edited by Yuka Igarashi ‧ RELEASE DATE: Aug. 25, 2020
An anthology full of promise for more and better (and, with luck, happier) stories to come.
The annual PEN award volume delivers another slate of outstanding stories from emerging writers of short fiction.
It being a fraught year already, it makes sense that many of the stories gathered here feature characters who fret about money and bleak futures. Sometimes these worries are nested, one unfolding from another. In Ani Cooney’s “Evangelina Concepcion,” for instance, the first glimpse we have of the teenage narrator comes as she gathers up her mother’s things for a yard sale. She is without visible emotion, following her mother’s mandate: “You will be like steel. You can cry the first few days, but…I expect you to get up and help your father.” Her mother has died in an automobile accident. The family needs money, but there’s more: The accident was the fault of a drunk man driving a BMW, and therefore presumably wealthy, and the news account of the accident highlighted a pedestrian who was also killed, a young woman named Ashley who adored Paris. That the paper didn’t mention the name of the unfortunate Evangelina Concepcion and her love for Los Angeles speaks volumes about the casual cruelties of class and race, cruelties that Cooney deftly brings to the fore. In Willa C. Richards’ meaningfully titled “Failure To Thrive,” a graduate student with a newborn infant confronts a miserable existence that binds mental illness, near servitude to one’s thesis adviser, and being “so poor we had begun to eat only the casseroles Alice’s mother sent over in weekly batches.” In another standout story, by Kristen Sahaana Surya, a Tamil-speaking woman is “sold to a man twelve years her senior…with the promise of cash and a cow.” His abuse yields unexpected revenge of a fiscal nature. Where there are marriages, as in Matthew Jeffrey Vegari’s densely layered “Don’t Go To Strangers,” evoking a blend of the best of Cheever and Carver, they are miserable—not just because of money, but always with the lack of it in play.
An anthology full of promise for more and better (and, with luck, happier) stories to come.Pub Date: Aug. 25, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-64622-022-9
Page Count: 240
Publisher: Catapult
Review Posted Online: June 16, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2020
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edited by Yuka Igarashi
by Matt Haig ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 3, 2024
Haig’s positive message will keep his fans happy.
A British widow travels to Ibiza and learns that it’s never too late to have a happy life.
In a world that seems to be getting more unstable by the moment, Haig’s novels are a steady ship in rough seas, offering a much-needed positive message. In works like the bestselling The Midnight Library (2020), he reminds us that finding out what you truly love and where you belong in the universe are the foundations of building a better existence. His latest book continues this upbeat messaging, albeit in a somewhat repetitive and facile way. Retired British schoolteacher Grace Winters discovers that an old acquaintance has died and left her a ramshackle home in Ibiza. A widow who lost her only child years earlier, Grace is at first reluctant to visit the house, because, at 72, she more or less believes her chance for happiness is over—but when she rouses herself to travel to the island, she discovers the opposite is true. A mystery surrounds her friend’s death involving a roguish islander, his activist daughter, an internationally famous DJ, and a strange glow in the sea that acts as a powerful life force and upends Grace’s ideas of how the cosmos works. Framed as a response to a former student’s email, the narrative follows Grace’s journey from skeptic (she was a math teacher, after all) to believer in the possibility of magic as she learns to move on from the past. Her transformation is the book’s main conflict, aside from a protest against an evil developer intent on destroying Ibiza’s natural beauty. The outcome is never in doubt, and though the story often feels stretched to the limit—this novel could have easily been a novella—the author’s insistence on the power of connection to change lives comes through loud and clear.
Haig’s positive message will keep his fans happy.Pub Date: Sept. 3, 2024
ISBN: 9780593489277
Page Count: 368
Publisher: Viking
Review Posted Online: Aug. 3, 2024
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2024
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by Matt Haig
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by Matt Haig
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by Matt Haig
by Marjan Kamali ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 2, 2024
A touching portrait of courage and friendship.
A lifetime of friendship endures many upheavals.
Ellie and Homa, two young girls growing up in Tehran, meet at school in the early 1950s. Though their families are very different, they become close friends. After the death of Ellie’s father, she and her difficult mother must adapt to their reduced circumstances. Homa’s more warm and loving family lives a more financially constrained life, and her father, a communist, is politically active—to his own detriment and that of his family’s welfare. When Ellie’s mother remarries and she and Ellie relocate to a more exclusive part of the city, the girls become separated. They reunite years later when Homa is admitted to Ellie’s elite high school. Now a political firebrand with aspirations to become a judge and improve the rights of women in her factionalized homeland, Homa works toward scholastic success and begins practicing political activism. Ellie follows a course, plotted originally by her mother, toward marriage. The tortuous path of the girls’ adult friendship over the following decades is played out against regime change, political persecution, and devastating loss. Ellie’s well-intentioned but naïve approach stands in stark contrast to Homa’s commitment to human rights, particularly for women, and her willingness to risk personal safety to secure those rights. As narrated by Ellie, the girls’ story incorporates frequent references to Iranian food, customs, and beliefs common in the years of tumult and reforms accompanying the Iranian Revolution. Themes of jealousy—even in close friendships—and the role of the shir zan, the courageous “lion women” of Iran who effect change, recur through the narrative. The heartaches associated with emigration are explored along with issues of personal sacrifice for the sake of the greater good (no matter how remote it may seem).
A touching portrait of courage and friendship.Pub Date: July 2, 2024
ISBN: 9781668036587
Page Count: 336
Publisher: Gallery Books/Simon & Schuster
Review Posted Online: April 19, 2024
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2024
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