(no subject)
Sep. 7th, 2008 08:52 amI picked up Kaui Hart Hemmings' House of Thieves for fifty cents, which was one very good reason to buy it! The other, better reason was that Kaui Hart Hemmings was a Stegner Fellow at my school for a year and we read one of her stories in one of my classes, and I liked that story and have an odd wistful feeling of school-patriotism now I am gone from it. So I bought and read it despite my problems with the Literary Short Story*, and I am overall glad I did, I think. Although some of the stories were very, very Literary Short Story ("I am writing about a middle-aged man who is having difficulty connecting with people and quite possibly a mid-life crisis! My workshop will LOVE this") there were some that I thought were very good, mostly all the ones that had younger and very unique voices. My favorite is still probably the one I read at school, "Begin With an Outline," which does fun things with the short-story format; I also quite liked "Secret Clutch," in which a teenaged boy tries to lay a claim on his nanny and she punches him in the groin. I think the author has a book out now going off one of the stories, but unfortunately it is one of the Middle-Aged Man stories that did not grab me so much, so I will probably not be reading it.
*To elaborate further on my problems with the Literary Short Story, which I think I have talked about before: there is a trend in the LSS to think that denouement is not really necessary so long as you have an interesting setup and conclude with an image that could pass for Epiphany. I blame this on James Joyce. Genre short stories tend to be better about this, i.e. they actually have a plot and a point.
*To elaborate further on my problems with the Literary Short Story, which I think I have talked about before: there is a trend in the LSS to think that denouement is not really necessary so long as you have an interesting setup and conclude with an image that could pass for Epiphany. I blame this on James Joyce. Genre short stories tend to be better about this, i.e. they actually have a plot and a point.