
Lunchtime
is reading time for many of us. I used to spend my midday break with
my current print/eBook or my audiobook, but lately I've gotten more
pleasure out of shorter pieces.
Each day I pick a story
or an article I can start and finish before I turn back to my
computer for an afternoon of editing. I've been sampling all kinds of
works: short stories, essays, articles, and poems.
Here's a look at three stories I read this week. Can't wait to read more in each collection.

It's
no secret that I'm a huge fan of Per Petterson's novels. Before his
longer works made him famous, Petterson published ten stories collected
in
Ashes in My Mouth, Sand in My Shoes (Graywolf Press) about a
young boy living outside of Olso in the early 1960s. These elegantly
written shorts view big issues from the perspective of a child's mind.
"Like a Tiger in a Cage":
After seeing a photograph of his mother from before he was born, Arvid
Jansen is startled by the changes in her brought about from the passing
of time. He doesn't want to get older, thinking six and a half years are
enough, but he can't figure out how to stop time . . . or can he?
He
held his hands to his face as if to keep his skin in place and for many
nights he lay clutching his body, feeling time sweeping through it like
little explosions. . . . But nothing helped, and with every pop he felt
himself getting older. (p. 44)

Kevin Barry's
Dark Lies the Island is another winning collection from Graywolf Press. Focusing on what the Minneapolis
Star Tribune called "marginalized figures," Barry explores his native Ireland with a brilliant combination of humor and darkness.
"The Girls and the Dogs":
Our unnamed narrator, on the run after selling a bad batch of crack,
ends up at the home of an old acquaintance. Evan has two sets of
children from two sisters, and all are living under the same roof.
Things start off well enough, but when Evan makes our hero an offer he
shouldn't have refused, our man finds himself in a tight spot.
Yes
it started like that—the trouble—it started as a soft kind of coaxing.
Sly comments from Suze and sly comments from Evan the Head. And I got
worried when the winter stretched on, the weeks threw down their great
length, the weeks were made of sleet and wind, and it became February—a
hard month. (p. 138)

Joanna Luloff's
The Beach at Galle Road
(Algonquin Books) is a collection of interlinked stories that bring the
effects of the twenty-five-year-long Sri Lankan civil war down to the
individual level. Luloff, a native American, spent almost two years in
Sri Lanka as a Peace Corps worker, giving her a firsthand view of the
country at war.
"Ghost Neighbors": After the war has taken her
family and dashed her dreams of becoming a teacher, Nilanthi returns to
her childhood home, where people from her past offer unwelcome and
questionable help. Overwhelmed with how life must be now, Nilanthi
becomes silent, talking only to her ghosts. One of them gives her a way
out; will Nilanthi listen?
The lye is
still under the bucket by the well. Drink some and we can dance here
together in circles until we are dizzy with spinning. (p. 232)
They all look good but The Beach at Galle Road stands out to me.
ReplyDeleteNot normally a short story fan but that Kevin Barry sounds interesting, I liked his other books.
ReplyDeleteI'm with Kathy. The Beach at Galle Road sounds really interesting. Reading something short every day is a good way to get some reading done.
ReplyDeleteI've been a reading slump and I think I should definitely start reading some short stories. The Beach at Galle Road sounds interesting!
ReplyDeletei always feel cheated when i read a short story ... if the premise and characters are involving i want more not less ...
ReplyDeleteLook like some good ones!
ReplyDelete