit into a larger story.  The stop/start nature of them never sits well with me, just as I am starting to get to know a character they are gone.  One way of solving this would be to use characters that a fan will already know; perhaps explore the past, or the future.  That sounds great for a fan, but how do you do this whilst also catering for a new reader?
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0575104678</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Sara Taylor
 
|title=The Shore
 
|rating=4.5
 
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=The first story we hear from the Shore, a group of isolated islands off the coast of Virginia, is from Chloe, who's telling her sister about what she overheard in the store. She'd been there buying chicken necks so that they could go crabbing. Normally they used bacon rinds, but they'd already eaten those.  Cabel Bloxom had been murdered and ''they done cut his thang clean off''. The girls are motherless and Chloe is fiercely protective of her little sister Renee.  She's the first of the strong women we'll encounter in these stories, which interlink to give a greater picture.
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|summary=It's been some time since I've read any horror.  I had a couple of misspent teen years reading Stephen King, borrowing the books from a boy I fancied at school and scaring myself half silly with them to the point that I couldn't shut my bedroom curtains at night for fear of the vampires outside! Don't worry - this short story collection isn't like that! It doesn't have those jump scares, and I didn't have to read it during daylight hours only!  But it is creepy, and I found most of that feeling came from the fact that these are stories about women, living normal lives, and that at least in part, the horrors arises from very normal situations such as a breakup, trying a new dieting app, going to a hen party and a coping with grief.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>009959188X</amazonuk>
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|isbn=1803363932
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author=Mary Higgins Clark
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|isbn= B0CCCVRSGX
|title=Death Wears a Beauty Mask
+
|title=Stories 2
 +
|author=Richard F Walker
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=In 1972, Mary Higgins Clark began writing a novella entitled ''Death Wears a Beauty Mask.'' She struggled with the story and put it aside, where it lay forgotton for several decades. When the author rediscovered the manuscript amongst some old files, she decided that she liked it and was ready to complete the long-awaited ending. ''Death Wears a Beauty Mask'' joins some of her other works, both old and new, in an entertaining collection of short stories full of mystery and suspense.
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|summary= This is Richard F Walker's second volume of short stories. There are thirteen in all and I took something from each of them. There isn't a single one that doesn't deserve to be among the others or brings down the overall quality. It can be tricky to review short stories without giving too much away, so I'll just pick two to talk about and I think they give a general flavour.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1471143228</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author=Danielle McLaughlin
+
|isbn=1739593901
|title=Dinosaurs on Other Planets
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|title=22 Ideas About The Future
|rating=4.5
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|author=Benjamin Greenaway and Stephen Oram (Editors)
|genre=Short Stories
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|rating=5
|summary=Seeing as this book is clearly a talented author hitting the ground running, I will dispense with any major preambleWe start with a tale of a daughter affected by the emotions of her parents as they separate – and the influence of a certain school-teacher – from the mother's point of viewAn ancient input shows how alien, and the modern day domesticity how regular, the isolation of a woman can feel, as events are peppered by minor acts of destructionBut men can be alienated too – especially one, a reluctant guest at a party for children hosted by someone he once had an affair with – he feels the new form of this influence in the light of another one he has had to try and abandon.  'All About Alice' – that's what the title character wants to say but has nobody to speak it to, but is it her – mid-40s and single, living with her father – that is most removed from her dreams or her old friend and now child factory, Marian? And we complete a lap of the calendar with the wintry tale of a man unable to tell his work superiors of the problems he faces at home – a new home, recently built like so many one sees while driving round Ireland.
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|genre=Science Fiction
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1473613701</amazonuk>
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|summary=''Our future will be more complex than we expectedInstead of flying cars, we got night-vision killer drones and automated elderly care with geolocation surveillance bracelets to track grandma.''
 +
 
 +
I've got a couple of confessions to makeI'm not keen on short stories as I find it easy to read a few stories and then forget to return to the bookThere's got to be a very compelling hook to keep me engagedThen there's science fiction: far too often it's the technology which takes centre stage along with the world-building. It's human beings who fascinate me: the technology and the world scape are purely incidental.  So, what did I think of a book of twenty-two science fiction short stories?  Well, I loved it.  
 
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}}
{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author= Christopher Fowler
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|isbn=B09XZMCDVF
|title= Bryant and May - London's Glory
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|title=Stories: 13 tantalising tales
|rating= 4
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|author=Richard F Walker
|genre= Crime
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|rating=4
|summary=In the depths of the last [[Bryant and May – The Burning Man by Christopher Fowler|B&M review I wrote]] I said '' Of course, it's unbelievable, farcical. But then you don't come to a Bryant and May story for realism.  You come for absurdity.''   Naturally, I stand by that comment. Fowler has concocted his characters and has no shame in shunting them up and down the time-line of British history as he sees fit.
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|genre=Short Stories
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0857523457</amazonuk>
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|summary=''A news vendor is crying out the headlines in the middle of the night; a wheelchair user loses touch with reality when he tries walking around in his imagination; a stickler for correct grammar goes back in time to correct an iconic quote; a volunteer teacher proves the ideal person to have around in a lawless village; the new boy on the pub football team is very useful with his feet, and awfully familiar…''
 +
 
 +
This collection of thirteen short stories by Richard F Walker has a lot to offer the eclectic reader. Tying them together is the idea that remarkable and strange, even miraculous, things can happen to ordinary people. And that ordinary doesn't mean boring or uninteresting. Form and tone varies so this little treasury of short fiction is never boring and you're never quite sure what's coming next.
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author=Alexander McCall Smith
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|isbn=1737030942
|title=Chance Developments: Unexpected Love Stories
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|title=Bag O'Goodies
|rating=5
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|author=Jolly Walker Bittick
|genre=General Fiction
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|rating=4
|summary=Sometimes, if I'm in a cafe by myself, I like to watch the people around me and imagine stories about their livesJust a single sentence, overheard, can lead to wonderous tales of mystery and intrigue whilst I sip my cappuccino!  So I was delighted to sit down to read the latest offering from AMS, not only because he wrote it, but because he wrote it after looking at 5 different black and white photographs, and then imagining the stories behind themWho are all these people, and what are their stories?  Each story is unique, and yet they all have one abiding link...love.
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|genre= Anthologies
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1846973295</amazonuk>
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|summary=Sometimes, you deserve a treat and mine was Jolly Walker Bittick's ''Bag O'Goodies''.  I first encountered his writing about a year ago, when I read his [[Cape Henry House by Jolly Walker Bittick|Cape Henry House]], a rollicking tale of what happens when five young men find a base for their partyingRight now, I didn't want a full-length novel, so I turned to this anthology of verse and short stories.  Bittick's writing has matured - and so have his characters. Well... most of them!
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author=Joannah Yacoub
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|isbn=1529418100
|title=When Mr Putin Stole My Painting: Ten Short Stories
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|title=Bruno's Challenge and Other Dordogne Tales
|rating=3.5
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|author=Martin Walker
 +
|rating=4
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=Put yourself, if necessary, in the mind of someone wanting to publish their first collection of short stories.  What do you choose as the contents – besides just saying the best available?  Do you try and find a theme, or connecting happenstance or style, to pin them together? Are they based on you now, someone else somewhen else, or all the diverse people and places you have once met?  Joannah Yacoub seems to have gone for the latter.
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|summary=I'm not usually a fan of short stories - I find it all too easy to put the book down between stories and forget to pick it up again - but I am a fan of Martin Walker's [[Martin Walker's Commissar Bruno Courreges Mysteries in Chronological Order|Bruno Courreges Mysteries]] so the temptation to read ''Bruno's Challenge'' was hard to resist and I'm rather glad that I didn't even try. For those new to the series, there's an excellent introduction that will tell you all you need to know about who's who and the background to why Bruno is in St Denis.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0704373971</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author=Eoin Colfer (editor)
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|isbn=B08NF79QXT
|title=Once Upon a Place
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|title=Cherry Blossom Boutique
|rating=3.5
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|author=Brooke Adams
|genre=Confident Readers
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|rating=3
|summary=You know the bit of the blurb on every ''Artemis Fowl'' book, where Eoin Colfer had it said about how you pronounce his name?  That wasn't the intention of an up-and-coming author to be recognisable; rather, it was pridePride in the difference of it, of the Irishness of itIreland, it seems to me, is more full than usual of people, things and ideas, and places that are different by dint of their singular nationality – and so many deserve to have pride attached to themThe places might not be the famous ones, but they can be the source of pride, and of stories, which is where this compilation of short works for the young comes in, with the authors invited to select their chosen place and write about it.
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|genre=Women's Fiction
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>191041137X</amazonuk>
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|summary=Thirty-one-year old Liberty Rossini has had her shop, the Cherry Blossom Boutique, for just six months when she's nominated for - and wins - the Retail Best Newcomer AwardShe's delighted and the two people she's brought with her to the event couldn't be more pleasedSonja, her mother, is an ex-model and Brazilian: you can see where Liberty got her looks from. Jessica's thirty-four and Liberty's best friend: they've known each other since university and Liberty adores Jessica's husband, Charles and their four-year-old daughter, AvaLife would be perfect for Liberty if it wasn't for one thing: she misses having a man in her life.
 
}}
 
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{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author=Sophie Hannah
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|isbn=B08KKQ85FN
|title=The Visitors Book
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|title=But Never For Lunch
|rating=3.5
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|author=Sandra Aragona
|genre=Paranormal
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|rating=4
|summary= Sophie Hannah's The Visitors Book is a short anthology of modern stories with a supernatural twist.  There is not a hammy gothic turret in sight as her characters experience their mundane, day-to-day, 21st century business -- a children's birthday party, a visit to a boyfriend, neck pain, the school run. Now, ghost stories based on ordinary people leading ordinary lives can be very unsettling indeed, making overly imaginative readers look over their shoulder at the bus stop, or giving them goosebumps for no apparent reason. So I was curious to see what Sophie Hannah, a writer I much admire, would make of this particular material.
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|genre=Short Stories
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1908745525</amazonuk>
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|summary=''If a woman approaching the menopause can be likened to a Rottweiler in lipstick, an Ambassador nearing retirement resembles a pampered peacock about to be released into the company of carrion crows or, more to the point, about to discover the real world of bus timetables and paying his own gas bills.''
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You don't get many better opening sentences than that, do you?  We first met His Excellency and The Ambassador's Wife in [[Sorting the Priorities: Ambassadress and Beagle Survive Diplomacy by Sandra Aragona|Sorting the Priorities]] and we learned what it was like to be moved around countries like accompanying baggage by the Italian Government but the time has come for HE to retires and for Sandra Aragona to become The Wife of Former Ambassador...  They have left The Career and settled in Rome. Well 'settled' rather overstates the situation and their dog, Beagle, has no intention of slowing down any time soon, despite being sixteen and deaf.
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author=Marina Warner
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|isbn=B08CHJLNBS
|title=Fly Away Home
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|title=Capturing Emilia
 +
|author=Brooke Adams
 
|rating=3
 
|rating=3
|genre=Short Stories
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|genre=Women's Fiction
|summary=How would you subvert a fairy tale?  You know enough of them and enough about them to do it, so think on itWould you give a mermaid a smartphone?  Would you pepper them with pop stars, and perhaps let them be witness to the Schadenfreude caused by a cave that's sacred to native Canadians?  Would you, in the light of their characters usually being routine, interchangeable tropes, give them a closely-observed personality – as seen here in a teacher's interior thoughts when faced with a piece of East Anglian lore? Would you take the exoticism of the east, and Egypt in particular, and see it in the light of a musical teacher on a zero-hours contract who ends up muttering to himself, directing traffic in the middle of the road, or from the remove of an elderly man with ''swollen feet in orthopaedic sandals'' with a message from the pastCertainly these two are not the standard Arabian Nights-styled pieces…
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|summary=He's Charles Devereaux, thirty-eight and a partner at Wickham Jones, the Mayfair letting agentsShe's Emilia, twenty-nine, librarian and archivist in the heritage library next door.  Emilia has read [[The Secret by Rhonda Byrne|The Secret]] but she's moved on from new age books like that, which leave you dependent on someone else's philosophies, to something a little deeper. Charles is more of a [[Personal by Lee Child|Jack Reacher]] man himself, but, above all, he's shocked that Emilia reads ''The Guardian''.  They're obviously not at all compatible, so why can Charles not get this woman out of his mindShe's not his usual type at all: it's obvious to his friends.  And given that Emilia regularly feels repulsed by Charles's superficiality, why does she feel drawn to him?  The relationship's obviously a non-starter, isn't it?
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1784630381</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author= Rose Tremain
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|author=Marie O'Regan and Paul Kane (editors)
|title= The American Lover
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|title=Cursed: An Anthology of Dark Fairy Tales
|rating= 5
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|rating=4.5
|genre= Short Stories
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|genre=Fantasy
|summary= Having never read a Rose Tremain book before, I was interested to start this collection of short stories. I wasn't disappointed, and it quickly became clear why she has won so many literary awards for her work.
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|summary=Curses. They're there throughout tales of faery and other fantastical folk – people being cursed to do this, or not to be able to do that. Children can be cursed, as can princesses on the verge of marrying, and older people too. It seems in a way there's no escaping it. Which is why the theme of this book of short stories is such a standout – we may well think we know all there is to know about this accursed character, that demonised place, and that other bewitched person. We'd be very wrong.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099548445</amazonuk>
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|isbn=1789091500
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author= Ursula K Le Guin
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|isbn=Stibbe_Xmas
|title= The Wind's Twelve Quarters and The Compass Rose
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|title=An Almost Perfect Christmas
|rating= 4
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|author=Nina Stibbe
|genre= Science Fiction
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|rating=4.5
|summary=I'll start by saying that I think the SF Masterworks series are pretty much always and without fail a really interesting read. I've bought quite a few from this publisher now and I find they will always pick interesting titles from the science fiction genre, making them a great place to start if you are either just dipping your toe into science fiction for the first time or if you're looking to build up your collection.
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|genre=Humour
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>147320576X</amazonuk>
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|summary=Christmas – the time of traditional trauma. You only have to think about the turkey for that – once upon a time it was leaving it sat on the downstairs loo to defrost overnight, and if that failed the hair-dryer shoved inside it treatment was your next best bet. Nowadays it's all having to make sure it's suitably free-range and organic – but not too organic that you can go and visit it, and get too friendly with it to want to eat it. Christmas, though, is of course also a time of great boons. It's cash in hand for a lot of plump people who can hire red suits and beards, it was always a godsend for postmen with all the thank-you letters to aunties you saw twice a decade that your parents made you write out in long-hand as a child, and as for the makers of Meltis Newberry Fruits – well, did they even try and sell them any other time of the year?
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author= Maeve Binchy
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|isbn=0954899520
|title= A Few of the Girls
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|title=A Winter Book
|rating= 5
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|author=Tove Jansson
|genre= Short Stories
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|rating=5
|summary= I was excited about reviewing a brand new collection of Maeve Binchy short stories and I wasn't disappointed. As her widower states in the introduction, Binchy had an extraordinary talent for telling powerful and compassionate stories, and was a true storyteller with an amazing output.  
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|genre=Literary Fiction
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1409161412</amazonuk>
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|summary=Tove Jansson's worldwide fame lasts on the Moomin books, written in the 1940s and later becoming television characters of the simplicity, naivety and sheer 'goodness' that would later produce flowerpot men or teletubbies. Simple drawings, simple stories, simple goodness. What is often forgotten outside of her native Finland is that she was a serious writer…that she wrote for adults as well as children…and that she had a feeling for the natural world and the simple life that not only informed those child-like trolls but went far beyond any fantasy of how the world might be.
 
}}
 
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{{newreview
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{{Frontpage
|author=Ann Cleeves (editor)
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|isbn=1911115847
|title=The Starlings and Other Stories
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|title=Nights of the Creaking Bed
 +
|author=Toni Kan
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
|genre=Crime
+
|genre=Literary Fiction
|summary=Six authors, known collectively as 'The Murder Squad', and their six accomplices were given twelve photographs of the remote landscape of Pembrokeshire by acclaimed photographer David Wilson and asked to come up with a short story inspired by what they saw. Some of the stories will be more to your taste than others, as is only to be expected in such a varied anthology, but none are weak and if you enjoy crime short stories then this book could be a real treat.
+
|summary=''Nights of the Creaking Bed'' is a collection of short stories by Toni Kan. The series of stories tell of the lives and lusts of an assortment of characters living in and around Lagos, Nigeria. Nigeria, in this collection, is imbued with its very own heart of darkness. Danger stalks the shadows and people are killed for nothing more than a wrong look. Kan writes with a vitality and passion that allows these cynical stories to achieve a glimmer of hope.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1909823740</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
+
{{Frontpage
|author= Walter M Miller Jr
+
|isbn=1529014484
|title= Dark Benediction
+
|title=Exhalation
|rating= 5
+
|author=Ted Chiang
|genre= Science Fiction
+
|rating=5
|summary= Walter M. Miller Jr is rightly placed among the science fiction giants H.G. Wells, Michael Moorcock, and Philip K. Dick in the ''Masterworks'' series, a large selection of genre-defining writers and works at the centre of what is now such a popular and diverse range of literatures, films, and television productions. Miller is considered one of the finest science fiction writers of the 1950s, and in ''Dark Benediction'', fourteen of this author's best short stories are brought together in one collection.
+
|genre=Science Fiction
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1473211948</amazonuk>
+
|summary=Over the past twenty-eight years, Ted Chiang has published fifteen science fiction short stories, these magnificent stories have won twenty-seven major science fiction awards so if you are a science fiction fan it is likely that you have already come across some of the work by Ted Chiang. If you haven't then take this opportunity to do so now. Trust me; your imagination will be grateful.
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
+
{{Frontpage
|author= Elizabeth McCracken
+
|isbn=1794467440
|title= Thunderstruck
+
|title=Watchwords
|rating= 5
+
|author=Philip Neal
 +
|rating=4
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary= I chose to review this collection of short stories with no prior knowledge of the author's work – often the best way to do it, though I am aware that McCracken's work comes highly commended. After reading these stories, I can see why and I am already looking forward to reading more of her work.
+
|summary=This satisfying collection of short stories has a provenance at least as beguiling as the provenance of the antique watches that inspired it.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099592975</amazonuk>
+
 
 +
Philip Neal lost a watch. It was a watch he was fond of and had been told was like a 1930s Cartier. Instead of mourning its loss, he began to collect vintage watches that resembled it. And that's how he became a watch collector. An eBay purchase led him to the Antique Watch Company watch repairers in Clerkenwell. The eBay purchase was a fake, but the friendship that grew between the buyer and the repairer of watches was not and the seed of an idea for a book was born.
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
+
{{Frontpage
|author= Pete Bellotte
+
|isbn=1529006031
|title= The Unround Circle
+
|title=Return to Wonderland
|rating= 2.5
+
|author=Various Authors
|genre= Short Stories
+
|rating=4.5
|summary= As short story collections go, this is a fairly ambitious bundle, some 22 stories running to a total of nearly four hundred pagesYou'll gather from the fact that I'm starting with the statistics that I didn't instantly fall in love with Bellotte's writing.
+
|genre=Short Stories
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1910533092</amazonuk>
+
|summary=In following a young girl called Alice down the rabbit hole a few years ago, when the first book she was in [[Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (150th Anniversary Edition) by Lewis Carroll and Anthony Browne|hit 150 years of age]], I found that I didn't really find too much favour with itThe wacky-for-the-sake-of-it did not gel, and I don't remember loving it more as a child.  But I would suggest I am the perfect audience for this book.  I had every chance to enjoy these short stories that come at the core from a tangent, that show the benefits of the oblique glance.  I've always preferred coming to an author's output through their least obvious, allegedly throw-away pieces, and it's the same with franchises – I'd more likely go for Bree Tanner's short novella than the whole Twilight saga (although that remains just a hunch, for obvious reasons). For another thing, there was every reason to expect some kind of greatness here – with Carroll much loved by millions, surely pieces written with that love in mind could only provide for success after success?
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
+
{{Frontpage
|author= Mary Higgins Clark (editor)
+
|isbn=1846974658
|title= Manhattan Mayhem – New Crime Stories from the Mystery Writers of America
+
|title=The Long Path To Wisdom
|rating= 5
+
|author=Jan-Philipp Sendker
|genre= Crime
+
|rating=4
|summary= I was unsure how to open this review. I heart Manhattan, big time.  I am always attracted to any work set in Manhattan, but I don’t want to pigeonhole this remarkable collection of stories into a slot that says 'only for Manhattan lovers'. Far from it it is a superb collection featuring the highest standards of both mystery writing and the form of short story.
+
|genre=Short Stories
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>159474761X</amazonuk>
+
|summary=On my travels around the world, I have a tendency to end up in any bookshop that is selling English-language books, and while I buy as many second-hand escapist tales as the next person, what I'm really looking for is the 'local' – the cookbook maybe, the maps definitely, but above all: the folk tales.  If I ever get to Burma, I won't need to hunt, I can read before I go.
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
+
{{Frontpage
|author=Ivan Vladislavic
+
|isbn=B077969HN8
|title=101 Detectives
+
|title=Alternative Medicine
|rating=3.5
+
|author=Laura Solomon
 +
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=101 Detectives had me baffled. The book comprises of a collection of stories which explore multiple themes from the perspective of one person. The stories are as varied as the characters presenting the tale to you. This exquisitely written book leaves you asking many questions and pondering many ideas.  
+
|summary=Laura Solomon's publisher describes the short stories in ''Alternative Medicine'' as ''black comedy with a twist of surrealism''. I'm rather glad that I didn't see this until ''after'' I'd finished reading as I'm not normally a fan of either, but I've come to two conclusions about the book: what the publisher says is correct - and I really enjoyed it.   The comedy is not ''too'' black and the surrealism is gentle and perhaps best described as a twist or flick of reality when you were least expecting it. Your comfort zones are going to be invaded in the nicest possible way.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1908276568</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
+
{{Frontpage
|author= Laurie R King and Leslie Klinger (editors)
+
|isbn=9386897504
|title=In the Company of Sherlock Holmes: Stories Inspired by the Holmes Canon
+
|title=Tales of Love and Disability
 +
|author=Laura Solomon
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=Well, that's one way to get a heck of a lot of attention to your series of short story collections, for sure – get the estate of the author you're respecting to take you to court with the idea that the works cannot be published – the characters are so firmly established and entrenched, but established and entrenched as their property and therefore cannot be artistically reinterpreted, revived or otherwise returned to at all until full and final copyright statutes have expiredNever mind that the characters – one S Holmes and Dr JH Watson – hardly have parallels in how often they already have been mimicked.  Never mind the fact that the estate of Conan Doyle was paid off in order for the first book to released.  Still, the case was won and this sequel is in our hands. Is it worth all the legal documents?  What is the important verdict, at the end of the reading day?
+
|summary=I've always believed that less-able writers produce longer books: it takes a great deal of skill and talent to write a short story which holds the reader and keeps them coming back for more.  There are far too many collections of short stories which are all too easy to put down and forget after you've read a couple of piecesI've recently read a couple of novellas by Laura Solomon - [[Marsha's Deal by Laura Solomon|Marsha's Deal]] and [[Hell's Unveiling by Laura Solomon|Hell's Unveiling]] and enjoyed them, so I was intrigued to see what she could do with an even shorter form.  
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>178329843X</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
+
{{Frontpage
|author=Jessie Greengrass
+
|isbn=1986586898
|title=An Account of the Decline of the Great Auk, According to One Who Saw It
+
|title=Going To The Last: Short Stories About Horse Racing
|rating=3
+
|author=K D Knight
 +
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=The title story, which appears first, is exactly what it says on the tin: one hunter's story of travelling to remote islands to take part in massive culls of great auks, until they were simply gone. It's always hard to believe that species that once numbered in their millions, such as the passenger pigeon, could go extinct so quickly, but when you read about the brutal slaughter tactics here – swinging clubs and boiling birds alive – you can see how a flightless bird was a sitting target. The narrator makes no real attempt to defend himself: the birds were there for the taking; that was that. Still, he regrets their extinction, because 'in any loss you can see a shadow of the way that you will be lost yourself.' (Those interested in the great auk's extinction may also want to read the 2013 novel ''The Collector of Lost Things'' by Jeremy Page.)
+
|summary=In the opening story, a man whose wife has deserted him visits Sandown with little money but comes away with cash in his pocket - and his wife.  In ''A Grey Day'' an owner struggles with the problem of whether or not to run his horse in the Gold Cup when the ground is against him.  My favourite was ''The Story of H'', the story of Foinavon.  H is depicted as a kind horse who only wanted to please people.  After changing hands on various occasions he came to the yard of John Kempton. H (or Foinavon) was entered in the Grand National and considered a no-hoper. In one of the most dramatic runnings of the race, a pile-up occurred at the 23rd fence. Foinavon, who had been many lengths adrift, cleared the fence and galloped to the line, winning the race at odds of 100/1.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1473610850</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
{{newreview
+
{{Frontpage
|author=Colin Barrett
+
|isbn=9386897296
|title=Young Skins
+
|title=Hell's Unveiling
|rating=4
+
|author=Laura Solomon
 +
|rating=3.5
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=We're taken into the lives of the youthful inhabitants of small town Ireland in seven short stories of differing styles but a shared setting. Barrett writes of a doorman at a suburban nightclub, known and respected by all the locals, although we only read about a brief affair and his vulnerability. Another tale portrays a young rocker and his emotional state, years after an incident that scarred him both physically and mentally and made him the talk of the town. Other tales all share the same focus on people and small but meaningful personal events in their lives.
+
|summary=A little while ago I really enjoyed [[Marsha's Deal by Laura Solomon|Marsha's Deal]] and I was delighted by the opportunity to read the sequel, ''Hell's Unveiling''. It's probably not much of a spoiler to say that Marsha bested the devil in ''Marsha's Deal'', but the devil is not one to take defeat lying down. He's out to wage war on Planet Earth and particularly on Marsha (who's thought of as a 'goody two shoes' in Hell).  Although a strong person, she's vulnerable where her foster children are concerned. Daniel is framed for a crime he didn't commit and sent to juvenile detention and refused permission to return to live with Marsha. Then, of course, there are all the other children who are not only targeted but - worst of all - subverted to the devil's evil ends.  He's out to prey on their fears and weaknesses and as with many foster children, their self-esteem is very fragile.  This is no small-scale operation, either - the devil has set up a training complex on earth, complete with an elevator to Hell.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>009959742X</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
{{newreview
 
|author=B Reid
 
|title=Beyond the Trees of Gulavstadt: A Gothic Short Story
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Politics and Society
 
|summary=Amy works for Claralingua, a London education company that runs English schools all over the world, and Amy is travelling to Gulavstadt, a remote town in Eastern Europe, to inspect one of the schools. Gulavstadt is a town of myths and the setting of a recent horror film, ''The Thing Behind the Trees'', exploiting them - featuring medieval, flesh-eating ghouls with mouths lined with the sharpest of teeth. But myths don't bother Amy...
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>B00U9I7KNI</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 +
 +
Move to [[Newest Spirituality and Religion Reviews]]

Latest revision as of 17:19, 25 March 2024

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Review of

All Tomorrow's Futures: Fictions that Disrupt by Benjamin Greenaway and Stephen Oram (Editors)

5star.jpg Science Fiction

Opening up new ways of thinking about the shape of things to come.

I've heard it said that 'technology' is what happens after you're eighteen. Well, I must confess that there have been more than a few decades of technology in my lifetime. I've kept up reasonably well with what's advantageous to me but I'm left with the feeling that it's all getting away from me. Some of it is - frankly - quite frightening. Of course, I could research the possibilities and the probabilities and end up down rabbit holes without really understanding whether I'm reading someone who knows what they're talking about or the latest conspiracy theorist. I needed people I knew I could trust and who could deliver information in a way I could understand. Full Review

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Review of

Super Short Stories: Flash Fiction by Mark C Wallfisch

4.5star.jpg Short Stories

Got a minute to be amused, entertained, or challenged? These 100 stories are super short. None is more than 300 words. You can read one in a flash. Some are funny. Some are poignant. All are short.

Question: how do you review flash fiction? How do you give a flavour of a fully rounded little story if that story is told in fewer than three hundred words? Or do you try to draw out themes from all the flash fictions in a book of them? I don't know! Perhaps we could start by explaining that there really isn't a fixed definition of flash fiction but that for this collection, author Mark C Wallfisch has gone for a three hundred word limit. That's about a single page in your average paperback. Full Review

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Review of

Bad Dolls by Rachel Harrison

4star.jpg Short Stories

It's been some time since I've read any horror. I had a couple of misspent teen years reading Stephen King, borrowing the books from a boy I fancied at school and scaring myself half silly with them to the point that I couldn't shut my bedroom curtains at night for fear of the vampires outside! Don't worry - this short story collection isn't like that! It doesn't have those jump scares, and I didn't have to read it during daylight hours only! But it is creepy, and I found most of that feeling came from the fact that these are stories about women, living normal lives, and that at least in part, the horrors arises from very normal situations such as a breakup, trying a new dieting app, going to a hen party and a coping with grief. Full Review

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Review of

Stories 2 by Richard F Walker

4star.jpg Short Stories

This is Richard F Walker's second volume of short stories. There are thirteen in all and I took something from each of them. There isn't a single one that doesn't deserve to be among the others or brings down the overall quality. It can be tricky to review short stories without giving too much away, so I'll just pick two to talk about and I think they give a general flavour. Full Review

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Review of

22 Ideas About The Future by Benjamin Greenaway and Stephen Oram (Editors)

5star.jpg Science Fiction

Our future will be more complex than we expected. Instead of flying cars, we got night-vision killer drones and automated elderly care with geolocation surveillance bracelets to track grandma.

I've got a couple of confessions to make. I'm not keen on short stories as I find it easy to read a few stories and then forget to return to the book. There's got to be a very compelling hook to keep me engaged. Then there's science fiction: far too often it's the technology which takes centre stage along with the world-building. It's human beings who fascinate me: the technology and the world scape are purely incidental. So, what did I think of a book of twenty-two science fiction short stories? Well, I loved it. Full Review

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Review of

Stories: 13 tantalising tales by Richard F Walker

4star.jpg Short Stories

A news vendor is crying out the headlines in the middle of the night; a wheelchair user loses touch with reality when he tries walking around in his imagination; a stickler for correct grammar goes back in time to correct an iconic quote; a volunteer teacher proves the ideal person to have around in a lawless village; the new boy on the pub football team is very useful with his feet, and awfully familiar…

This collection of thirteen short stories by Richard F Walker has a lot to offer the eclectic reader. Tying them together is the idea that remarkable and strange, even miraculous, things can happen to ordinary people. And that ordinary doesn't mean boring or uninteresting. Form and tone varies so this little treasury of short fiction is never boring and you're never quite sure what's coming next. Full Review

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Review of

Bag O'Goodies by Jolly Walker Bittick

4star.jpg Anthologies

Sometimes, you deserve a treat and mine was Jolly Walker Bittick's Bag O'Goodies. I first encountered his writing about a year ago, when I read his Cape Henry House, a rollicking tale of what happens when five young men find a base for their partying. Right now, I didn't want a full-length novel, so I turned to this anthology of verse and short stories. Bittick's writing has matured - and so have his characters. Well... most of them! Full Review

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Review of

Bruno's Challenge and Other Dordogne Tales by Martin Walker

4star.jpg Short Stories

I'm not usually a fan of short stories - I find it all too easy to put the book down between stories and forget to pick it up again - but I am a fan of Martin Walker's Bruno Courreges Mysteries so the temptation to read Bruno's Challenge was hard to resist and I'm rather glad that I didn't even try. For those new to the series, there's an excellent introduction that will tell you all you need to know about who's who and the background to why Bruno is in St Denis. Full Review

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Review of

Cherry Blossom Boutique by Brooke Adams

3star.jpg Women's Fiction

Thirty-one-year old Liberty Rossini has had her shop, the Cherry Blossom Boutique, for just six months when she's nominated for - and wins - the Retail Best Newcomer Award. She's delighted and the two people she's brought with her to the event couldn't be more pleased. Sonja, her mother, is an ex-model and Brazilian: you can see where Liberty got her looks from. Jessica's thirty-four and Liberty's best friend: they've known each other since university and Liberty adores Jessica's husband, Charles and their four-year-old daughter, Ava. Life would be perfect for Liberty if it wasn't for one thing: she misses having a man in her life. Full Review

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Review of

But Never For Lunch by Sandra Aragona

4star.jpg Short Stories

If a woman approaching the menopause can be likened to a Rottweiler in lipstick, an Ambassador nearing retirement resembles a pampered peacock about to be released into the company of carrion crows or, more to the point, about to discover the real world of bus timetables and paying his own gas bills.

You don't get many better opening sentences than that, do you? We first met His Excellency and The Ambassador's Wife in Sorting the Priorities and we learned what it was like to be moved around countries like accompanying baggage by the Italian Government but the time has come for HE to retires and for Sandra Aragona to become The Wife of Former Ambassador... They have left The Career and settled in Rome. Well 'settled' rather overstates the situation and their dog, Beagle, has no intention of slowing down any time soon, despite being sixteen and deaf. Full Review

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Review of

Capturing Emilia by Brooke Adams

3star.jpg Women's Fiction

He's Charles Devereaux, thirty-eight and a partner at Wickham Jones, the Mayfair letting agents. She's Emilia, twenty-nine, librarian and archivist in the heritage library next door. Emilia has read The Secret but she's moved on from new age books like that, which leave you dependent on someone else's philosophies, to something a little deeper. Charles is more of a Jack Reacher man himself, but, above all, he's shocked that Emilia reads The Guardian. They're obviously not at all compatible, so why can Charles not get this woman out of his mind? She's not his usual type at all: it's obvious to his friends. And given that Emilia regularly feels repulsed by Charles's superficiality, why does she feel drawn to him? The relationship's obviously a non-starter, isn't it? Full Review

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Review of

Cursed: An Anthology of Dark Fairy Tales by Marie O'Regan and Paul Kane (editors)

4.5star.jpg Fantasy

Curses. They're there throughout tales of faery and other fantastical folk – people being cursed to do this, or not to be able to do that. Children can be cursed, as can princesses on the verge of marrying, and older people too. It seems in a way there's no escaping it. Which is why the theme of this book of short stories is such a standout – we may well think we know all there is to know about this accursed character, that demonised place, and that other bewitched person. We'd be very wrong. Full Review

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Review of

An Almost Perfect Christmas by Nina Stibbe

4.5star.jpg Humour

Christmas – the time of traditional trauma. You only have to think about the turkey for that – once upon a time it was leaving it sat on the downstairs loo to defrost overnight, and if that failed the hair-dryer shoved inside it treatment was your next best bet. Nowadays it's all having to make sure it's suitably free-range and organic – but not too organic that you can go and visit it, and get too friendly with it to want to eat it. Christmas, though, is of course also a time of great boons. It's cash in hand for a lot of plump people who can hire red suits and beards, it was always a godsend for postmen with all the thank-you letters to aunties you saw twice a decade that your parents made you write out in long-hand as a child, and as for the makers of Meltis Newberry Fruits – well, did they even try and sell them any other time of the year? Full Review

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Review of

A Winter Book by Tove Jansson

5star.jpg Literary Fiction

Tove Jansson's worldwide fame lasts on the Moomin books, written in the 1940s and later becoming television characters of the simplicity, naivety and sheer 'goodness' that would later produce flowerpot men or teletubbies. Simple drawings, simple stories, simple goodness. What is often forgotten outside of her native Finland is that she was a serious writer…that she wrote for adults as well as children…and that she had a feeling for the natural world and the simple life that not only informed those child-like trolls but went far beyond any fantasy of how the world might be. Full Review

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Review of

Nights of the Creaking Bed by Toni Kan

4star.jpg Literary Fiction

Nights of the Creaking Bed is a collection of short stories by Toni Kan. The series of stories tell of the lives and lusts of an assortment of characters living in and around Lagos, Nigeria. Nigeria, in this collection, is imbued with its very own heart of darkness. Danger stalks the shadows and people are killed for nothing more than a wrong look. Kan writes with a vitality and passion that allows these cynical stories to achieve a glimmer of hope. Full Review

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Review of

Exhalation by Ted Chiang

5star.jpg Science Fiction

Over the past twenty-eight years, Ted Chiang has published fifteen science fiction short stories, these magnificent stories have won twenty-seven major science fiction awards so if you are a science fiction fan it is likely that you have already come across some of the work by Ted Chiang. If you haven't then take this opportunity to do so now. Trust me; your imagination will be grateful. Full Review

1794467440.jpg

Review of

Watchwords by Philip Neal

4star.jpg Short Stories

This satisfying collection of short stories has a provenance at least as beguiling as the provenance of the antique watches that inspired it.

Philip Neal lost a watch. It was a watch he was fond of and had been told was like a 1930s Cartier. Instead of mourning its loss, he began to collect vintage watches that resembled it. And that's how he became a watch collector. An eBay purchase led him to the Antique Watch Company watch repairers in Clerkenwell. The eBay purchase was a fake, but the friendship that grew between the buyer and the repairer of watches was not and the seed of an idea for a book was born. Full Review

1529006031.jpg

Review of

Return to Wonderland by Various Authors

4.5star.jpg Short Stories

In following a young girl called Alice down the rabbit hole a few years ago, when the first book she was in hit 150 years of age, I found that I didn't really find too much favour with it. The wacky-for-the-sake-of-it did not gel, and I don't remember loving it more as a child. But I would suggest I am the perfect audience for this book. I had every chance to enjoy these short stories that come at the core from a tangent, that show the benefits of the oblique glance. I've always preferred coming to an author's output through their least obvious, allegedly throw-away pieces, and it's the same with franchises – I'd more likely go for Bree Tanner's short novella than the whole Twilight saga (although that remains just a hunch, for obvious reasons). For another thing, there was every reason to expect some kind of greatness here – with Carroll much loved by millions, surely pieces written with that love in mind could only provide for success after success? Full Review

1846974658.jpg

Review of

The Long Path To Wisdom by Jan-Philipp Sendker

4star.jpg Short Stories

On my travels around the world, I have a tendency to end up in any bookshop that is selling English-language books, and while I buy as many second-hand escapist tales as the next person, what I'm really looking for is the 'local' – the cookbook maybe, the maps definitely, but above all: the folk tales. If I ever get to Burma, I won't need to hunt, I can read before I go. Full Review

B077969HN8.jpg

Review of

Alternative Medicine by Laura Solomon

4.5star.jpg Short Stories

Laura Solomon's publisher describes the short stories in Alternative Medicine as black comedy with a twist of surrealism. I'm rather glad that I didn't see this until after I'd finished reading as I'm not normally a fan of either, but I've come to two conclusions about the book: what the publisher says is correct - and I really enjoyed it. The comedy is not too black and the surrealism is gentle and perhaps best described as a twist or flick of reality when you were least expecting it. Your comfort zones are going to be invaded in the nicest possible way. Full Review

9386897504.jpg

Review of

Tales of Love and Disability by Laura Solomon

4star.jpg Short Stories

I've always believed that less-able writers produce longer books: it takes a great deal of skill and talent to write a short story which holds the reader and keeps them coming back for more. There are far too many collections of short stories which are all too easy to put down and forget after you've read a couple of pieces. I've recently read a couple of novellas by Laura Solomon - Marsha's Deal and Hell's Unveiling and enjoyed them, so I was intrigued to see what she could do with an even shorter form. Full Review

1986586898.jpg

Review of

Going To The Last: Short Stories About Horse Racing by K D Knight

4.5star.jpg Short Stories

In the opening story, a man whose wife has deserted him visits Sandown with little money but comes away with cash in his pocket - and his wife. In A Grey Day an owner struggles with the problem of whether or not to run his horse in the Gold Cup when the ground is against him. My favourite was The Story of H, the story of Foinavon. H is depicted as a kind horse who only wanted to please people. After changing hands on various occasions he came to the yard of John Kempton. H (or Foinavon) was entered in the Grand National and considered a no-hoper. In one of the most dramatic runnings of the race, a pile-up occurred at the 23rd fence. Foinavon, who had been many lengths adrift, cleared the fence and galloped to the line, winning the race at odds of 100/1. Full Review

9386897296.jpg

Review of

Hell's Unveiling by Laura Solomon

3.5star.jpg Short Stories

A little while ago I really enjoyed Marsha's Deal and I was delighted by the opportunity to read the sequel, Hell's Unveiling. It's probably not much of a spoiler to say that Marsha bested the devil in Marsha's Deal, but the devil is not one to take defeat lying down. He's out to wage war on Planet Earth and particularly on Marsha (who's thought of as a 'goody two shoes' in Hell). Although a strong person, she's vulnerable where her foster children are concerned. Daniel is framed for a crime he didn't commit and sent to juvenile detention and refused permission to return to live with Marsha. Then, of course, there are all the other children who are not only targeted but - worst of all - subverted to the devil's evil ends. He's out to prey on their fears and weaknesses and as with many foster children, their self-esteem is very fragile. This is no small-scale operation, either - the devil has set up a training complex on earth, complete with an elevator to Hell. Full Review

Move to Newest Spirituality and Religion Reviews