All in Short Story Collections
I wasn’t sure what kind of reading I was going to be able to handle during the high-anxiety week of the election, which ended up an emotional and difficult week for my family, as well. Tiny Beautiful Things is formatted as letters and replies from an online advice column. And although I didn’t have the energy to contemplate becoming a better version of myself, reading lots of short pieces was easier for my brain than one long book would have been.
Wow! Can Amor Towles write! I found myself repeatedly amazed at his ability to craft a sentence, a paragraph and ultimately a short story. He is most assuredly one of the greatest living American authors writing at this time. For those of you who loved A Gentleman in Moscow (read review here), Rules of Civility and/or The Lincoln Highway (read review here), you are in for a treat with Table for Two.
If reviewing Curtis Sittenfeld two months in a row doesn’t convince you of my love for her books, I don’t know what will. A collection of short stories, Sittenfeld published You Think It, I'll Say It in 2018. We often mention in our reviews that we take it as the sign of a good book when we find ourselves thinking about the characters or story after we finish reading.
How could an author with a name like this be anything but wonderful? All kidding aside, King has written some fabulous novels: Writers & Lovers, Euphoria and The English Teacher are among her best. Five Tuesdays in Winter is her debut collection of short stories. As I’ve shared before, short story collections are not usually my first choice of what to read. But I am so glad that I pushed myself to read this collection.
If you read only one collection of short stories this year, The Secret Lives of Church Ladies should be the one. This group of nine stories is Philyaw’s debut publication and deserves all of the accolades that it has received, including winning the 2021 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction.
I have found in my limited reading of short story collections that when I find one I really enjoy, I tend to read them even faster than I would a novel. There is something about finishing a story and knowing that the next one holds an entirely new set of characters and problems that keeps me turning pages. Alexia Arthurs drew me in over and over, and I ended up reading the entire collection in about a day and a half.
Like many readers I suspect, my only Zora Neale Hurston experience was reading (and loving) Their Eyes Were Watching God in high school. Although I remember truly enjoying the book, I didn’t remember much about the author, and so was glad to find this short story collection comes with a lengthy intro. It reminded me about her rise to fame at a time when Black fiction was scarce and Black, female authors almost entirely unknown.
For me to pick up a book of short stories to read -- when it hasn’t been selected by one or another of my book clubs -- is unusual, to say the least. I must have received some sort of silent signal that this collection was going to knock my socks off. Curtis Sittenfeld wrote the books Prep andEligible, both great reads. I share with you now that she also writes great short stories.
Call me lazy, but I think one of the reasons that I don’t often pick up collections of short stories is because they take a bit more effort to read than a novel. I mean, you’ve just figured out who all the characters are and how they relate to one another and where the story is set and when, and the story is over and you have to start all over again with another story. Who wants to work that hard, right? Wrong! You must read Elizabeth Strout’s newest short story collection, Anything Is Possible.
I don’t often read short stories, and have read exactly zero books set in the Philippines, but I am extremely glad to have picked this one up! Each story centers around either a visitor to the Philippines, or a Philippino living abroad in places as far as Bahrain and as near (to us) as Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. Alvar has the incredible ability to jump into her stories and make you feel as though you have had a 200-page intro to the characters and circumstances with which she presents you.