Short Stories in September, II: Willie Davis, Gerald Durrell, Sue Mell and Lore Segal

Four more collections down. Two of them blend fictional and autobiographical modes. Two are set primarily in New York City, with another hanging out in Kentucky and the fourth touring Europe. Three of the authors were new to me and one is an old favourite. I’m borrowing Marcie’s five-sentence review format to keep things simple.

 

I Can Outdance Jesus by Willie Davis (2024)

I don’t often take a look at unsolicited review copies, but I couldn’t resist the title of this and I’m glad I gave it a try. Davis’s 10 stories, several of flash length, take place in small-town Kentucky and feature a lovable cast of pranksters, drunks, and spinners of tall tales. The title phrase comes from one of the controversial songs the devil-may-care narrator of “Battle Hymn” writes. My two favourites were “Kid in a Well,” about one-upmanship and storytelling in a local bar, and “The Peddlers,” which has two rogues masquerading as Mormon missionaries. I got vague Denis Johnson vibes from this sassy, gritty but funny collection; Davis is a talent!

Published by Cowboy Jamboree Press. With thanks to publicist Lori Hettler for the free e-copy for review.

 

The Picnic and Suchlike Pandemonium by Gerald Durrell (1979)

If you’ve read his autobiographical trilogy or seen The Durrells, you’ll be familiar with the quirky, chaotic family atmosphere that reigns in the first two pieces: “The Picnic,” about a luckless excursion in Dorset, and “The Maiden Voyage,” set on a similarly disastrous sailing in Greece (“Basically, the rule in Greece is to expect everything to go wrong and to try to enjoy it whether it does or not”). No doubt there’s some comic exaggeration at work here, especially in “The Public School Education,” about running into a malapropism-prone ex-girlfriend in Venice, and “The Havoc of Havelock,” in which Durrell, like an agony uncle, lends volumes of the sexologist’s work to curious hotel staff in Bournemouth. The final two France-set stories, however, feel like pure fiction even though they involve the factual framing device of hearing a story from a restaurateur or reading a historical manuscript that friends inherited from a French doctor. “The Michelin Man” is a cheeky foodie one with a surprisingly gruesome ending; “The Entrance” is a full-on dose of horror worthy of R.I.P. I wouldn’t say this is essential reading for Durrell fans, but it was a pleasant way of passing the time. (Secondhand – Lions Bookshop, Alnwick, 2021)

 

A New Day by Sue Mell (2024)

Three suites of linked stories focus on young women whose choices in the 1980s have ramifications decades later. Chance meetings, addictions, ill-considered affairs, and random events all take their toll. Emma house-sits and waitresses while hoping in vain for her acting career to take off; “all she felt was a low-grade mourning for what she’d lost and hadn’t attained.” My favourite pair was about Nina, who is a photographer’s assistant in “Single Lens Reflex” and 13 years later, in “Photo Finish,” bumps into the photographer again in Central Park. With wistful character studies and nostalgic snapshots of changing cities, this is a stylish and accomplished collection.

Published by She Writes Press on September 3. With thanks to publicist Caitlin Hamilton Summie for the free e-copy for review.

 

Ladies’ Lunch and Other Stories by Lore Segal (2023)

The first section contains nine linked stories about a group of five elderly female friends. Bessie jokes that “wakes and funerals are the cocktail parties of the old,” and Ruth indeed mistakes a shivah for a party and meets a potential beau who never quite successfully invites her on a date. One of their members leaves the City for a nursing home; “Sans Teeth, Sans Taste” is a good example of the morbid sense of humour. A few unrelated stories draw on Segal’s experience being evacuated from Vienna to London by Kindertransport; “Pneumonia Chronicles” is one of several autobiographical essays that bring events right up to the Covid era – closing with the bonus story “Ladies’ Zoom.” The ladies’ stories are quite amusing, but the book as a whole feels like an assortment of minor scraps; it was published when Segal, a New Yorker contributor, was 95. (Secondhand – National Trust bookshop, 2023)

Postscript: Segal died on 7 October 2024, aged 96.

 

I’ll have a couple more reviews roundups between now and early October.

Currently reading: The Lone-Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven by Sherman Alexie, The Skeleton in the Cupboard by Lilija Berzinska; The Woman Who Gave Birth to Rabbits by Emma Donoghue; The Best Short Stories 2023: The O. Henry Prize Winners, ed. Lauren Groff; Waltzing the Cat by Pam Houston; Dreams of Dead Women’s Handbags by Shena Mackay; How to Disappear by Tara Masih; The Souvenir Museum by Elizabeth McCracken; Like Life by Lorrie Moore; The Long Swim by Teresa Svoboda; In Love and Trouble by Alice Walker

13 responses

  1. Rebecca Moon Ruark's avatar

    Ahhh, I love a good short story collection. But I usually gravitate to novels. Maybe because too many short stories remind me too much of my MFA program, where the thing seemed to be to impress a reader rather than entertain or inform in a genuine way. Best collection I’ve read in a good long while is from Rachel Swearingen–not new–called How to Walk on Water. Traditional, longer short stories, 10 in all, and not a clunker in the bunch!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Me, too; I have to force myself to make a special effort to read them one month per year. The Groff-edited anthology I’m reading is rather like that, full of show-offy pieces. But also, genuinely excellent stuff.

      The Swearingen sounds great. Thanks for the rec!

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Liz Dexter's avatar

    That’s a nice lot of short stories, I didn’t know Durrell had written actual fiction and sounds like one for me to avoid, though I do love his autobiographies and animal collecting books (hm, will they stand up to modern ideas, though, I wonder).

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    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Well, the stories are ostensibly autobiographical but they feel more exaggerated and crafted than others of his books. The ghost story, in particular, seemed like he just fancied writing something scary and then made up the framing device.

      (No doubt there would be some casual racism and sexism. There was a tiny bit of the latter here in his attitude toward his ex.)

      Liked by 1 person

  3. A Life in Books's avatar

    Three of these are very appealing as I’m fond of linked short stories, New York settings and small town fiction.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. lyndhurstlaura's avatar

    An interesting selection. I shall have to try to find the Durrell collection. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’m glad one of these piqued your interest 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Laura's avatar

    Will be interested in your thoughts on the Donoghue – I’ve never read any of her collections of short stories (though she did write one of those Amazon Original shorts and I absolutely hated it, ha, but I don’t think it was the form that was the problem).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      All the ones I’ve read by her (Astray, her entry in Furies, and this) are historical with dedication to research and accuracy, as in Learned by Heart. I find them rather functional and lacking spark. I like the title story a lot, though.

      Liked by 1 person

  6. […] September-released short stories, I also recently reviewed A New Day by Sue […]

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  7. […] the middle of, so I’ve managed to read 13 during this challenge to self (including my first and second posts). Again I’m borrowing Marcie’s five-sentence review format to keep things […]

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  8. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    How did I miss this?! I did make a mistake with my feed reader (accidentally deleted some folders) but I thought I had repaired it. Anyway, I also think it’s very funny that you’re trying the five-sentence experiment, because it’s your skill with summary that got me started at trying to write more concisely about collections recently! I think I enjoyed the Lore Segal stories more than you did, but that could also be simply because I knew you felt they were slight so that would have impacted my expectations. I definitely would like to read more of her work!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Ha! And there I thought I adopted the practice from you. (Well, the 5-sentence thing, definitely.)

      Like

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