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You are here: Home / Archives for short stories

short stories

Book Review: Good Bones, by Margaret Atwood

17th May 2012 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Photo by Just Chaos

Good Bones is a collection of (very) short stories by Margaret Atwood, probably best-known and loved for her novel The Handmaid’s Tale. I picked this up in hardback at a university book sale I organised a couple of years ago, having previously read The Handmaid’s Tale and Negotiating With The Dead, a collection of essays about writing. I was already part way through a book of short stories at the time so it went to the bottom of my TBR, until I pulled it out to read on the train in March. I don’t read short story collections very often but this year I’ve already read three. I think they’re a great way to have a break from teen/YA books that isn’t too long! I also think they’re fantastic for commuting, because if you know your reading speed and choose wisely, you can read a whole story or more during one journey. If I’m part way through a really good novel I find it really annoying when I then have to go do something else for seven or eight hours before I can pick it up again, but with short stories, I can finish one a couple of minutes before I get off the train. Perfect.

The first short story collection I read this year was Wayward Girls and Wicked Women, and Good Bones was quite similar in that there were often feminist messages behind the stories that I had to try to puzzle out. Again, this was a nice change from YA, which is usually quite straightforward. Not that YA novels don’t make me think, but it’s a different kind of contemplation. Usually I don’t have to wonder what a YA book is about, though I may ponder the issues raised in the story at length.

Good Bones is also quite a witty collection – some stories made me laugh, or at least had me smiling at their cleverness. I enjoy it when books make me smile whilst I’m on the train because other commuters always notice and I reckon it makes me seem mysterious but also happy!

My favourite stories were ‘The Little Red Hen Tells All’, which is a retelling of the children’s story about the little red hen who planted a grain of wheat, and ‘ Gertrude Talks Back’, which is from the point of view of Hamlet’s mother, but I liked all of the stories. Most of them are only three or four pages long, even in my little hardback edition, so they’re very quick to read. Unfortunately this makes some of them quite easy to forget, but on the other hand it seems to amplify the power of others.

I would recommend Good Bones to anyone who has enjoyed any of Margaret Atwood’s other works, anyone who likes short stories, and most especially to anyone who wants to try reading more short stories.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: anthology, book review, collection, feminism, Margaret Atwood, review, short stories, Virago

Book Review: Wayward Girls and Wicked Women, edited by Angela Carter

7th May 2012 By Julianne Leave a Comment

I’ve been really busy since the start of February and the result is that I’ve gotten ten books behind in my reviewing. But today, this seems like serendipity rather than poor time management as I’m reviewing Wayward Girls and Wicked Women on its editor’s birthday (she would have been 72!).

It’s an anthology of short stories, all about women and girls who don’t behave in the way that they’re supposed to. Some of them just bend the rules of femininity, tiptoeing around scandal, others wander down morally grey paths, a few are borderline evil, but most of them show the irony of the title – the behaviour of their characters may be regarded as wayward or wicked, but they are just trying to live their lives. I can honestly say that I enjoyed every story in this collection, and all of them made me think. Some of them are still regularly popping into my mind two months later.

Wayward Girls and Wicked Women features tales of varied lengths and a couple of the longest, Colette’s ‘The Rainy Moon’ and Vernon Lee’s ‘Oke of Okehurst’ did drag a bit, though they are also two of the most memorable and interesting stories.

I also really liked ‘Violet’ by Frances Towers, ‘The Long Trial’ by AndrĂ©e Chedid, and ‘The Earth’ by Djuna Barnes. I’d read Angela Carter’s own contribution, ‘The Loves of Lady Purple’ before, as it also appears in one of her own collections, Fireworks, and of course in the collected short stories volume Burning Your Boats (I own both), but it’s a story with wonderful atmosphere and I really liked the way that the author summarised it when giving an overview of the stories in her introduction to the anthology.

My copy is one of the old green covered editions which is cool in a retro way, but I really like the design of the reissue, both in hardback and paperback.

A much better review than mine

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: Angela Carter, anthology, book review, collection, feminism, review, short stories, Virago

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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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