Several new short story collections with starred reviews appeal to a variety of interests and feature writing by award-winning authors:
Press Start to
Play will be released next Tuesday (8/18) and that, too, promises to be
high interest and entertaining for students.
These 26 stories have to do with video games and the attraction for their
participants. The editors (Daniel Wilson – Robopocalypse and
Hugo winner John Joseph Adams) plus other contributors will be instantly
recognizable to students and teachers, especially sci-fi fans. Examples include: Andy Weir (The Martian),
Holly Black (Tithe, Coldest Girl in Coldtown), Cory Doctorow (Little
Brother), T.C. Boyle (Tortilla Curtain), Hugh Howey (Wool),
plus writers from the gaming industry. And there is a foreword by Ernest Cline (Ready Player One and
the recent Armada). I am looking forward to having teachers
share some of these stories and discuss the idea of video games as narrative. This
collection should be fun to explore and provide hours of entertainment.
Award-winning author Neil Gaiman whose work will be included
in the forthcoming Ghostly also gave us Trigger Warning
earlier this year. Subtitled “Short Fiction and Disturbances,” some of the
stories and poems are rather bleak, dealing as Gaiman says, with “things that
wait for us in the dark corridors of our lives.” Gaiman has such a huge,
creative imagination and it is on full display in his recent collection.
If you are looking for more classic mystery stories, you may
like Resorting to Murder. Edited by Martin Edwards, this set contains fourteen stories from the golden age of British crime fiction, including ones by
Chesterton and Conan Doyle. Several selections are relatively rare and Resorting
to Murder joins numerous recent re-issues from Poisoned Pen Press.
Finally, be sure to look for a collection which has received
almost universal praise this summer: Music
for Wartime. Written by local
author Rebecca Makkai (The Borrower and The Hundred-Year House),
these stories show why her short fiction has appeared in four consecutive
additions of The Best American Short Stories. Recommended on NPR, pbs
and in local press, Makkai’s seventeen stories deal with family, with artists, and
with the human condition both during WWII and today.
If you have other short story collections to suggest, please
let us know. I am already planning additional
reviews for Sept/Oct titles including O. Henry Prize Stories and Anatomy
of Curiosity.
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