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The Fruit Cage (Storycuts)
The Fruit Cage (Storycuts)
Sep 22, 2024 1:42 AM

Author:Julian Barnes

The Fruit Cage (Storycuts)

Christopher's early declaration that he has known his parents all his life is shown to be misguided. Following the widowing of one of their associates, and the emergence of their latter day estrangement, he realises he must re-evaluate the history of his parents' relationship.

Part of the Storycuts series, this short story was previously published in the collection The Lemon Table.

Reviews

Powerful stories...playful...sexy...frightening.

—— Sunday Times

Ovid's winning mix of passion and compassion, sex, and terror, love and grotesquerie - all recreated by the storytellers of Ovid Metamorphosed.

—— Independent

A rare treat of indulgent erudition.

—— Scotland on Sunday

M R James is quite simply the finest writer of ghost stories ever. They're always set in an academic context, about university chaps who find out very nasty things while they're researching. They uncork the wrong bottle, unearth the wrong papers, dig up the wrong place. . . James was provost of Eton and a fellow of Kings College, and the stories have this wonderful candlelit, academic atmosphere, surrounded by incredible nastiness. Tweedy, but unpleasant

—— Christopher Frayling

A master class in creepiness from the Edwardian-era Provost of King's College, Cambridge. James delivers brilliant atmospherics, gnawing disquiet and (above all) horrific denouements created by suggestion rather than ghoulish spectacle

—— Independent

'Whistle And I'll Come To You' is one of the best ghost stories that has ever been written... will haunt you to the marrow

—— Daily Express

Beautifully nuanced stories, realistic snapshots of modern Japan enclosed in a fictional world that is seemingly trivial, but loaded with portent

—— Independent

A really imaginative collection where all the stories are intertwined and mysterious in that Murakami way

—— Observer

Murakami's storytelling inspires intimacy. It's the particular kind of intimacy that can evolve between a reader and a book, unspoken and unexpected, familiar, satisfying, strange.

—— JANE MENDELSOHN , Village Voice

Even in the slipperiest of Mr Murakami's stories, pinpoints of detail flash out warm with life.

—— New York Times

Murakami is one of the best writers around.

—— Time Out

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
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