When my friend Christopher Golden announced the forthcoming The Twisted Book of Shadows anthology - which will start accepting submissions in February 2018, so mark your calendars! - I started considering what I could write and submit. That led to thinking about my
favorite short stories, which is a pretty short list (no pun intended)
as I tend to gravitate towards longer stories, full-length novels and
serialized television. I started asking friends, colleagues, and patrons
of all ages about their favorite anthologies and short
story
collections, and here's what we've got!
Jules, who runs the fantastic blog Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast, loves Naomi Shihab Nye's Honeybee,
which offers both poems and prose. She calls it "a rewarding read" -
"the results are both striking and moving, yet she manages to throw some
humor in there, too." Check out her review of the collection,
which includes quotes from the text, with the author's permission. (I
love this note from the author: "If I see a lone bee hovering in a
flower, I wish it well.")
Allison seconds the
recommendation for Naomi Shihab Nye, saying her work is "off all charts.
I’ve never read anything by her that
didn't have at least a touch of honeyed language. One of my other
favorite short story/essayists is Bailey White who used to read her
short stories and essays on All Things Considered. Her first book was Mama Makes Up Her Mind. Barbara Kingsolver and bell hooks are two others
I love."
Author and artist Sarah Jamila Stevenson, whose novels include The Truth Against the World and The Latte Rebellion, enjoyed the anthology Slasher Boys and Monster Girls edited by April Tucholke. "This 2015 anthology featuring some big names in YA literature brings a fresh perspective to classic horror tropes - and it's not for the faint-hearted. I'll never think of the Mad Tea Party in the same way again, that's for sure..."
Rachel's favorite anthology is The Best Science Fiction of the Year 3
edited
by Terry Carr. "This anthology got me hooked on science fiction and
fantasy when I was around 12 or 13, and I have been hooked ever since,"
she said. It contains two of her favorite short stories, Of Mist, Grass and
Sand by Vonda N. McIntyre and The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas by
Ursula K. LeGuin, both of which she considers "still incredibly relevant today."
Prompted by our conversation, she looked up the full table of contents
and added, "One of the ones I'd forgotten about, that hits me in a
completely
different way now, is The Women Men Don’t See, written by Alice Bradley
Sheldon under the pseudonym James Tiptree, Jr."
As for collections, he said, "The
easiest and truest answer is that Stephen King set the bar with Night Shift and Different Seasons. If you go back and read those today - the
former a collection of short stories and the latter a quartet of
novellas - you'll see the master at work. King didn’t realize it at the
time, but those were STATEMENTS, establishing the benchmark for weird
fiction. Years later, I wrote the introduction for Joe Hill's 20th Century Ghosts and I had no idea of his parentage. I should have known,
reading those stories, because that set a bar for a new generation.
Others that should absolutely be on your weird or horror fiction
collection list include all six volumes of Clive Barker's groundbreaking
Books of Blood, Shirley Jackson's The Lottery and Other Stories, and
Robert Shearman's Remember Why You Fear Me. On the fantasy side, Robert
Holdstock's The Bone Forest is an overlooked marvel, and Kelly Link's Stranger Things Happen is remarkable."
Thanks
to Chris for giving us so many recommendations -- and for giving me a segue to share my own! I really enjoyed Golden's fantastic short story collections The Secret Backs of Things and Tell My Sorrows to the Stones. The titles are fantastic and the collections fully deliver. He recently released Don't Go Alone, a collection of collaborations, which includes Joe Golem and the Copper Girl (co-written with Mike Mignola and part of their series of Joe Golem novels and comics), Ghosts of Albion animated films and books), and Wellness Check (co-written with Thomas E. Sniegoski and part of their fantastic dark fantasy series The Menagerie, which I really love).
Looking for books for younger readers and/or more classic fare? As a kid, there were collections of myths and scary stories that I read multiple times. Check out my booklist packed with short story collections and quick reads for elementary through high school readers. Have fun adding titles to your to-read pile, and feel free to leave your short story recommendations in the comments below!
Looking for books for younger readers and/or more classic fare? As a kid, there were collections of myths and scary stories that I read multiple times. Check out my booklist packed with short story collections and quick reads for elementary through high school readers. Have fun adding titles to your to-read pile, and feel free to leave your short story recommendations in the comments below!
1 comment :
Wonderful set of recs! I agree--anything by Kelly Link is fantastic. :)
Post a Comment