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You are here: Home / Archives for short stories

short stories

Book Review: St Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves, by Karen Russell

16th June 2013 By Julianne Leave a Comment

If there is a more intriguing title out there than St Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves, well, I’d love to hear it, but I’d also be surprised by it’s very existence! When I saw the spine of this book in the shop I couldn’t resist picking it up. It’s a collection of short stories, and one of the review quotes on the back cover mentions Angela Carter, who is one of my favourite writers. I took it straight up to the till. It took me a few months to finish, as with all short story books. I started reading it when I was reading a novel that was too large to cart around on the tube and it made a great travel read, as it’s quite slim and easy to slip into.

The stories are not connected but what they do have in common is their magical realist atmosphere and quirky settings. Most of the stories draw on mythological or supernatural ideas and almost all the narrators or protagonists are teenagers, predominantly boys, but there are a few girls, most notably in the title story.

As I’ve written before in other reviews, I have issues with short stories and novels which feel like snapshots of a character’s life rather than complete stories in their own right. I can’t say that I didn’t have issues with the abrupt endings of some of the stories in St Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves, but Karen Russell’s imagination is so fantastic and her ideas are so interesting that I didn’t mind that much.

My favourite story was the title story, ‘St Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves’, which is about a pack of girls, the human children of werewolves, who have been sent by their parents into the care of a group of nuns, who give them new names and try to teach them to behave as humans are supposed to. I also loved  ‘Z.Z.’s Sleep-Away Camp for Disordered Dreamers’, about children with both magical and non-magical sleep issues, and ‘from Children’s Reminiscences of the Westward Migration’, which is narrated by a boy whose father is a Minotaur.

I won’t say anymore because at least half the fun of reading these stories comes from discovering the details! I would like to read more of Karen Russell’s work, but her novel, Swamplandia! is based on one of the stories that I wasn’t quite as keen on, so I might skip that and go straight to Vampires in the Lemon Grove, her second short story collection.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Karen Russell, literary fiction, magical realism, short stories, teenage protagonist in literary fiction

Book Review: Povídky: Short Stories by Czech Women, edited by Nancy Hawker

12th June 2012 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Telegram Books is an independent publisher of international fiction and a few years ago they published several themed collections featuring women writers from different countries. Povídky: Short Stories by Czech Women is the first of these collections that I have tried. I really enjoyed it and will definitely try to read more of the collections from this series.

The writers are from a wide range of backgrounds and thus the stories in the collection are very varied – some more overtly political and others more personal. Some are snippets of memoir, others are fictional fables. A list of all the writers, with titles and synopses for the stories, can be found on the Telegram website here.

My favourite story in the collection has to be ‘A Day in the Half-Life of Class 4D’ by Kateřina Sidonová, which follows a group of teenage girls as they battle with teachers, smoke in the boys’ toilets, joke and tease each other, and try to avoid humiliation, all during one day at school. I enjoyed it so much that this story alone would make the book a keeper.

I was also amused by ‘The Path of Medium Sinfulness’, by Viola Fischerová, about a little boy who struggles with the idea that animals don’t go to heaven, after the death of his pet dog, and the imaginative bargain he makes in the end. ‘How I Went to School’, by Tera Fabiánová, is a memoir about going to school as a Roma girl, which was shocking and sad but is written with enough comedy to make it easy to read.

I would recommend Povídky to readers that enjoy short fiction and that would like to broaden their horizons.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: anthology, book review, books, collection, Czech, review, short stories

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Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

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