Author:Alice Munro
Covering the first half of Nobel Prize winner Alice Munro's career, these are some of the best, most touching and powerful short stories ever written
This first-ever selection of Alice Munro's stories sums up her genius. Her territory is the secrets that cackle beneath the façade of everyday lives, the pain and promises, loves and fears of apparently ordinary men and women whom she renders extraordinary and unforgettable.
This volume brings together the best of Munro's stories, from 1968 through to 1994. The second selected volume of her stories, 1995-2009 is also published by Vintage Classics.
Munro is a great realist, and her powers come from her sense of the way in which communities – especially small, socially anxious, limited ones – construct and guard their reality.
—— James Wood , London Review of BooksOne of the most esteemed writers in the world....Few writers capture the moral ambiguities, murkiness, messiness - and joy - of relationships with as much empathy and grace as Munro
—— GuardianHer work is practically perfect. Any writer has to gawk when reading her because her work is very subtle and precise
—— Jane SmileyThe best short story writer alive... Munro can pack more into one of her stories - more subtlety, more grace, more tender twists of the human heart - than many novelists do in a lifetime's oeuvre
—— IndependentOne of the world's best living short-story writers...say that she has made the short story her own and reinvigorated it somehow falls short - she has reinvented it
—— ObserverMunro's stories enact what can only be called a sort of magic
—— Ali SmithAlice Munro! Now that's writing
—— Margaret AtwoodStories that mirror reality -- in all its erratic unpredictability -- so convincingly that you can almost forget the skill with which they're created
—— Daily MailThe Great One
—— Jonathan FranzenIn these stories, fiction saves lives. Imagination kills. Tales break bones
—— New StatesmanMunro can be harrowing to read; she can make your gums tingle, make you moan, or make you cry...really, who could be better?
—— Evening StandardThe most exciting Irish short story writer of his generation, one whose best work rivals William Trevor and John McGahern. His language is thrilling: Barry has a Martin Amis-style aversion to writing so much as one dull sentence. Talent this raw and natural simply cannot be taught.
—— John Burns , Sunday TimesA rhythmic, rural Hiberno-English onslaught, which forces black humour into the bleakest of corners
—— Ruth Gilligan , TLSIreland's must-read literary author
—— Sunday Business Post MagazineWhen I read the first of these short stories, I could immediately see there was something special about this writer... Funny and beautifully observed...
—— William Leith , Evening StandardBarry is undoubtedly acquainted with the darker side of existence and unafraid to depict it with humour and great humanity
—— John Harding , Daily MailThis vividly told collection of short stories spans love, cruelty and desperation
—— The TimesBarry’s best stories combine playful irony with high emotion
—— Emma Hagestadt , IndependentKevin Barry…isn’t sparing with his powers. Even his throwaway lines are keepers… But what makes this book such a satisfying read is that his memorable sentence-writing is in the service of well-constructed, moving stories
—— Susannah Meadows , New York TimesA writer who reveals the power of the short story to speak for our time
—— Irish TimesO’Connor is a gifted storyteller… [He] has a wonderful ear for dialogue and is a master of the telling phrase
—— Brian Maye , Irish TimesThis collection is beautiful; full of pure, simple truths that linger long in the mind
—— Philip Womack , New Humanist