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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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=AllTomorrowsFutureCover
|author=Joyce Carol Oates
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|title=All Tomorrow's Futures: Fictions that Disrupt
|title=The Corn Maiden and Other Nightmares
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|author=Benjamin Greenaway and Stephen Oram (Editors)
 
|rating=5
 
|rating=5
|genre=Short Stories
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|genre=Science Fiction
|summary=Many years ago, I stumbled across a Joyce Carol Oates story in a horror anthologyWhat I most remember about the story was how vividly the feelings the characters experienced were portrayedWhilst the story itself was not exactly a horror story in the mould of Stephen King and James Herbert, it was very well presentedWith this experience, I had high hopes of 'The Corn Maiden and Other Nightmares' a brand new collection of short stories from Oates.
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|summary=''Opening up new ways of thinking about the shape of things to come.''
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1908800224</amazonuk>
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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 frighteningOf 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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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=B0CDZRGT1M
|author=Robin Jones and Ashley Stokes (Editors)
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|title=Super Short Stories: Flash Fiction
|title=Unthology: No. 3
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|author=Mark C Wallfisch
 
|rating=4.5
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=Unthank Books have brought out their third annual short story 'unthology'.  (See what they did there?)  The series is described as showcasing the ''unconventional, unpredictable and experimental'' which is correct as far as it goes. They omit words that I personally would have included; words like 'refreshing' and 'excitingly different' because, if I needed to be convinced about short stories (and, being a fan, I don't) they would be the clincher.
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|summary=''Got a minute to be amused, entertained, or challenged?''
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0957289707</amazonuk>
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''These 100 stories are super short. None is more than 300 words. You can read one in a flash.''
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''Some are funny. Some are poignant. All are short.''
  
{{newreview
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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.
|author=Tania Hershman
 
|title=My Mother Was An Upright Piano: Fictions
 
|rating=5
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|summary=It's said that the art of short-story writing is totally different from that of novels as the writer only has ten or so pages to accomplish what others do in two to three hundred. Imagine, therefore, telling an entire story in prose conveying depth and meaning in fewer words than this review.  It may be difficult but, apparently, not downright impossible as [[:Category:Tania Hershman|Tania Hershman]] has nailed it with honours.  In fact her first collection [[The White Road by Tania Hershman|The White Road]] was commended by the Orange Prize judges of 2009.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1906477604</amazonuk>
 
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|author=Rachel Harrison
|author=Mike Henley
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|title=Bad Dolls
|title=One Dog and His Man
 
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
|genre=Pets
 
|summary=Oberon is a Labrador with a pedigree as long as your arm and ''One Dog and His Man'' is his story about what it's like living with the man he generously refers to as ''The Boss'', about life in general and the ways of the world.  Think of him as the canine equivalent of the parliamentary sketch writer, there to highlight the idiosyncrasies of human life and bring a gentle humour to situations which might otherwise be taken far too seriously.  Before you wonder how this is possible - how a dog can write a book - let me remind you that dogs are very intelligent animals.  After all, dogs and their humans might go to what are laughingly called 'dog training classes', but it's the humans who are trained, not the dogs.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1471660354</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Joseph O'Connor
 
|title=Where Have You Been?
 
|rating=5
 
|genre=Literary Fiction
 
|summary=Irish novelist Joseph O'Connor has had quite a 2012.  Earlier in the year he joined the ranks of such authors as Edna O'Brien, [[:Category:Roddy Doyle|Roddy Doyle]] and Seamus Heaney when he became a recipient of the PEN award for his outstanding contribution to Irish literature.  What could possibly top that for a sense of achievement?  Well this, his first book of short stories in 20 years, must come pretty close to at least equalling it, amply illustrating the reasons for the panel's decision.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1846556899</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Anita Desai
 
|title=The Artist of Disappearance
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Literary Fiction
 
|summary=Anita Desai's ''The Artist of Disappearance'' is a collection of three novellas with several satisfying unifying features. All are set in modern day India, all involve some looking back in time and all three involve some consideration of the creative art - who it is for, what happens to it once it leaves the artist's control and who 'owns' it. Most of all, each one is beautifully written, with strong characters and evocative descriptions of personal loss. In terms of length each is relatively short - around 50 pages long - but after each one you feel that you've been engrossed in the story just as much as if you had read a novel of more conventional length.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099553953</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Roddy Doyle
 
|title=Bullfighting
 
|rating=5
 
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=I've often wondered what goes through an author's mind the next time they sit down to write after winning a major literary prize. Does it put undue pressure on an author, thinking that they will have to write something equally as good or better next time around?  Some writers can wilt under the pressure and future offerings are derided by critics as 'not as good as (insert title here)'. But some thrive under the weight of expectation and continue to write wonderful stories.  1993 Booker Prize winner [[Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha by Roddy Doyle|Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha]] falls firmly into this latter category.
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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>009955562X</amazonuk>
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|isbn=1803363932
 
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}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn= B0CCCVRSGX
|author=Gerry Wells
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|title=Stories 2
|title=Kicking the Hornets' Nest
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|author=Richard F Walker
|rating=4.5
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|rating=4
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=WWII books about the RAF and the Navy are quite common. Books about Special Operations Executive and similar organisations proliferate. Stories about the army are fewer and try as I might I really couldn't think of one which was other than incidentally about tank crew, so when the opportunity came I ''had'' to read 'Kicking the Hornets' Nest' particularly as it's written by an author who crewed a Sherman tank in Operation Overlord, back in June 1944. I had just a couple of nagging doubts.  It's a book of short stories.  Would I find it easy to pick up - and out down again?  The big worry was whether or not this was going to be a macho action story, which wouldn't really be my cup of tea at all.
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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>1780881568</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=1739593901
|author=Helen Simpson
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|title=22 Ideas About The Future
|title=A Bunch of Fives
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|author=Benjamin Greenaway and Stephen Oram (Editors)
 
|rating=5
 
|rating=5
|genre=Short Stories
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|genre=Science Fiction
|summary=I will come straight out with it at the top of this review and state that I am a big fan of Helen SimpsonSo this book, which is a selection of five stories from each of her five collections, is right up my street.  All I’ve got to do now is convince you that you need to read it too!
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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.''
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099561573</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
  
{{newreview
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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.  
|author=Keith Gray
 
|title=Next
 
|rating=5
 
|genre=Teens
 
|summary=That Keith Gray hangs out with all the cool people, you know. Hot on the heels of one fabulous anthology of short stories all about virginity, [[Losing It by Keith Gray|Losing It]], comes ''Next''. The topic this time is life after death and it's another preoccupation for young people. What's next? What will it be like? How will those left behind manage and cope? Each of the cool people contributes an idea of what death may bring.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1849393001</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=B09XZMCDVF
|author=Francis Bennett
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|title=Stories: 13 tantalising tales
|title=The Crabber Stories
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|author=Richard F Walker
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=John White was known to everyone as Crabber - a nickname which he once earned and which then stuck - and he grew up on the shores of Long Island in the nineteen-fifties.  It was a close-knit community and a time when children had more freedom than they are likely to be allowed now.  We watch as Crabber grows from being a boy still suffering from the death of his elder brother when we first met him through to a time when he's old enough to go on a hunting trip on the mainland with a local family.  He tells his own stories, as truthfully as he can and with the sort of insight which children have before life injects its cynicism.
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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…''
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>B00737IKIW</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
  
{{newreview
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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.
|author=Stephanie Tillotson and Penny Thomas
 
|title=All Shall be Well
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Anthologies
 
|summary=Twenty five years - a quarter of a century - is a long time.  It's an incredible length of time as an independent publisher, particularly one which specialises in publishing the best in Welsh women's writing, but that's exactly what Honno have achieved. To celebrate the occasion they've published this anthology of twenty five short stories and non-fiction pieces.  They've previously been seen in the numerous anthologies published by Honno but when combined they give an interesting and enlightening insight into the work of these great writers.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1906784337</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=1737030942
|author=Marshall Moore
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|title=Bag O'Goodies
|title=The Infernal Republic
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|author=Jolly Walker Bittick
|rating=2
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|rating=4
|genre=Short Stories
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|genre= Anthologies
|summary=''The Infernal Republic'' is a collection of short stories containing a mixture of general fiction, horror and fantasy published by Signal8Press, an imprint of author Marshall Moore's own publishing company Typhoon Media Ltd. Now normally I wouldn't pay much attention to who publishes the books I read, but in this case I'm making an exception because I can't honestly believe that any traditional publisher would have put out this book in this formThe whole collection is so badly crying out for a good editor that it actually ended up making me angry in places.
+
|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 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 charactersWell... most of them!
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>9881516404</amazonuk>
 
 
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}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=1529418100
|author=Marc Nash
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|title=Bruno's Challenge and Other Dordogne Tales
|title=52FF
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|author=Martin Walker
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=52FF is a collection of short stories in the flash fiction format. If you're new to flash fiction, you should know there are various definitions but here, Marc Nash chooses a format of under 1,000 words. This gives him some leeway and so the pieces are in a wide variety of styles - some experimental - but all of them exploring a single central metaphor and all with a darkness about them which is sometimes explicit and sometimes only emerges after you've had time to think and digest.  
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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>B005IHMZR6</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=B08NF79QXT
|author=John E Flannery
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|title=Cherry Blossom Boutique
|title=Our Little Secret and Other Stories
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|author=Brooke Adams
|rating=3.5
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|rating=3
|genre=Short Stories
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|genre=Women's Fiction
|summary=It's over eighteen months since we first encountered John Flannery and his debut collection of shorts stories, [[Toby's Little Eden by John E Flannery|Toby's Little Eden]]A golf course near Manchester and the characters who populated it came sharply to life and we laughed and we smiled along with them.  Things are different in ''Our little Secret and Other Stories'' as we encounter violent death, suicide, delusion and mental illnessIt's a good read but it's certainly not a comfortable one.
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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 Award.  She'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.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>B007CKT6PG</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=B08KKQ85FN
|author=Etgar Keret
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|title=But Never For Lunch
|title=Suddenly, a Knock on the Door
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|author=Sandra Aragona
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=In the opening, titular story, Keret is forced by several people to create, and alter, a short short story.  It's a plain metaphor for the history of Israel, but it proves that this modern Scheherazade is not too far removed geographically from the original.  And what follows are probably the sort of short, tantalising, open-ended, rough-round-the-edges and surreal results of being compelled to carry on telling tall tales on a nightly basis.
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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.''
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0701186674</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
  
{{newreview
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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 RomeWell 'settled' rather overstates the situation and their dog, Beagle, has no intention of slowing down any time soon, despite being sixteen and deaf.
|author=Ray Fawkes
 
|title=One Soul
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Graphic Novels
 
|summary=When reading this it soon becomes very clear we're reading not one, but nineteen, stories. With each page divided into a regular 3x3 grid there are eighteen images on each double page spread, and every one shows an episode, or a beat, of a different character's life in turn, from being a babe-in-arms to deathHowever, the way they join up - everyone's figurative moment comes at once, at times the artist's heavy black ink makes all eighteen images coincide into one image - proves there is a separate, individual tale around and behind the others, one which will end with the most delightful moral - that the ability to be anything one imagines is in our DNA.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1934964662</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=B08CHJLNBS
|author=Angela Carter
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|title=Capturing Emilia
|title=Burning Your Boats
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|author=Brooke Adams
|rating=5
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|rating=3
|genre=Short Stories
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|genre=Women's Fiction
|summary='Burning your Boats' brings together Carter's early works and her uncollected short stories, alongside the collections 'Fireworks', 'The Bloody Chamber', 'Black Venus' and 'American Ghosts'.  Carter's ability to take the everyday and transform it into the fantastic is evident in stories that range from a cautionary tale of a musician in love with his instrument to a lost motorist whose journey ends in nightmarish circumstances in the Snow Pavilion.
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|summary=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 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 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?
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099592916</amazonuk>
 
 
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}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|author=Marie O'Regan and Paul Kane (editors)
|author=Anita Anand, Julian Barnes, Bella Bathurst, Alan Bennett and others
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|title=Cursed: An Anthology of Dark Fairy Tales
|title=The Library Book
 
 
|rating=4.5
 
|rating=4.5
|genre=Lifestyle
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|genre=Fantasy
|summary=I had better begin by saying that I had a vested interest in liking this book since I am a chartered librarian myself and so am wholeheartedly in support of saving our nation's public libraries. But you don't need to be a librarian to enjoy this book. It is rich with anecdotes from some wonderful writers and makes a pleasant read whether you're keen to save libraries or not.
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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>1781250057</amazonuk>
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|isbn=1789091500
 
}}
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=Stibbe_Xmas
|author=Alexander MacLeod
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|title=An Almost Perfect Christmas
|title=Light Lifting
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|author=Nina Stibbe
 
|rating=4.5
 
|rating=4.5
|genre=Short Stories
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|genre=Humour
|summary=Short stories may not be everyone's cup of tea. Sometimes, particularly with first time authors, there is an annoying tendency to be overly experimental. Not so with Alexander MacLeod's stunningly assured debut. True he has genetic 'form' in that he is the son of novelist and short story writer [[:Category:Alistair MacLeod|Alistair MacLeod]], but even so, the quality of this collection, is remarkable. The collection of seven stories is not overly themed, although certain issues and concerns do reappear, but what binds the stories together is a very human approach to adversity.
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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?
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0224093940</amazonuk>
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}}
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{{Frontpage
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|isbn=0954899520
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|title=A Winter Book
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|author=Tove Jansson
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|rating=5
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|genre=Literary Fiction
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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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}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=1911115847
|author=Peter O'Donnell
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|title=Nights of the Creaking Bed
|title=Modesty Blaise: Live Bait
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|author=Toni Kan
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
|genre=Graphic Novels
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|genre=Literary Fiction
|summary=We're back in the gritty yet glamorous world of Modesty Blaise - at least, as gritty and glamorous as you could get in the Evening Standard daily comic strip in the late 1980s. Titan have had a mammoth undertaking to reproduce all the original strips in handy large-format graphic novel compendia, and this latest covers three stories, all of which I consider greater in depth than those in the other volume I've reviewed - [[Modesty Blaise: Sweet Caroline by Neville Colvin and Peter O'Donnell|Sweet Caroline]].
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|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>0857686682</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=1529014484
|author=Jon McGregor
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|title=Exhalation
|title=This Isn't the Sort of Thing That Happens to Someone Like You
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|author=Ted Chiang
|rating=4.5
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|rating=5
|genre=Literary Fiction
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|genre=Science Fiction
|summary=The clue is in the Christopher Brookmyre-styled title.  If the events, characters and circumstances in these stories are known to you, then you have my sympathies.  A man causes an embarrassment trying to watch his daughter's first school nativity play.  Another has a phobia of eggs containing an avian foetus when he puts knife and fork to them. There's a car crash here - and there, a drowning, some arson, some theft... and a lot of clues that point to some national disaster. Take all those clues as one and you eventually see this is more than just a collection of disparate short stories, but a very fractured, obfuscated novel.
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|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.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1408809265</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
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{{Frontpage
{{newreview
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|isbn=1794467440
|author=Tessa Hadley
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|title=Watchwords
|title=Married Love
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|author=Philip Neal
|rating=4.5
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|rating=4
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=Married Love is Tessa Hadley’s second collection, containing twelve short stories looking at (mostly) modern relationships and family dynamics – many are about parents and their grown up children and in-laws, others are about couples. Flicking through the book to choose some of the best and/or most interesting stories to mention, I have found a difficulty. Almost all of these incisive, witty stories reveal an interesting group of characters I would like to know more about after the end, sometimes from several different viewpoints, and it is hard to pick out just a few.  
+
|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>0224096427</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
  
{{newreview
+
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.
|author=Adam Ross
 
|title=Ladies and Gentlemen
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|summary=Adam Ross's characters are driven - but I mean that in the wrong way.  They're not the ones riding on a crest of a wave of motivation, steering their course through life.  No, instead they are passengers, and who or whatever is at the wheel seems to have lost the satnav. So, in 'Futures', a middle-aged unemployed man finds himself giving life lessons and a kick up the backside to a teenaged neighbour just as his own career seems about to enter its nth phase, with an airy-fairy psychic-oriented company that won't ever go as far as telling him what his job might be.  A professor who has to settle temporarily where his work takes him and not where he would like, has to wonder what to do when told of the action-packed adventures of a devil-may-care, come-what-may mechanic.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0224087746</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
+
{{Frontpage
{{newreview
+
|isbn=1529006031
|author=Javier Marias
+
|title=Return to Wonderland
|title=While the Women are Sleeping
+
|author=Various Authors
 
|rating=4.5
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=
+
|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 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?
The first thing the trivially minded will note is that this is not the complete edition of While the Women are Sleeping, for not all the stories in the original Spanish volume are here. You might think that's because some have been hived off for a future 'best of' compilation. But if this isn't the best of Javier Marias, then I don't know what is.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099553929</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
+
{{Frontpage
{{newreview
+
|isbn=1846974658
|author=Stella Gibbons
+
|title=The Long Path To Wisdom
|title=Christmas at Cold Comfort Farm
+
|author=Jan-Philipp Sendker
|rating=3.5
+
|rating=4
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=First things first.  There's only one story in this collection about Cold Comfort Farm.  This is a story about the farm before Flora Poste arrives, a 'prequel' if you like.  It features the Starkadder family at Christmas, with a dispute over a coffin-nail and it did make me smile.  I suspect it is one for fans, however.  For instance, the appearance of a teenage Dick Hawk-Monitor, already in love with Elfine, shoots a knowing wink at the devoted but would leave most readers cold.
+
|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 talesIf I ever get to Burma, I won't need to hunt, I can read before I go.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099528673</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Michael Morpurgo
 
|title=War: Stories of Conflict
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Confident Readers
 
|summary=Throughout history, war has blighted society and had long lasting impacts on not only those directly involved but the innocent bystanders too. This collection of stories, edited by the magnificent Michael Morpurgo himself, looks to explore the impacts of war on individual soldiers, families and especially children. Every story approaches conflicts from a different angle and this ensures that even though there are a good number of short stories in the book, you will never feel as if it is becoming repetitive or dull. The stories do a good job of conveying just how multi-faceted and complex the concept of war is.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1447205014</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Andrew Kaufman
 
|title=The Tiny Wife
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Literary Fiction
 
|summary=It all begins with a bank robbery.  Only this isn't your typical sort of bank robbery since the robber demands not money but instead each person in the bank must give him the item of most sentimental value that they have with themThese range from photographs and a key through to a calculator...and on taking these items he says he is also taking fifty percent of their souls, and it is up to the victims to find the way to get their souls back, or to die trying.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0007429258</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
+
{{Frontpage
{{newreview
+
|isbn=B077969HN8
|author=Ludwig Bechstein, Axel Sceffler and Julia Donaldson
+
|title=Alternative Medicine
|title=The Gloomster
+
|author=Laura Solomon
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=General Fiction
 
|summary=We've all been there.  Finding fault with everything around us, and perhaps picking on one particular irritant that gets us so rattled, tetchy and narked all we can do is invoke "Hell and damnation!" down on all creation - including, of course, ourselves.  After all, our lot is so bad it won't make anything much worse.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0571274242</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Lloyd Jones
 
|title=The Man in the Shed
 
 
|rating=4.5
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=The title is certainly attention-grabbing and I hoped that the book would live up to my expectations.  It did.  The man in 'The Man in the Shed' is not blessed with a nameHis name (whatever it is) is not important or relevant to the tale.  It's all about ''why'' he's in the shed in the first place.  This particular shed's in a garden of a house inhabited by a family which includes the young narrator. It's pretty clear that the marriage is going through a rocky patch right nowSo who, you could reasonably wonder, is the odd one out here - the husband or the man in the shed.  Jones tells us in his own way. He's a writer who catches your attention early, or he did in my case.  No fancy statements or lazy cliches but good old plain English but with flair.
+
|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 itYour comfort zones are going to be invaded in the nicest possible way.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1848544820</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
+
{{Frontpage
{{newreview
+
|isbn=9386897504
|author=Judith Hermann
+
|title=Tales of Love and Disability
|title=Alice
+
|author=Laura Solomon
 
|rating=4
 
|rating=4
|genre=Literary Fiction
+
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=''Alice'' is a collection of five short stories, linked thematically since they all deal with the subject of death, but they are also linked because the central character, Alice, is the same in each storySo rather than feeling like short stories the book has a hint of the novel to it, yet the stories are never completed or fully told so it's a novel where you're not always sure what's going on.
+
|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>184668529X</amazonuk>
 
}}
 
 
 
{{newreview
 
|author=Jamil Ahmad
 
|title=The Wandering Falcon
 
|rating=4
 
|genre=Literary Fiction
 
|summary="In the tangle of crumbling, weather-beaten and broken hills, where the borders of Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan meet, is a military outpost…"  Thus begins the tale of Tor Baz, the Black Falcon.  To this desolate place come two wanderers, a man and a woman seeking refuge.
 
 
 
Refuge is denied them, since it places duties that the fort commander cannot accept, but instead he offers them shelter from the wind of a hundred and twenty days.  For as long as they want it. Shelter, and food.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0241145155</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
+
{{Frontpage
{{newreview
+
|isbn=1986586898
|author=Cees Nooteboom and Ina Rilke (Translator)
+
|title=Going To The Last: Short Stories About Horse Racing
|title=The Foxes Come At Night And Other Stories
+
|author=K D Knight
 
|rating=4.5
 
|rating=4.5
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=There's a bold statement on the front cover from, as it happens, one of my favourite authors, [[:Category:A S Byatt|A S Byatt]] saying that Nooteboom is ''one of the greatest modern novelists'' so I thought that I was in for a treat.  But I didn't enjoy the first short story.  Not the greatest of startsI was disappointed to say the least and was wondering what all the fuss was aboutThen I started to read the story entitled ''Thunderstorm'' and things started to pick upI appreciated the sparse and elegant languageLines such as  'Five people at an outdoor cafe:  two women ... a solitary black man ... a couple at a table nearbyEnough for a film.'  How lovely and evocative is that last line, I'm thinking.  I read it twice as it was so good.
+
|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 FoinavonH is depicted as a kind horse who only wanted to please peopleAfter changing hands on various occasions he came to the yard of John KemptonH (or Foinavon) was entered in the Grand National and considered a no-hoperIn one of the most dramatic runnings of the race, a pile-up occurred at the 23rd fenceFoinavon, who had been many lengths adrift, cleared the fence and galloped to the line, winning the race at odds of 100/1.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0857050230</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
+
{{Frontpage
{{newreview
+
|isbn=9386897296
|author=Sue Gee
+
|title=Hell's Unveiling
|title=Last Fling
+
|author=Laura Solomon
|rating=4
+
|rating=3.5
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|genre=Short Stories
|summary=Sue Gee is well known for her novels, but this is her first collection of short storiesShort story collections are not for everyoneI've always enjoyed them since they fit easily into a busy life, leaving you feeling as if you've lived through a whole story in just a short space of timeIt's easier to find the time for a quick story sometimes than to sit down with a four hundred page novel!
+
|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 MarshaThen, of course, there are all the other children who are not only targeted but - worst of all - subverted to the devil's evil endsHe'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>1907773061</amazonuk>
 
 
}}
 
}}
  
{{newreview
+
Move to [[Newest Spirituality and Religion Reviews]]
|author=Helen Simpson
 
|title=In-Flight Entertainment
 
|rating=5
 
|genre=Short Stories
 
|summary=I am always thrilled to see that Helen Simpson has brought out a new book.  I am a big fan of her crisp, funny, observant short stories.  So I picked up 'In Flight Entertainment' with some anticipation.  I was not disappointed.
 
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>0099546124</amazonuk>
 
}}
 

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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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