Author:A.L. Kennedy
The twelve stories in Indelible Acts are variations on a theme of longing - the unassuagable human need for contact, for completion, for that most fugitive gift of all: reciprocal love. Its characters' lives are thwarted, dashed, impassioned, each in their own way immolated by hope. A queue outside a cheese shop leads to a thrilling infidelity; a crematorium funeral exposes a love gone sour; a foreign hotel room becomes a diorama of despair as physical sickness becomes a metaphor for incurable grief. In the title story, two lovers confront their lusts amid the ruins of Rome; in 'A Bad Son' a young boy from a damaged home searches for some kind of peace in the newly fallen snow.
Brilliant... These 12 stories are among the most devastating you will read this year
—— Daily TelegraphThis woman is a profound writer
—— Richard FordAn astonishing writer, with an imaginative empathy that seems to know no bounds
—— Time OutThese are powerful, intimate and angry stories. Kennedy writes with flaying precision about the things we won't often admit to ourselves, let alone speak aloud
—— Daily MailThe clarity, wit and descriptive intensity of (Kennedy's) style are uplifting and the collection ends on a note of fragile hope... A writer in her thirties, who is becoming one of Britain's best
—— The TimesDark, exact and bitterly funny collection... sharp, thought-provoking and fiercely readable
—— Time OutThe narratives seem opened up to the entire history of fiction... touching...revelatory...devastating
—— Mark Kamine , Times Literary SupplementThese stories have been well made and have been carefully fitted together... undeniably classy
—— Sameer Rahim , Daily TelegraphA wonderful writer
—— Irish IndependentInhabits his characters with the seemingly effortless sympathy of the gifted realist writer... Deserves all the honours it is able to accrue: a better book of short stories will not be published this year
—— Kevin Power , The Irish Timesa collection whose seemingly ordinary surfaces conceal precipitous depths
—— Claire Allree , MetroA good collection of short stories ought to be as enticing as a gift of fruit or flowers, even if the apple conceals a poison, the rose a canker. Few exponents of the short form offer such tempting, disturbing pleasures as James Lasdun.
—— Richard T Kelly , Financial TimesStriking collection of humane short stories.
—— Must reads , The Sunday TimesReading Lasdun is like reading a sly collaboration between Kafka and Updike: elegant, acutely observed and utterly unflinching.
—— John Burnside , The TimesA sobering study of how humans cope when under pressure. Lasdun's prose is undeniably sound. Ingenious sentences are strung together with ease
—— Sunday HeraldShort stories from a master prose miniaturist
—— New StatesmanA marvellous, masterful collection
—— LA TimesLasdun specialises in capturing, with unnerving insight, the split seconds in which moods and emotions turn on triggers so fine and subtle that they're barely perceptible. He nails these moments perfectly, spiking the core of the microgram of fly in the ointment and thus catching the infinitesimal moment with startling perception
—— Leyla Sanai , www.rocksbackpagesblogs.comJames Lasdun is one of those gifted writers who seems to have avoided the attention he deserves....It's Beginning to Hurt is, in places, the best story collection I have read since Tobias Wolff's Our Story Begins.
—— http://theasylum.wordpress.comLasdun's third collection of short stories is nothing short of a revelation... each story is raised to amazing heights by the author's incredibly incisive prose
—— Oldham Evening ChronicleJames Lasdun, poet, novelist, short story writer and Englishman turned American émigré, offers up permutations of suppressed inner turmoil
—— The ListThere is something so rich and gripping in his prose that it simply elicits your attention... It's Beginning to Hurt is a collection to jump-start your imagination
—— AestheticaA master of the form with the enthralling psychological subtleties
—— Guardian, Geoff DyerPrecisely observed and chilling
—— ScotsmanLasdun is a smart writer with an excellent sense of pace
—— Peter Scot , Daily TelegraphLasdun's prose is marked by a fine, thoughtful, humane exactness
—— Tom Deveson , The Sunday TimesLasdun bravely identifies a profoundly anti-human aspect to environmental moralising to provide a study in embarrassment that made this reader wince
—— Chris Ross , GuardianSuperb... punchy, exhilarating collection
—— James Urquhart , Financial TimesDeft precise language, strong narratives and great emotional insight
—— Frances O'Rourke , Irish TimesLasdun's characters from New York and the Sussex countryside create a world of objects and feelings that are rich, recognisable and yet elusive, marked by the thoughtful, and humane exactness of his prose
—— Sunday Times Summer Reading