This year, 2012, I read exactly 100 books, or I will if I finish Sweet Tooth by Ian McEwan before twelve midnight, New Year’s Eve.
As usual, I reread a few old friends including two novels by
Willa Cather: My Antonia and Death Comes to the Archbishop. Wonderful Willa. She never
disappoints and you are left wishing she had written more novels. Next, I reread The Wind in the Willows, as
delighted as ever to feel it reanimate the child-like side of my nature.
I read a lot of short stories this year, mostly in Canadian literary
magazines but I also listened to a lot too.
Every morning, The New Yorker podcast of short stories helps me through
my routine of physio exercises. As usual, I reread "The Dead" by James Joyce.
I am not sure how many times. I think I have the thing almost memorized but
even so, I still believe it is the greatest short story ever written. However, I am now caught up in "The
A&P" by John Updike, a story that sticks with you by means of that mystical
glue all great stories possess.
Here is no particular order are ten of the best short
stories from the many I read (or listened to) this year.
1. "Concerning the Body Guard," by Donald Barthelme. This story is written as a series of
questions which lead, interrogatively, to a menacing conclusion.
2. "Bluebell Meadow," by Benedict Keily. In the 1930’s Ireland , a
Catholic girl and a Protestant boy are endangered by the talk in the town.
3. "City Lovers," by Nadine Gordimer. Apartheid South Africa
and a European takes up with a coloured woman. In a viciously racist society,
the lovers try to snatch a private life.
Nadine Gordimer
4. "Intimate Strangers," by Eve Joseph, from the Malahat
Review.
5. "A Day," by William Trevor. A woman remembers the day she
learned her husband was having an affair.
After the Great Alice, I believe Trevor is the best contemporary short
story writer.
6. "God-damn Ranch," by Thomas McGuane A cowboy works at a strange ranch.
7. "Something Else," by Grace Paley. A group of American
sociologists visit Communist China.
8. "Eating Dirt," by Charlotte Gill. The life of a BC tree
planter.
9. "Axis," by Alice Munro. A boyfriend visits his girl at her
farm but her mother walks in during sex and he flees. Then the author does her Magic Alice Dance, leading the
reader through changes in time, place and point of view so smoothly that you,
mesmerized, follow on. Later you can go
back and figure out how she does it.
Good luck.
10. "Violent Friday," by Ernest Hekkanen. Published in the New
Orphic Review The first sentence starts: “The day began with a random act of
violence.” After an opening like that,
your are hooked.
Earnest Hekkanen
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