The best American short stories

Book - 1978

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813.08/Best
2019: 1 / 1 copies available
2020: 1 / 1 copies available
2021: 1 / 1 copies available
2022: 1 / 1 copies available
2023: 1 / 1 copies available
2024: 1 / 1 copies available
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Subjects
Genres
Short stories, American
Short stories, Canadian
Short stories
Serial publications
Published
Boston : Houghton Mifflin 1978-
Language
English
Item Description
"Selected from U.S. and Canadian magazines."
Includes the Yearbook of the American short story, 1978-<1980>.
Physical Description
volumes ; 22 cm
Also issued on sound disc
Also issued online
Publication Frequency
Annual
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780063275966
9780063275911
9780358724407
9781328485380
9781328485366
ISSN
00676233
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Pitlor ushers in her final installment as series editor of this long-running staple showcasing the year in short fiction. Of all the kids at the literary lunch table, the anthology might have it the hardest. Wearing plaid with stripes, unpacking the random items in its lunch box--it's hard for a cohesive personality to shine through, unlike those cool-kid single-author collections. But if readers are prepared for eclecticism--and since Best American Short Stories was established in 1915, we must be--these 20 stories have something for everyone. Guest edited by Groff, a seven-time Best American author, the collection includes some nods to short story royalty: Jhumpa Lahiri, Lori Ostlund, the late Laurie Colwin, and Jim Shepard are all represented. But as both Pitlor and Groff discuss in their introductions, Groff sent back Pitlor's initial batch of stories asking for something "rawer, meaner, spikier"--stories with their own "weird logic." (Groff's description of this aesthetic preference lands better than her diatribe against the first-person point of view, which precedes 12 of 20 stories in first-person.) In finding weird, spiky stories, Groff leans hard--and often thrillingly--on early-career writers. There is Katherine Damm's sparkling and funny "The Happiest Day of Your Life," featuring a young husband freewheeling into drunkenness at a wedding reception for his wife's ex-boyfriend. In Suzanne Wang's inventive "Mall of America," AI narrates a tale of corporate (and all-too-human) woe when an elderly man spends time after hours in the mall's arcade. Madeline Ffitch's "Seeing Through Maps" recounts the tense relationship between two neighbors with a complicated history. In Steven Duong's "Dorchester," a young writer has a poem go viral after an anti-Asian hate crime. All hits and no skips is a tall order, but this strong, solid compilation is well worth a short story lover's time. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.