Showing posts with label short story collection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short story collection. Show all posts

Sunday, September 4, 2022

Book Review: Binge by Douglas Coupland (short story collection), published by Random House Canada

 Douglas Coupland has his finger on the pulse of the 2020s. He knows us--with and without our clothes on.



Binge: 60 short stories to make your brain feel different

Douglas Coupland

Random House Canada

2021

251 pages


The book is aptly titled Binge because that's precisely what you'll want to do with this collection. Like chips, you won't be able to stop reading after devouring one story. And as the stories are all under ten pages in length, you'll easily be able to indulge your desire. However, you may want to slow down to meditate upon what you just read. There is much food for thought.

The stories are written in the first person and feature a diverse cast of characters--male, female; gay, straight; abled, disabled; children, adults. Some stories are paired--Coupland examines the same story from two unusual, always entertaining angles.

Binge is at times humourous, always provocative. It's a must-read.

Favourite quotes...

'and it dawned on me that most people are totally lost inside their own lives, and that I'd better be getting on with mine really quick, before it was all over.' (p. 41)

'Not everyone wants to be who they're supposed to be 100 percent of the time. Everyone has hidden selves just waiting to pop out. It's who we are.' (p. 22)

'if our lives aren't stories, what are they? Glorified microbes on a petri dish?' (p. 250)


photo by ldyck

September on this Blog...

Thursday, September 8

International Literacy Day

Sunday, September 11

Books by Leanne Dyck (short story)

"Dyslexics don't like books. They're reluctant readers," they say.

Hmm, well... Not all of us. I've always loved stories. This story explains how much.

Sunday, September 18

An Old Man On A Small Island by Leanne Dyck (short story)

What do people do for fun on my remote island home? You may wonder.

This short story answers that question.

Sunday, September 25

Book Review: The Secret Diary of Mona Hasan by Salma Hussain (middle grade novel)

This book opened my Western eyes to life in another country.



photo by ldyck


A story...

Launching a Poetry Book

"I'm pleased to read to you from my collection of love poems."

Sunday, May 15, 2022

Book Review: The Running Trees (short story collection) by Amber McMillan published by Goose Lane Editions

 The Running Trees is the thinking person's short story collection. 



The Running Trees

Amber McMillan

Published by Goose Lane Editions

2021

Buy this book from an Independent Bookstore in

Canada

United States 

I received my copy of The Running Trees from the publisher



The 13 stories in The Running Trees will get you thinking not only about the topics covered--such as creative license and sibling relations and the nature of truth and...--but also about the nature of story. By that I mean, what the story looks like, how it is written, and what it contains. For example, "The Dinner Party" is the first story in the collection and it is one of the shortest--at seven pages and a few lines. I enjoyed reading this story and I wanted more. So I began to argue with myself. It has a beginning, middle, but does it end? I don't think it-- Yes, it does because the story isn't about what I think it's about.

And... "Photo Happiness", at first, frustrated me because there's no speaker attribution and I really wanted to know who was speaking. Once again I took myself in hand and gave myself time to think. With a calm mind, I was able to see how very clever this treatment was. 

See this book makes you think. Give yourself time to digest what you read. In fact, it might be fun to read this book with a friend. Or... Better yet, it would make a very engaging book club read. And... And I think The Running Trees would make a fantastic audiobook. Have a read and tell me what you think. 

Amber McMillan Answers 

Our Atlantic Book Awards

Nominee Proust Questionaire


May on this Blog...





Sunday, May 22
Book Review
The Spoon Stealer by Lesley Crewe
published by Vagrant Press
(an imprint of Nimbus Publishing)

Are you missing Author Reading Wednesday?
Well...
Based on the popularity of Not a Mother but... I've decided to bring it back. So...

Wednesday, May 18
Author Reading

Hurray! I was able to make this recording. I hope you enjoy listening.


Sunday, May 29
Short Story
My Song by Leanne Dyck

They say that you shouldn't meet your heroes. This story offers an explanation of why you shouldn't.

Cool literary things I found online...


Sunday, November 8, 2020

Book Review: How to Pronounce Knife stories by Souvankham Thammavongsa (short story collection)

Congratulations to Souvankham Thammavongsa for writing How to Pronounce Knife which won the 2020 Scotiabank Giller Prize


How to Pronounce Knife is a collection of 14 short stories. All but two of the protagonists are immigrants Canadians from Laos. They are children, a factory worker, a senior citizen, an ex-boxer, small businesspeople, farm labourers, a cleaner. They are disempowered people. Even if, like Mr. Vong (from the short story The Universe Would Be So Cruel), they hold a position of respect in their community they discover that they are still powerless against outside forces. 

Many of these stories are tinged with sadness. Many are earthy, gritty stories. 

Following in the tradition of authors such as John Steinbeck, Souvankham Thammavongsa uses her considerable talent to champion the underdog. People that many of us may not have known existed if not for her. 




Buy this book

Published by McClelland & Stewart

an imprint of Penguin Random House

Published in 2020


Virtual Reading...

Wednesday, November 11 

Remembrance Day


I will read my short story "Remembering Him"

--and oh boy will this be a challenge for me to read.


Next Sunday...

November 15

Short story:  

Is She Me?

Leanne Dyck

This short story is intended as an anthem for women of a certain age.



'found art' photo by ldyck

Sharing my author journey...

WIP
word count:  8,555 words
goal:  40,000+ words

I reached a new high with my manuscript. After days, weeks 

Sunday, October 18, 2020

Book Review: People Like Frank and other stories from the edge of normal by Jenn Ashton

The Short, Short Story with Jenn Ashton (a writers' workshop)

One of the fun writing activities Jenn offers is to encourage writing a 6-word memoir. Here's mine...

Reading disability leads to writing passion.


People Like Frank, Jenn Ashton's short story collection is peopled with diverse characters from disabled to immigrants to transients to... These characters speak loudly and clearly building bridges of understanding. I like how some of these stories are linked. This pairing invites a closer look, encourages a deeper understanding, or offers an opposing view. 




Buy this book

Published by Tidewater Press

Published in 2020

I received my copy from the publisher.


Stories range in length from 3 to 12 pages. The collection is dyslexic-friendly. It's a perfect book to take with you on your morning commute. Some stories are heart-warm. Others are emotionally challenging. 

1)Nest

Betty dies while knitting. All of her belongings--including her knitting--are donated to Goodwill. Francine works at Goodwill. What Betty was knitting and where it belongs becomes Francine's mystery.

2)The Bag and I

The narrator puts a recyclable frozen asparagus package in the recycle bin, but the garbage man tosses it out. Why? The narrator devotes herself to solving this mystery.

3)Remembering Vincent Price

Chrissy Evers a thirty-something university interim instructor attempts to heal from haunting childhood trauma.

4)The Instruction of Thomas Epperman

Inspired by her Ph.D. thesis, Isobel Emerson develops a new method of communication.

5)Professor Angel

Acting with understanding and compassion, Alice fills roles that others may have overlooked or neglected. 

This story is packed with information and I would have liked to see it fleshed out so I could have witnessed Alice's interactions. But maybe there's a reason she isn't given a voice.

6)Still

A happily married woman looks forward to the day when her husband's dystonia is under control.

7)Pee

Recovering from a stroke, Allison is relearning many of the tasks we take for granted--like using the toilet.

8)Sundown

Anne is wife and primary caregiver to the narrator who has dementia.

9)People Like Frank

Frank has dementia and his wife is noticing how it's changing him.

10)Glass

Fleeing a dangerous life, Lina reinvents herself.

11)Keeper

We see the world through Blake Cheever's eyes and we slowly begin to realize why he is where he is and why he acts the way he does.

The story left me yearning for a happy life for Blake. It's a story that I'm sure will remain with me. 

12)Good Planning

Inside the mind of someone who is experiencing a psychotic break. 

13)Virginia, Ten

At an early age, the narrator must raise her little brother Jimmy because her mother has bipolar disorder. 

14)Mecca

The oldest in a family that's 'good at breeding' (p. 127), Jess longs to escape her boring rural Canadian home. 

15)All-Nation Soup

The narrator reminisces about Sundays spent at Granny's with her ten cousins.

'The cold world outside stopped and we could breathe at Granny's table and just be ourselves.' (p. 136)

Such a loving tribute to a time, to family, to a woman--to Granny.

16)The Weatherman

A Japanese-Canadian couple lives on a remote island in one of the last working lighthouses.

Far from feeling bored or isolated, Tekki, the narrator, finds intellectual challenges, beauty, and love.  

17) Mea Culpa

'I'm writing because I want to tell you about the last stupid thing I'll ever do.' (p. 153)--become obsessed with Boris the electrician. 

18)Material Remains

Set in Scotland, Sarah is in search of a life she can squeeze herself into. She keeps searching until she finds something that can be truly hers. 

19)Hollow Bones

The narrator and her daughter travel in search of a home, in search of stillness.

20)Mona Lisa

Lessons learned by a 57-year-old traveler.

'I marvel at how I tried all my life to please so many people, when each person's experience of me was so different.' (p. 184)

Mark your calendar...

People Like Frank will be launched at the Whistler Writers Festival (October 17) and Massy Books (October 27) Here's a Facebook link to attend Massy Books virtual book launch 


 Virtual Reading...


Wednesday, October 21

Ownership (horror)

Do you own your house or does it own you?


Next Sunday...


Book Review:  The Guardians by Andrew Pyper

The Guardians is a suspenseful haunted house story--a perfect read on a chilly Halloween night.




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photo by ldyck

Sharing my author journey...



Enter a short story writing contest
Deadline October 31


WIP Progress Report:  4,510/40,000
Bear in mind that this is the first draft, words can be removed just as easily as they are added--at this point. 
Miles to go--having tons of fun and...

An interesting side-effect of writing novels--of starting with a stack of paper--or a blank screen--and adding lots and lots of words...

Sunday, September 6, 2020

Book Review: Runaway (short story collection) by Alice Munro


Writing the end of a story can be challenging. Reading Alice Munro's short story collection Runaway is like attending a master class. 

The ends of each of these eight stories fall like heavyweights in this deeply emotional collection. 


Published by McClelland & Stewart
Published in 2004

Alice Munro has carefully chosen the titles to guide the reader--helping us to focus on what is truly important. 

Runaway
Clara's neighbour Sylvia describes her as 'Naturally happy'. (p. 18) Sylvia tells her friends 'how the girl's presence had come to mean more and more to her, how an indescribable bond had seemed to grow up between them.' (p. 20) So when Clara breaks down in front of Sylvia, she's eager to find a solution. But... 

Runaway is a captivating read right up to and including the alarming ambiguous end. 

Chance
On a long train ride a man sits down to talk to Juliet, but he looks boring. Worried that she'll get stuck with him, Juliet makes up some lame excuse and leaves. This is the first time she has acted out of self-interest. Usually, she lets people like him suck her dry. Not this time. But... 

Is Juliet responsible for what happens to the man? 

To comfort herself, Juliet turns to Eric--a man she meets on the train. Juliet falls for Eric but is there a chance he'll return her emotions?

Soon
Juliet's mother is dying. So Juliet takes her thirteen-month-old baby home. But...

Juliet isn't married and she wants to get to the bottom of how her father feels about that.

Silence
When Juliet's daughter Penelope is twenty-one years old she goes on a six-month retreat. During her time at the retreat, Penelope has no contact with her mother. After the retreat... 

This story draws to this powerful conclusion...
'She keeps on hoping for a word from Penelope... She hopes as people who know better hope for undeserved blessings.' (p. 158)

Passion
Grace is more in love with Maury Travers' family than she is with him. Oblivious, Maury makes plans for their future.
On Thanksgiving, before supper, Grace is outside playing with the Travers' children when she cuts her foot. Neil, Maury's brother, is a doctor. He bandages her foot and takes her to the hospital for an anti-tetanus shot. When Maury comes to pick-up Grace at the hospital, Neil sneaks her out a back way. But...

Trespasses
Due to her free-living parents, Lauren knows things most children her age don't. But there are things she doesn't know--who is her mother? What is her birth story? Where can she find the truth? Can she ever?
This is a complex, heavy story.

Tricks
As a treat, Joanne travels from her small town to attend a Shakespeare play in Stratford, Ontario. During one of these adventures, Joanne meets a man. She envisions a happily-ever-after-ending. But fate loves to play tricks. 

Powers
This short story spans the years between the late 1920s and early 1970s. Nancy's friend Tessa has strange powers. Is it Nancy's responsibility to protect her friend from the world?

Runaway reveals Alice Munro's full power over the short story. She bends, twists, and shapes achieving things only a master can. 

Interested to learn more about author Alice Munro, click this link...

80 Things to Know About Master Short Story Writer Alice Munro

Recordings of Author Readings...

Wednesday, September 9, I plan to record Rainbow Ice Cream 
Saturday, September 12, I plan to record What Matters

Next Sunday...



Short Story:  Lessons in Icelandic
What stories would you tell to introduce your culture to others?

If you're looking for me...

I'm over here...

Twitter                                                Linked In


About my teeth...

Sunday, May 3, 2020

Book Review: Oh, My Darling by Shaena Lambert (short story collection)

Relationships come in all shapes and sizes in Shaena Lambert's ten story collection.

All but three of the stories in Oh, My Darling are set in BC. As a proud Gulf Islander, I was delighted to discover that The Wind--a story with a heart-breaking conclusion--is set on Galiano Island. The other locations are Germany, the United Kingdom and Greece.

Artists and activists and senior citizens and... the stories are peopled with a diverse cast of characters. The most unique--a cancerous lump. Oh, My Darling--the story that gives the collection its name--is a call to action. The message:  you can beat cancer, you can survive, but you need to have courage, you need to be strong. You need to use all your resources including the power of your imagination.

The collection ends on a high with the story of a married couple vacationing in Delphi. Once again I was impressed with author Shaena Lambert's creativity. This time in how she formatted the story. First focusing on the wife, then the husband, then the wife again and so on. The couple have travelled to Delphi to celebrate the wife's fiftieth birthday. A milestone... A time to take stock of the past and make plans for the future. Maya, the wife, racks her brain attempting to come up with the perfect question to ask the oracle in the temple on top of the mountain. I love the last lines of this story:  'And they did. Down the hill, together.' (p. 197)

Oh, My Darling there is much to love in this clever collection.






Published by HarperCollins Publishers
Published in 2013





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photo by ldyck

What makes me smile...

Usually, in order to attend a literary event I have to hop on a ferry and spend the night in Vancouver. But things have changed...

Sunday, April 21, 2019

Book Review: Something for Everyone by Lisa Moore (short story collection)

Something for Everyone by Lisa Moore is tailor-made for a creative writing course. The collection could be used for exploring form, structure (What is the difference between form and structure?), and genre. Most of the stories are contemporary. The exceptions are “Marconi” (historical fiction) and “Light Up the Dark” (magical realism). “Light Up the Dark” is my pick of the litter with its positive message. As told by a mysterious (and legendary) hero, “Light Up the Dark” is a tender story about the love a grandson has for his grandmother. Some of the stories explore the same themes as Atwood's Bluebeard's Egg—especially “Skywalk”. I think Atwood would be impressed by Moore's powerful language—especially pages 264 to 267. Though diverse in form, structure, and genre the stories have a commonality—Newfoundland. Most stories are set in that province and those that don't have a protagonist from Newfoundland—for example, “The Viper's Revenge” (set in Orlando, Florida).

photo by ldyck


Published in 2018
Published by House of Anansi

longlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize, in 2018



In her author acknowledgements, Lisa Moore thanks her students and colleagues—Lisa Moore is an Assistant Professor at Memorial University in Newfoundland.

Reviewing Something for Everyone for the Toronto Star, Stephen Finucan writes:  'Moore's great gift is her ability to make common the uncommon and extraordinary the mundane...Without question, Moore is a great conscience and compassion.'




Book Review: Caught

Scotiabank Giller interview with Lisa Moore

Next post...

Sunday, April 28 (at approximately 5 PM PST)



Huldufolk (short story)
Who is your mother? Where did you come from? These are easy questions for most--but not all.

Sunday, April 14, 2019

Book Review: Bluebeard's Egg by Margaret Atwood (short story collection)

photo by ldyck

Buy this Book



Bluebeard's Egg is an ideal book club read. There's plenty of fuel for literary discussion, lots of symbolism, lots of hidden meaning.

Author Margaret Atwood dedicated this collection to her parents and four of the twelve stories appear to be about them (Significant Moments in the Life of My Mother, Hurricane Hazel, Betty, and Unearthing Suite)--to a greater or lesser degree. All twelve stories in the collection focus on the relationship between women and men--our differences and, reading more carefully, our similarities.

A question to guide your club's discussion:  As viewed through the lens of this collection, what does it mean to be female--for ourselves, our sisters, and our mothers?
Maybe [the egg is] a symbol of virginity, and that is why the wizard requires it unbloodied. Women with dirty eggs get murdered, those with clean ones get married. (p. 159)
McClelland and Stewart published this collection in 1983 (during that same year Coach House Press published Atwood's short story collection Murder in the Dark and Salamander Press published her poetry collection Snake Poems) and, 36 years later, these stories are still relevant.

More...

Stone Mattress by Margaret Atwood
published by McClelland & Stewart (2014)


Buy the book
In this nine story collection, the grand dame of Canadian literature writes for her age cohorts. I was delighted to discover that many of the stories were written about writing. In Alphinland, an aging author finds comfort from her lonely reality in the world she created. In Revenant, a senior poet dies but lives on in his work. In Dark Lady, the poet's female muse deals with his death. In The Dead Hand Loves You, an elder horror author confronts the toll his fame has taken on his relationship with three-decades-old friendships. Torching the Duties is a horror story set in a manor house for the elderly. In Stone Mattress an elderly woman finally takes revenge on the man who sexually assaulted her. Lusus Naturne and The Freeze-Dried Groom don't feature senior protagonists. Both fit into the horror genre.

I closed the book with increased respect and passion for short stories.



Book Review:  The Robber Bride by Margaret Atwood

Book Review: The Cat's Eye by Margaret Atwood


Atwood was first published in 1961--Double Persephone (a poetry collection)--by Hawkshead Press (a small press)--when she was 22 years old. In total, she's published 71 books--including (20) novels, (8) short story collections, (8) books for children, (24) poetry collections, (10) non-fiction books and a graphic novel. And she has written for television, radio and stage. And she has...

Margaret Atwood's full bibliography

And she's not done yet...

Margaret Atwood is currently working on a sequel to A Handmaid's Tale.

Atwood has won the Governor General award and the Man Booker Prize and...

Special Award Spotlight:  Margaret Atwood



photo by ldyck

Next Post...

Sunday, April 21 at approximately 5 PM PST

Something for Everyone (short story collection) by Lisa Moore

longlisted for the 2018 Scotiabank Giller Prize
stories uniting theme:  Newfoundland


Sunday, April 7, 2019

Your Favourites: a free short story collection by Leanne Dyck


photo by ldyck

From 2010 to 2023, I've shared short fiction on this blog. Recently I hunted down the stories (for this collection I defined 'story' as works of fiction) that received the most page views to create this collection. They're short and diverse--from horror to humour. It's interesting to see how my writing has improved and changed over the years. I hope you enjoy reading Your Favourites...


2010


Whacked out Knitting
About those ugly sweaters, your aunt sends you
(knitting themed humour)



2011


A Slave to Her Muse
Even if you want to stop writing, can you?
(metafiction)



2012


It Was Nothing
What are childhood nightmares made of?
(horror)



2013


Eve's Other Children
based on Icelandic folklore



2014


Like Magic
a conversation influenced by St. Patrick's Day
between a child and an Early Childhood Educator
(fiction)



2015


Tame Your Bully
when the bully doesn't win
(fiction)



2016


Sarren's Curse 
claiming your writer's voice
(metafiction)
(part 1 of 2)
(you'll find a link to part 2 in the post)



2017


Awakening
valuing your writing
(metafiction)
(part 1 of 2)
(you'll find a link to part 2 in the post)



2018


Wanderlust
inspired by Tom Paxton's 1964 classic:  Can't Help But Wonder Where I'm Bound
(fiction)


2019


Authors in a Pub
Three mid-list authors complain about hard it is to be an author as they drink beer in a pub. Inspired by Monty Python.

2020

How two brothers gained their independence.

2021

Sometimes your childhood neighbours can influence--for your entire lifetime. 

2022

a downpour becomes magical for one teenage girl when... 

2023

Older Rufous hummingbirds fly south in August. Younger hummingbirds migrate in September, but Pablo stays. Will he stay too long? 


More...

not only to publish but also to improve your craft




Next Post...

Sunday, April 14th at approximately 5 PM PT

Book Review:  Bluebeard's Egg (short story collection) by Margaret Atwood

Is your book club looking for its next book? Look no further...



Sunday, April 15, 2018

How I Wrote My First Book by Leanne Dyck

The following article was published in the West Coast Knitter's News in November 2006. The newsletter was edited by Paulette Lane.





How I Wrote a Knitting Book

Like all journeys, this one began with a single step. I was at a house party and innocently told a friend, "I'd like to start a writing group."

"Well," advised the friend, "you should talk to (name withheld to protect the innocent)." And a few short weeks later Mayne Island writers group was formed.

I immediately began to benefit from the group. The first lesson I learnt was in order for skills to be sharpened you have to practice them. So I made a commitment to write daily.

I had tried this strategy before and had failed miserably. Not wanting this same fate I decided to go public by way of a blog.

Daily writing is difficult. You begin to run out of ideas. When this happens you have to dig deep. You have to carve off the fat to reach the bone. What really matters to you begins to be exposed. You begin to write from your heart.

I began to write about my passion:  knitting. Each time I did this my readership grew. People were actually logging on to read my writing. Go figure? It amazed me. 

The idea started to percolate in my brain that I could write a book.

Still, the sheer volume of writing scared me. Even a short book is 100 pages. How could I write 100 pages?

Day after day I wrote. I kept the good bits and forgot about the bad.

I shared my best stuff not only with my blogging readership but with the talented writers of the writers' group. They gave me the feedback I needed in order to grow.

I soon began to realize that my goal of publishing a book was attainable.

Upon reviewing my writing I realized how very dear to me this story was. Visualizing a publisher molding and forming it made me churn.* No, the only answer for me at this time was self-publishing. I wanted to tell my story in my words in my way. 

I have always thoroughly enjoyed clicking my knitting needles to the sound of audiobooks. I knew there were many other knitters who felt the same. I was surprised to realize that, (to my knowledge) there wasn't an audiobook written by a knitter for the knitting community. An audiobook that celebrated knitting called out to be written. Was it possible?

Fortunately for me, the man I married had considerable computer skills. It is due to his patience, dedication, and talent that Novelty Yarn has such high-quality sound. 

The family I married into is jam-packed-full of talented musicians--such as my brother-in-law Tim Dyck. He composed and performed the beautiful instrumentals which knit the readings together. 

Self-publishing is a misnomer. Many hands were involved in the creation of Novelty Yarn. From the members of the Mayne Island writer's group who carefully edited it to the island printer who designed the CD cover.

Recently, a friend, clutching the CD in her hands, said, "You should be very proud."

Know what? I am.

A journey of a thousand miles begins with one step. Don't be afraid to take that step.

*Later in my writing career, I learned that publishers, editors don't alter a writer's work to serve their own needs. Rather they make suggestions to improve the story.




Next post:  
The Lure of Yarn (short story)is from Novelty Yarn--my first book.
It's a tongue in cheek look at being addicted to knitting. 
Published on April 22nd at approximately 5 PM PT



'Abby beachcombing' ldyck


Sharing my author journey...

Sunday, August 13, 2017

Book review: Nine Stories by J.D. Salinger



I always manage to find an intriguing read at the church fair and this year was no exception.

A Perfect Day for Bananafish was recommended in an online article I read recently. And it is included in this collection. In fact, it is the first story in this collection. This is my only complaint. Not that I didn't enjoy reading it, I did. Simply because it casts a certain hue on the rest of the stories.

It's plain to see, especially in stories such as Uncle Wiggly in Connecticut, J.D. Salinger ability to develop young adult characters. An ability that is utilized to great effect in his young adult best-seller The Catcher in The Rye

First published by Little, Brown in 1953 and again in 1965 (with subsequent printings by Modern Library in 1959, and Bantam in 1964 and 1981), some of the language and attitude is dated but the underlying messages in the stories are timeless.


Favourite Quote...

'The worst that being an artist could do to you would be that it would make you slightly unhappy constantly.' -from the short story De Daumier-Smith's Blue Pencil
More...

If you enjoy reading this book, you may also enjoy Stone Mattress and The Path of Most Resistance. I did.

Stone Mattress by Margaret Atwood
published by McClelland & Stewart (2014)

In this nine story collection, the grand dame of Canadian literature writes for her age cohorts. I was delighted to discover that many of the stories were written about writing. In Alphinland, an aging author finds comfort from her lonely reality in the world she created. In Revenant, a senior poet dies but lives on in his world. In Dark Lady, the poet's female muse deals with his death. In The Dead Hand Loves You, an elder horror author confronts the toll his fame has taken on his relationship with three decades-old friendships. Torching the Duties is a horror story set in a manor house for the elderly. In Stone Mattress an elderly woman finally takes revenge on the man who sexually assaulted her. Lusus Naturne and The Freeze-Dried Groom don't feature senior protagonists. Both fit into the horror genre.

I closed the book with an increased respect and passion for short stories.

The Path of Most Resistance by Russell Wangersky
published by House of Anansi (2016)

The first story in this collection--Rage--is a work of genius. The ending draws from the story--everything points to it--and yet it surprised me. Having written all of that, if I had to choose, I'd say Farewell Tour was my favourite story in this collection.

On the whole, I'm impressed by Wangersky's mastery of description but puzzled by his sparse dialogue--both internal and external. It's like he's afraid to allow his characters to speak.



photo by LDyck

Sometimes endings are very hard to write...