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Graphic: Animal cruelty, Animal death, Gun violence, Infidelity, Misogyny, Racial slurs, Racism, Sexism, Violence, Car accident, Murder, and Alcohol
Moderate: Sexual assault, Slavery, Xenophobia, Sexual harassment, and War
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- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
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- Strong character development? No
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Book Review: Exploring Brevity and Brilliance with Terry O’Brien’s ’50 Greatest Short Stories’
After a brief hiatus from reading (thanks to my full-time advertising gig), I found my way back into it, and my rekindled literary journey commenced with ‘50 Greatest Short Stories’ curated by Terry O’Brien. This anthology served as the perfect re-entry point, welcoming me with O’Brien’s promise of diverse narratives and encapsulating the essence of storytelling in succinct, captivating forms and genres.
As a novice reader, I discovered that the brevity of short stories was both challenging and inviting, a unique canvas demanding attention to every word. The strength of this collection lies not only in the diversity of themes but also its ability to distil complex emotions and intricate plots into concise narratives. Each story is a masterclass in brevity, urging readers to immerse themselves in a world of characters and settings that unfold.
Personally, one of the hallmarks of a great anthology is the resonance of its characters, and this anthology excels in this regard. O’Brien introduces us to a myriad of characters, each with their own struggles, triumphs, and idiosyncrasies. It’s like attending a quirky family reunion where everyone has a unique story to tell, and you’re the eager guest trying to keep up. Whether it’s the poignant tale of a love lost or the humorous escapades of an eccentric protagonist, the characters linger in the reader’s mind, leaving a lasting impression that transcends the brevity of the format.
Featuring 50 stories and more than 20 authors, it was like jumping into a literary banquet of some of the most revered authors I had heard and read about, including timeless masters like Edgar Allen Poe, Charles Dickens, Rudyard Kipling, Anton Chekhov, Virginia Woolf, and F. Scott Fitzgerald. There were also new discoveries for me, thanks to my limited literary exposure, such as Ambrose Bierce, Saki, Kate Chopin, and more. The inclusion of such esteemed authors adds an extra layer of richness to the anthology. While I wouldn’t label it as the greatest stories ever written, there are certainly some ever-lasting classics.
Now, onto the stories that left a mark and resonated with me. In quite a few tales, like ‘The Last Leaf,’ the use of symbolism added a layer of complexity to my reading experience, prompting me to revisit the story multiple times. Re-reading ‘The Curious Case of Benjamin Button’ and ‘Amy Foster’ was indeed heart-warming. The highlights for me were ‘The Lady or the Tiger?’ and ‘The Boarded Window.’ The emotional resonance lingered long after I turned the last page, leaving me with a sense of contemplation. A few of my other favourites were ‘The Lottery Ticket,’ ‘The Pit and the Pendulum,’ ‘The Lady with the Dog,’ and ‘An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge,’ among others.
“A short story must be short!” wrote O’Brien in the introduction. The shortest story in this collection was ‘My Financial Career’ by Stephen Leacock. Talk about brevity at its best—it was also extremely well-written and humorous.
One good decision I made right at the beginning was to approach the stories randomly. I guess that saved me from a rather dull start. I also appreciate a bit of randomness, especially when I cannot do that while reading a novel.
In conclusion, ’50 Greatest Short Stories’ is a testament to the enduring power of short fiction. I highly recommend this anthology to readers seeking a diverse and enriching literary experience. O’Brien’s curation skilfully navigates the vast landscape of human stories, offering a collection that is both timeless and contemporary—a literary treasure trove waiting to be explored.
Pick up Terry O’Brien’s ’50 Greatest Short Stories’ from any Kunzum store or WhatsApp +91.8800200280 to order. Buy the book(s) and the coffee’s on us.
About the Reviewer:
Richa Shah spent a decade in the fast-paced world of advertising before deciding to take a leap into the slow, yet enthralling, and ever-growing realm of home brewing Specialty Coffee, all while exploring new and catching up on some unread books. Amidst the pages of books and sips of coffee, Richa has found joy in this new chapter of her journey. Follow her here: Instagram
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The Best Reviewed Short Story Collections of 2021
Featuring haruki murakami, brandon taylor, elizabeth mccracken, kevin barry, lily king, and more.
Well, friends, another grim and grueling plague year is drawing to a close, and that can mean only one thing: it’s time to put on our Book Marks stats hats and tabulate the best reviewed books of the past twelve months.
Yes, using reviews drawn from more than 150 publications, over the next two weeks we’ll be revealing the most critically-acclaimed books of 2021, in the categories of (deep breath): Memoir and Biography ; Sci-Fi, Fantasy, and Horror ; Short Story Collections; Essay Collections; Poetry; Mystery and Crime; Graphic Literature; Literature in Translation; General Fiction; and General Nonfiction.
Today’s installment: Short Story Collections .
Brought to you by Book Marks , Lit Hub’s “Rotten Tomatoes for books.”
1. Afterparties by Anthony Veasna So (Ecco)
22 Rave • 5 Positive • 1 Mixed
“The presence of the author is so vivid in Afterparties , Anthony Veasna So’s collection of stories, he seems to be at your elbow as you read … The personality that animates Afterparties is unmistakably youthful, and the stories themselves are mainly built around conditions of youth—vexed and tender relationships with parents, awkward romances, nebulous worries about the future. But from his vantage on the evanescent bridge to maturity, So is puzzling out some big questions, ones that might be exigent from different vantages at any age. The stories are great fun to read—brimming over with life and energy and comic insight and deep feeling.”
–Deborah Eisenberg ( New York Review of Books )
2. Filthy Animals by Brandon Taylor (Riverhead)
19 Rave • 7 Positive • 2 Mixed Read an interview with Brandon Taylor here
“Taylor plays the Lionel-Charles-Sophie storyline for all its awkwardness and resentment, but it can feel like a note held too long to suspend commitment, which is the resolution we’re trained to expect … The violence is neither glamorous nor gratuitous; it is senseless without being pointless. In contrast, Taylor presents such earnest moments of vulnerability in Anne of Cleves that my breath hitched … Some writers have the gift of perfect pitch when writing dialogue; Taylor’s gift is perfect tempo. In a band of writers, he’d be the drummer who sticks to a steady moderato. He neither rushes a story to its high notes nor drags the pace so that we can admire his voice. And as a plotter, he doesn’t rely on gasp-inducing reveals … Taylor’s superpower is compressing a lifetime of backstory into a paragraph – sometimes just a sentence … I’ve come to expect, in fiction, the story of the Sad Gay Youth who is rejected by his often religious family and thereafter becomes self-destructive or reckless. And while Taylor refracts versions of this story throughout the collection, he does so without overly romanticising it … He is a writer of enormous subtlety and of composure beyond his years.”
–Ian Williams ( The Guardian )
3. First Person Singular by Haruki Murakami (Knopf)
13 Rave • 17 Positive • 7 Mixed • 5 Pan
“… a blazing and brilliant return to form … a taut and tight, suspenseful and spellbinding, witty and wonderful group of eight stories … there isn’t a weak one in the bunch. The stories echo with Murakami’s preoccupations. Nostalgia and longing for the charged, evocative moments of young adulthood. Memory’s power and fragility; how identity forms from random decisions, ‘minor incidents,’ and chance encounters; the at once intransigent and fragile nature of the ‘self.’ Guilt, shame, and regret for mistakes made and people damaged by foolish or heartless choices. The power and potency of young love and the residual weight of fleeting erotic entanglements. Music’s power to make indelible impressions, elicit buried memories, connect otherwise very different people, and capture what words cannot. The themes become a kind of meter against which all the stories make their particular, chiming rhythms … The reading experience is unsettled by a pervasive blurring of the lines between fantasy and reality, dream and waking … Most of the narrators foreground the act of telling and ruminate on the intention behind and effects of disclosing secrets, putting inchoate impulses, fears, or yearnings into clear, logical prose … This mesmerizing collection would make a superb introduction to Murakami for anyone who hasn’t yet fallen under his spell; his legion of devoted fans will gobble it up and beg for more.”
–Pricilla Gilman ( The Boston Globe )
4. That Old Country Music by Kevin Barry (Doubleday)
13 Rave • 10 Positive •1 Mixed
“There’s not a bad story in the bunch, and it’s as accomplished a book as Barry has ever written … Barry does an excellent job probing the psyche of his diffident protagonist, and ends the story with an unexpected moment of sweetness that’s anything but cloying—realism doesn’t need to be miserablism, he seems to hint; sometimes things actually do work out … Barry has a rare gift for crafting characters the reader cares about despite their flaws; in just 13 pages, he manages to make Hannah and Setanta come to life through sharp dialogue and keen observations … Barry proves to be a master of writing about both love and cruelty … Barry brilliantly evokes both the good and bad sides of love, and does so with stunningly gorgeous writing … There’s not an aspect of writing that Barry doesn’t excel at. His dialogue rings true, and he’s amazingly gifted at scene-setting—he evokes both the landscape of western Ireland and the landscape of the human heart beautifully. His greatest accomplishment, perhaps, is his understanding of the ways our collective psyche works; he seems to have an innate sense of why people behave the way we do, and exactly what we’re capable of, both good and bad.”
–Michael Schaub ( NPR )
5. Milk Blood Heat by Dantiel W. Moniz (Grove)
17 Rave • 1 Positive Listen to an interview with Dantiel W. Moniz here
“Mortality is the undercurrent in Dantiel W. Moniz’s electrifying debut story collection, Milk Blood Heat , but where there’s death there is the whir of life, too. A lot of collections consist of some duds, yet every single page in this book is a shimmering seashell that contains the sound of multiple oceans. Reading one of Moniz’s stories is like holding your breath underwater while letting the salt sting your fresh wounds. It’s exhilarating and shocking and even healing. The power in these stories rests in their veracity, vitality and vulnerability.”
–Michelle Filgate ( The Washington Post )
6. The Dangers of Smoking in Bed by Mariana Enriquez (Hogarth)
15 Rave 2 Positive Read a story from The Dangers of Smoking in Bed here
“There’s something thrilling about other people’s suffering—at least within this collection’s 12 stories of death, sex and the occult. Horrors are relayed in a stylish deadpan … Enriquez’s plots deteriorate with satisfying celerity … Largely it’s insatiable women, raggedy slum dwellers and dead children—those who are ordinarily powerless—who wield unholy power in this collection, and they seem uninterested in being reasonable. And Enriquez is particularly adept at capturing the single-minded intensity of teenage girls … If some of these stories end vaguely, the best ones close on the verge of some transgressive climax … To Enriquez, there’s pleasure in the perverse.”
–Chelsea Leu ( The New York Times Book Review )
7. The Souvenir Museum by Elizabeth McCracken (Ecco)
13 Rave • 2 Positive • 1 Mixed Read Elizabeth McCracken on savoring the mystery of stories here
“Elizabeth McCracken’s The Souvenir Museum begins with one of the funniest short stories I’ve read in a long time … I had to stop reading ‘The Irish Wedding’ several times to explain to my husband why I was laughing so hard. I kept thinking: I wish I were reading a whole book about these people … they’re all beguiling … This tale, like much of McCracken’s work, captures the mixed bag that characterizes most people’s lives … McCracken’s writing is never dull. She ends this fantastic collection with a second English wedding and its aftermath, nearly 20 years after the first, delivering happiness tempered by sobering circumstances—and a satisfying symmetry.”
–Heller McAlpin ( NPR )
8. Wild Swims by Dorthe Nors (Graywolf)
13 Rave • 1 Positive Read an excerpt from Wild Swims here
“How slippery the work of the Danish writer Dorthe Nors is, how it sideswipes and gleams … The stories are vivid the way a flash of immobilizing pain is vivid … Perhaps because they’re so very short and because they mostly sketch slight interior shifts in her characters, Nors’s stories all feel a little bashful, a little tender. Surely this is intentional … Most of her stories are too short to linger deeply in time or consciousness; the characters spin back into their silence almost as soon as they emerge on the page. Nors is a master at portraying female rage, but here there is also no violent explosion outward, instead a sort of inner collapse; her characters assiduously resist confronting their fury until it rises up against them and attacks their bodies … The sense of simultaneous, furious upwelling into text and retraction into shame or reticence gives the stories a powerful undercurrent, as if they were constantly wrestling with themselves. Inherently self-contradicting, they wobble interestingly on their axes, pulled between outraged individualism and the restrictive Janteloven.”
–Lauren Groff ( The New York Review of Books )
9. Walking on Cowrie Shells by Nana Nkweti (Graywolf)
12 Rave • 1 Mixed Read an interview with Nana Nkweti here
“The pure energy of the words strikes first, the thrumming, soaring, frenetic pace of Nana Nkweti’s expression … None of these stories end with a miraculous healing. Even where revelations occur, they never erase scars. Nkweti uses genre tropes to subvert our expectations. She employs the zombie story, the fairy tale, and the confessional in order to invert conventions … The levity of Nkweti’s writing can make even passing descriptions a delight … Occasionally the writing veers into the overwrought … But the sheer speed of Nkweti’s expression allows for correction in midair, and her keen descriptive eye provides more pleasures than missteps … Her inventiveness dazzles.”
–Lee Thomas ( Los Angeles Review of Books )
10. My Monticello by Jocelyn Nicole Johnson (Henry Holt)
9 Rave • 4 Positive 1 Mixed Read Jocelyn Nicole Johnson on how writing “vengeful fiction” can make you a better person, here
“Jocelyn Nicole Johnson uses history to spectacular effect in her debut fiction collection … What makes My Monticello particularly resonant is that it does not stray far from life as we know it today. In the near future conjured by Johnson, there are the heat waves and wildfires that bring climate change into view. There is fallout from a fraught election. There is the vile replacement theory rhetoric of the right wing. But the lives of Johnson’s richly drawn characters—their personal stories—are always in focus. And, because of it, the storytelling is propulsive, as we follow these refugees along a harrowing journey, with danger ever at their heels. My Monticello is, quite simply, an extraordinary debut from a gifted writer with an unflinching view of history and what may come of it.”
–Anissa Gray ( The Washington Post )
Our System:
RAVE = 5 points • POSITIVE = 3 points • MIXED = 1 point • PAN = -5 points
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50 Great Short Stories is a comprehensive selection from the world's finest short fiction. The authors represented range from Hawthorne, Maupassant, and Poe, through Henry James, Conrad, Aldous Huxley, and James Joyce, to Hemingway, Katherine Anne Porter, Faulkner, E.B. White, Saroyan, and O'Connor.
Terry O'Brien's "50 Greatest Short Stories" is a collection of classic and contemporary short fiction from around the world. The book features stories by some of the most celebrated authors in the history of the genre, including Mark Twain, Edgar Allan Poe, Anton Chekhov, and F. Scott Fitzgerald.
3.76. 347 ratings51 reviews. A Splendid collection of 50 stories from Washington Irving's 'The Adventures Of A German Student' to John Updike's 'The Lucid Eye in Silver Town'. Such classic stories as Edgar Allan Poe’s 'Ms. Found in a Bottle', Bret Harte’s 'The Outcasts of Poker Flat', Sherwood Anderson’s 'Death in the Woods', Stephen ...
what makes a great short story? The sudden unforgettable revelation of character; the vision of a world through another's eyes; the glimpse of truth; the capture of a moment in time. All this the short story, at its best, is uniquely capable of conveying, for in its very shortness lies its greatest strength.
O’Brien’s curation skilfully navigates the vast landscape of human stories, offering a collection that is both timeless and contemporary—a literary treasure trove waiting to be explored. Pick up Terry O’Brien’s ’50 Greatest Short Stories’ from any Kunzum store or WhatsApp +91.8800200280 to order. Buy the book(s) and the coffee’s ...
The Best Reviewed Short Story Collections of 2021 Featuring Haruki Murakami, Brandon Taylor, Elizabeth McCracken, Kevin Barry, Lily King, and more By Book Marks