Short stories are perfect for the age of short attention spans, according to some. But not according to P.A. O'Reilly. O'Reilly, whose novel The Fine Colour of Rust was released on March 1, finds short story collections by Australian women both "beautifully written" and "astounding." She provided AWW with her "starter list".
O'Reilly writes:
The idea of the Australian Women Writers 2012 Challenge is brilliant – not only bringing into focus the gender imbalance in coverage of books, but actually doing something about it. And the reviews are evidence that readers are thrilled to be discovering new books and authors. Now I hope you’ll allow me to add another flavour to the challenge: short stories.
I’ve read plenty of comments about short stories being
perfect for the contemporary world because, well, they’re short. Short
attention span of the digital age, people having less free time, perfect length
to read in a commuter ride and so on and so forth.
I think that’s rubbish. The less free time idea seems to
presume that most people in ye olde reading days used to sit down for a ten or
twenty (or, in the case of some doorstoppers, fifty) hour stretch to read. I
imagine the butler brought meals and visitors were turned away at the door,
‘I’m sorry, but madam cannot be disturbed - she is Reading a Novel.’ The
majority of readers have always picked up a book when they had a couple of free
hours or at bedtime or on that commuter ride, and read a chapter or two.
And the short attention span? Tell that to someone who
spends three solid hours struggling with a computer that’s eaten a document or minuting a meeting at
work or looking after a two-year-old.
So here’s my proposition. Don’t try reading reading short
stories because they fit into a busy lifestyle or you catch the tram to work or
you can only concentrate for twenty minutes (!). Try reading short stories
because beautifully written ones are astounding. A short story is designed to
be read in a sitting and I urge you to get up after that reading and leave the
story inside you to do its work. When you read a collection of stories, try to
resist the urge to read one straight after another. Think of how you feel after
gorging on a whole box of chocolates.
You may think you don’t like short stories much, but chances
are you still remember a few. Man turns into a bug, village has a lottery,
something about an overcoat. Yet it’s not the plot that makes a short story
memorable. A short story works in a different way. It travels through you, into
your hidden places. There is a single essence to a short story but it flavours
everything you know. A short story has what in cooking we call umami.
And in a short story, the extraordinary power of words is there, pulsing in
front of you, each word essential, each word working with all its
possibilities.
Try reading some short stories by Australian women. You
probably know the names of our world famous short story writers Cate Kennedy
and Margo Lanagan. If you haven’t yet, read them. But in recent years there
have also been quite a few collections by other women writers published in
Australia. Here’s a starter list of contemporary Australian women short story
authors who’ve published recently - so many straight off the top of my head
that I had to sort them alphabetically. I think you’ll love them.
- Julie Chevalier - Permission to Lie
- Amanda Curtin - Inherited
- Irma Gold - Two Steps Forward
- Catherine Harris - Like Being a Wife
- Karen Hitchcock - Little White Slips
- Tiggy Johnson - Svetlana or Otherwise
Jennifer Mills - The Rest is Weight(forthcoming) - Josephine Rowe - How a Moth Becomes a Boat
- Gretchen Schirm - Having Cried Wolf
- Leah Swann - Bearings
- Tara June Winch - Swallow The Air
From Ticonderoga Publications (www.ticondeerogapublications.com)
ReplyDeleteSara Douglass, The Hall of Lost Footsteps
Lisa L Hannett, Bluegrass Symphony
Angela Slatter, The Girl With No Hands and other tales
Kaaron Warren, Dead Sea Fruit
Matilda Told Such Dreadful Lies, Lucy Sussex
Thanks for these suggestions, Punkrocker1991. It looks like we have the makings for a new tab on the AWW website. I hope the suggestions keep coming.
DeleteThanks! Looks like a great press.
ReplyDeleteA great article Paddy, I rarely read short stories I must admit and probably should read more
ReplyDeleteShelleyrae @ Book'd Out
I loved Lisa Wardle's Reflections.Her story 'Lost' floats back into my mind every now and then. (Published by Mockingbird)Myra King's City Paddock has a real maturity in the stories, from an experienced writer (Ginninderra Press). And I agree with Tiggy Johnson's listing, her story 'A dash of milk' really moved me.
ReplyDeleteFor more short stories by Australian women, check out the Twelfth Planet Press 'Twelve Planets' line-up: all women, all the time.
ReplyDeleteIncluding:
Cracklescape, Margo Lanagan
Through Splintered Walls, Kaaron Warren
Showtime, Narelle Harris
Thief of Lives, Lucy Sussex
Nightsiders, Sue Isle
Love and Romanpunk, Tansy Rayner Roberts
As well as:
Glitter Rose, Marianne de Pierres
And my books (just for completion, I swear!):
Bad Power and A Book of Endings, Deborah Biancotti
Fabulous - keep them coming! And congratulations on yours.
ReplyDeleteJanette Turner Hospital´s stories. They inspired me to get writing.
ReplyDeleteAt time of writing I have available a set of four volumes of Australian Short Stories, mainly on romantic themes, and hope to soon publish another, slightly differently formatted, book. My books are available through Amazon.com., and are stocked by several public libraries in Sydney suburbs such as Sutherland and Kogarah.
ReplyDeleteTitles: 25 Stories of Life and Love in Australia; A Taste of Life and Love in Australia; The Essence of Life and Love in Australia: and Reflections of Life and Love in Australia.
My name is Margaret Lynette Sharp, and I'm the wife of Ronald Sharp, the Sydney Opera House Grand Organ creator, and now editor of my books.