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Selected Stories
Selected Stories
Oct 31, 2024 5:31 PM

Author:Alice Munro

Selected Stories

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.

Reviews

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 Books

One 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

—— Guardian

Her work is practically perfect. Any writer has to gawk when reading her because her work is very subtle and precise

—— Jane Smiley

The 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

—— Independent

One 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

—— Observer

Munro's stories enact what can only be called a sort of magic

—— Ali Smith

Alice Munro! Now that's writing

—— Margaret Atwood

Stories that mirror reality -- in all its erratic unpredictability -- so convincingly that you can almost forget the skill with which they're created

—— Daily Mail

The Great One

—— Jonathan Franzen

In these stories, fiction saves lives. Imagination kills. Tales break bones

—— New Statesman

Munro can be harrowing to read; she can make your gums tingle, make you moan, or make you cry...really, who could be better?

—— Evening Standard

Murakami is a true original and yet in many ways he is also Franz Kafka's successor because he seems to have the intelligence to know what Kafka truly was - a comic writer.

—— Sunday Herald

Another set of masterpieces in miniature…Russell’s language rockets off the page…one of our most entrancing storytellers

—— Vogue

Amidst the leading pack of talents Karen Russell writes the most like she’s on fire, as in: this close to revelations. Orange World is her best collection yet. Her imagination’s baroque syntax has been planed down to the absolute essentials, allowing the power of her vision to speak for itself...This is prophetic work written with clarifying fury

—— John Freeman , Lit Hub

Marvelous... Startlingly inventive stories which confirm Russell's status as master of the slipstream

—— San Francisco Chronicle

Brilliant... Stunning... Her imagination is boundless... Russell's last book, Vampires in the Lemon Grove was far and away one of the best books of 2013, and Orange World proves that the author has only gotten better... Russell is one of the most original American authors working today. She's also one of the best. Orange World is a thing of beauty, a stunning collection from one of the most brilliant literary minds of her generation

—— NPR

Eight crisp stories that will leave longtime fans hungry for more. Since her debut more than a decade ago, Russell has exhibited a commitment to turning recognizable worlds on their heads in prose so rich that sentences almost burst at the seams. Her third collection is no exception, and its subjects—forgotten pockets of violent American history, climate-related apocalypse, the trials of motherhood—feel fresh and urgent in her care...A momentous feat of storytelling in an already illustrious career

—— Kirkus, starred review

Ingenious, reality-warping, darkly funny, and exquisitely composed story collection rooted in myth and horror... Russell writes with mischievous clarity, wit, and conviction, grounding the most bizarre situations in the ordinary

—— Booklist

‘[Barrett] cuts across all kinds of boundaries of class and education to produce immensely tender portraits of living characters.

—— Anne Enright , Irish Examiner

This 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 Post

An exciting debut

—— Sunday Times

I don’t think I’ve ever read a better collection by somebody I had never heard of

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

A technically-assured collection that never disappoints

—— Country & Town House

Roupenian’s tales from the frontline of modern relationships are perfect for an alternative Valentine’s Day display.

—— Bookseller

A collection of short stories which cover the same murky waters of attraction as "Cat Person".

—— Olivia Ovenden , Harper's Bazaar, The books we can't wait to read in 2019

There is always some anxiety following such a short, steep rise to recognition, but in this collection Roupenian lives up to those high expectations. The stories are wonderfully varied in execution, from realist to surreal, staying fresh while circling one primary concern: how men and women relate to one another, and how often that relationship can go wrong.

—— Vanity Fair

[A] sharp, powerful and uncomfortable debut collection of stories[Roupenian] is always in narrative control.

—— Kathryn Maris , Times Literary Supplement

Abrasive, painfully aware accounts of relationships in turmoil… You know you want this collection.

—— Sarah Gilmartin , Irish Times

You Know You Want This seems to touch on conversations that the country has yet to have — often using horror and magical realism to illuminate the darker corners of our world.

—— Elisabeth Garber-Paul , Rolling Stone

In Look at Your Game, Girl and The Boy in the Pool, naïve female desire is so brilliantly and lushly evoked… [Biter] shows a flair for satire and comic timing… I look forward to Roupenian’s next book.

—— Nicole Flattery , Guardian Weekly

The best fiction leaves us thinking about it long after turning the last page, and with [Cat Person], author Kristen Roupenian established herself as a writer to watch. Her short-story collection, You Know You Want This, includes that story and others, all of which will have you talking about them long after finishing.

—— PopSugar

In her highly anticipated debut collection, the author behind the viral Cat Person story offers up a host of strange, fascinating, and downright delightful narratives you won't be able to stop talking about. Spanning a range of genres and topics, it is equal parts dark, uncomfortable, and funny.

—— Bustle

Readers who are looking for more uncomfortably realistic renderings of awkward romantic encounters won’t be disappointed, but this collection is so much more than that, offering an array of biting (sometimes literally!) looks at the ways our most hidden perversions manifest in our lives. It’s a razor-sharp, often ruthless, never less than relentless examination of the way we are now. Scary, right? But you know you want it.

—— NYLON

[You Know You Want This captures] the torturous and complicated justifications for untoward behaviour in the search for closeness and connection.

—— Eithne Farry , Daily Mail

What unites the collection is less her [Roupenian’s] gender politics than her interest in the way fantasies become distorted, disappointing, even dangerous when they approach reality… narrative twist[s] changes the direction of a story and leads it somewhere new. Roupenian’s desire to have her moral and reject it too could be said to put a twist on the twist.

—— Lauren Oyler , London Review of Books

Roupenian remains rooted in realism, she gives pause by exposing the sinister side of sexuality, and one looks forward to seeing what she might accomplish with the novel form.

—— Mia Levitin , Financial Times

Kristen Roupenian's debut short stories fulfil all expectations… she infuses mundane reality with a thrilling layer of menace.

—— Emily Rhodes , Spectator

One of the most anticipated story collections of the year.

—— Elle

Violence, cruelty or misunderstanding are never far away in these 12 stories, which are by turns, unsettling, ruthless and often funny.

—— UK Press Syndication

Walker’s laconic, Hemingway-esque prose style perfectly complements his low-key approach to his material: the matter-of-fact tone in which he recalls his most horrific experiences in Iraq makes them seem all the more horrible. It works equally well with deadpan humour.

—— Jake Kerridge , Sunday Times

Roupenian is a wizard of provocative, psychological fiction, exploring the dark side of the human psyche. Each of her short stories is terrifyingly relatable, making the reader fear something much more relevant than more supernatural horror stories.

—— The Mancunion

A fascinating and repugnant series of stories, all tremendous examples of what this unsung hero of a literary form can do.

—— Culture Calling

Roupenian’s wildly discomfiting new collection, You Know You Want This… is often wonderfully, if grotesquely, physical… This book isn’t bedtime reading.

—— Ruth Franklin , New York Review of Books

These are stories that make you feel fascinated but repelled, scared but delighted, revolted but aroused.

—— Glamour

You Know You Want This is an alarming but compelling book. Roupenian’s short stories, weaving together science fiction, confession and fantasy, are like infections spreading across the senses, blocking out everything except the compulsion to read on… Roupenian achieves something few other writers have: providing a balanced reflection on a very difficult subject.

—— Ella Whelan , Spiked

There isn't enough ink on the internet to recommend this collection highly enough; I urge you to experience not only the viral hit ‘Cat Person' but the sheer abundance summarised in the ‘and other stories'… Her ability as a short story writer is absolute, and in her hands the form returns to what it is in the works of writers like Poe, Kafka, Shirley Jackson: they're provocations.

—— Foyles
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