Author:Panos Karnezis
Panos Karnezis' remarkable stories are all set in the same nameless Greek village. His characters are the people who live there - the priest, the barber, the whore, the doctor, the seamstress, the mayor - and the occasional animal: a centaur, a parrot that recites Homer, a horse called History. Their lives intersect, as lives do in a small place, and they know each other's secrets - the hidden crimes, the mysteries, the little infamies that men commit. Karnezis observes his villagers with a forgiving eye, and creates a world where magic invariably loses out to harsh reality, a world at once universal, funny and utterly compelling.
Karnezis has captured the spirit of his people and spoken for them in a spellbinding, universal voice
—— The TimesKarnezis's robust prose, as luminous and flinty as his landscape, sharpens his focus on captive souls in a lonely place
—— IndependentStrikingly original... The stories in Little Infamies are extraordinary - shocking, colourful and resonant. Panos Karnezis is an entirely individual writer in full command of his material
—— Sunday TimesA deeply impressive collection of short stories
—— Sunday TelegraphOne of the most original American novelists on either side of the Mississippi
—— TimeIf you loved Out Stealing Horses, you won’t be disappointed by his razor-sharp debut, which tells the story of Arvid’s childhood … The language is simple, beautiful and cleansed of literary affectation. There is not a single superfluous word
—— Ekstrabladet (Denmark)These father-son stories bring us the first meeting with one of Nordic literature’s most lovable characters, Arvid Jansen. A mixture of Alfons Åberg, Ingemar from My Life as a Dog and in part Oskar from The Tin Drum ... New readers should begin nowhere but here
—— Euroman (Denmark)There is both humour and tenderness in Per Petterson’s debut collection from 1987 … Petterson masters the art of writing simply of big subjects. As a reader, you have to read slowly and attentively to register everything, or read the book twice, which you gladly will
—— Kristeligt Dagblad (Norway)If you loved Out Stealing Horses, you won’t be disappointed by his razor-sharp debut… The language is simple, beautiful and cleansed of literary affectation. There is not a single superfluous word
—— Ekstrabladet (Denmark)There is both humour and tenderness… Petterson masters the art of writing simply of big subjects. As a reader, you have to read slowly and attentively to register everything, or read the book twice, which you gladly will
—— Kristeligt Dagblad (Norway)Dreamy and evanescent, [the stories] recall the opening pages of James Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
—— Jon Michaud , Washington PostFull of heartache and the ways in which we hurt each other, and ourselves... Fans of Kennedy's quirky expressionism won't be disappointed.
—— Sunday TimesEvidence that, at her best, there’s no-one to touch Kennedy.
—— Neil Stewart , CivilianFull of challenges and beauty.
—— StylistThis is a sure-footed and intelligently organized collection. These small pieces encompass an extensive emotional territory
—— Chris Power , GuardianAn arresting collection that blends poetic imagery, raw emotion and cerebral insight
—— Juanita Coulson , LadyAs subtle as the colour of Kitsune's silk
—— M John Harrison , GuardianRussell is an amazing storyteller, and this book certainly whets the appetite for her next offering
—— Irish Times‘[Barrett] cuts across all kinds of boundaries of class and education to produce immensely tender portraits of living characters.
—— Anne Enright , Irish ExaminerThis is an exceptional debut, and one of the best collection of short stories that I have read in years.
—— Louise O’Neill, 5 stars , Irish PostAn exciting debut
—— Sunday TimesI don’t think I’ve ever read a better collection by somebody I had never heard of
—— William Leith , Evening StandardA technically-assured collection that never disappoints
—— Country & Town House