Short Stories Books


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Short Stories Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Short Stories
Doing a Bit of Bleeding
Published in Paperback by Ghost Road Press (2005-03-31)
Author: Nate Liederbach
List price: $15.95
New price: $9.40
Used price: $8.49

Average review score:

Emotion much?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-28
What Bleeding has in bundles is emotion and believability. The stories are well crafted, there is an attention to detail and respect afforded the creation of Fiction that all young writers strive for. These things are useless without the presence of the raw emotional fiber. What Liederbach does is remind us that stories come from human experience, not evening Fiction classes. A powerful debut.

Reminder of Humanity
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-30
"Doing a Bit of Bleeding" is about real people. These people have flaws, they do things they are ashamed of. These people walk and talk, and within the pages of "Bleeding", you can feel them breathe. Occasionally a metaphor will rise up and slap you in the face, but generally "Bleeding" is crafted from a very deep, very honest place that lots of writers veer away from. The book is like a scab you keep picking at, it's ugly, it's bloody and it hurts, but you just can't stop. It's real. "Bleeding" really takes off in the last four stories, the beginning just a primer for the real meat at the end. You won't find story book characters here. They are you. They are me. I don't recommend reading "Gravel Pit" before bed.

Blood Read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-13
The power of this collection is in its details. The thought-provoking, shiver-inducing wounds of life are mined for all their humanity. Each character lives pain through the ink of every day language. It's the echo of a voice we all know, that emotional stutter of reflecting on our mistakes, of realizing our own weaknesses. Liederbrach accomplishes the difficult task of creating characters that are both fascinating and brutally real. In the end, you may not love them all, but you'll appreciate their vulnerability. Definitely a writer with great stories to come.

Great collection!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-18
This is definately a collection worth owning, and I can only echo the praise already written about this book with two thumbs up. The characters draw you into their lives and you will run with them. The humor is subtle, dark at times. This book is filled with tender moments, realizations and people worth knowing. As I understand, this is Mr. Liederbach's first collection, but I definately hope to see more work from him in the future.

The guy can write!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-02
Reading Liederbach's work and you'll come face to face with fishermen and chicks who say one thing but mean another, Jesus-freaks and men freaked out by all the ways a heart can break. "Not Exactly a Parable" and "Moonbeams" are the collection's highlights.

Short Stories
Duchess Bakes a Cake
Published in School & Library Binding by Atheneum (1955-06)
Author: Virginia Kahl
List price: $7.95
Used price: $4.67

Average review score:

My favorite childhood reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-22
Some fifty years ago I could recite this book by heart. It was a precursor to my later infatuations with Gilbert and Sullivan. It has not lost its charm: medieval setting, whimsical plot, rhythm and rhyme, amusing observations of human foibles. I relate to the duchess today in ways that I might not have suspected as a child, and make it my favorite gift to other parents of little girls.

Love this story!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-31
An untypical tale of a duchess who's clutzy in the kitchen. Read this story to my daughter years ago, now I got this copy for my granddaughter, and she loves it too.

What a fun book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-12
All my kids (4,7, & 9 yrs) loved this book! We especially enjoyed the rhyming text. Even so the text was extensive enough to tell a full story. In general, most pages have many lines of text. We read it as a Five in a Row book, but I am sure it will be a requested book for years to come. We were able to talk about many side issues including cakes, yeast, consequences, calories, catapults, castles, alliteration, complementary colors. The duchess decides to make a "lovely, light, luscious, delectable" cake but doesn't accept any advice or follow any instructions. As a result, she puts everything in it and way too much yeast! She sits on it and rises high in the sky unable to get down. It sounds rather silly but it is very well written and was a worthwhile purchase.

Most fun children's book ever!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-18
I love, love, love this book! It's playfully delightful and now that I can get one at a reasonable price, I'll be ordering a copy for my 4 y/o niece soon!

Most fun I've had with this book is rapping it with a friend for a talent show...

Amazing! Its back in print!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-08
This was one of the truly formative books of my youth. Silly and fun and with a wonderful rhyme. I have the most wonderful memories of my mother reading this to me. Years ago, when I first had children, I HAD to find this book for them and it was out of print. I managed to find an excellent copy but spent nearly $100 for it -- and thought it worth every cent! Now that its back in print, I've bought FOUR more copies -- for gifts for all the children of the right age that I can think of. Highly, highly, highly recommended!

Short Stories
El laberinto de la soledad
Published in Paperback by Penguin (Non-Classics) (1997-11-01)
Author: Octavio Paz
List price: $16.00
New price: $9.27
Used price: $5.99

Average review score:

I read this in college.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-22
I found the Spanish easy to understand, though his philosophy went over my head!

Una Obra de Arte
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-19
Aunque no estes de acuerdo con todas las ideas de Octavio Paz, las reflexiones y los analisis de esta mente birllante ayudan a entender nuestra magnifica raza. La escritura lleva al lector al pasado y al presente, para poder entender la condicion de Mexico y su gente. Todos los Mexicanos deberian de sentarse a devorar este libro que clarificara las costumbres de nuestra gente y nos ayuda a entender que tiene que cambiar en nuestra politica para tener un pais mas prospero.

El libro mas importante de las obras de Paz
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-25
Paz, el ganador del Premio Nobel de 1990, escribo tantos libros destacados-Sor Juana, El arco y la lira, pero este representa el cumbre de su poder artistico. El escribe sobre el hombre mexicano en todas sus formas y tribulaciones. El libro es, al mismo tiempo, un ensayo(o mejor, un libro de ensayos), un analisis, una historia, y, sobre todo, una pregunta-en que consiste este hombre cuyo origen forma parte de la conquista de America, un proceso ya en proceso.

Empieza la obra discutiendo "el pachuco"-una figura del medio siglo XX que representaba la ambiguedad y la frenesi del hispano en los estados unidos durante ese periodo. Despues de esta discusion, continua explicando la cultura hispana desde la epoca precolumbina hasta la revolucion mexicana. Termina la historia con este evento, y la unica cosa que le hace falta a la obra es un analisis de la historia contemporanea.

Este seria el primer libro que le recomienda sobre Mexico al nuevo estudiante.

Un libro extraordinario
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-13
Octavio Paz, el escritor que haya definido nuestra vida como "olvidado asombro de estar vivos", nos habla de sus ensayos escritos más que hace cincuenta años. Su "La Dialéctica de la Soledad", uno de sus ensayos más destacados, presente sus puntos de vista sobre la soledad no solamente mexicana, sino también la de hombre presente mismo. Paz trata varios temas ensayísticos con la cristalina claridad y persigue un proyecto casi filosófico: muestra la alma mexicana con sus raíces aztecas, su plaza en la vida antigua y contemporánea y, finalmente, su visión de "soñar con los ojos cerrados". Justamente por este ensayo mismo atrevo a recomendar todo el libro tratando de la soledad, cuya presencia en nuestra vida diaria es tan obvia. Además, un interesado en la obra de Octavio Paz debería leer su discurso que había pronunciado en el año 1990 con el motivo de agradecer el galardonar de Premio Nobel. Leyendo Paz, uno descubre que Paz ya contestó muchas de nuestras cuestiónes inquietantes ...

Hommage to a great Man of Letters
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-13
Octavio Paz wrote the definitive sociological book that deciphered the Mexican character. He correctly diagnosed that, in fact, the Mexican was stuck in a labyrinth and condemned to find a way out, and in many respects is still trying to find that way out. He understood that he would receive harsh criticism and he did. However, he stayed true to his calling as a man of letters and delivered a book that must indeed be read by anyone wanting to understand the make-up of the Mexican or the serious scholar searching for understanding in the field of Mexican history. I strongly and without reservation recommend this book, it will change your outlook on this important country and most importantly on the inhabitants and descendants of it forever.

Short Stories
God Is an Englishman
Published in Paperback by (1998-04-30)
Author: R. F. Delderfield
List price: $15.95
New price: $16.09
Used price: $5.09

Average review score:

God is an Englishman
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-02
The first and best of a family saga during the mid 1800s in England, when industry changes everyone's lives.

God in an Englishman
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-07
I first read this in 1971, and followed through with all Delderfield's later books. Now, through Amazon.com I can reread the entire series and and my husbands is reading it for the first time and is enthralled!

God Is AN Englishman
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-18
I have read God is an Englishman 45 years ago. It was a great book to read. I have enjoyed reading it so much that I have read it twice. There is a book 2 that follows this first edition and that too is great. I wish you they whoever can produce a movie of the story. It would make a wonderful masterpiece. Let the author know to produce a movie and let me know because I would be the first to see and then purchise it on DVD.
Thank you for a great site. I will be ordering a copy of this book again in the near future. I strongly recommend this book to all single ladies who enjoy reading a good novel and romantic story. Henrietta Netta, Exeter PA

One of the best family sagas
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-20
Adam Swann has followed his family's tradition of military service for long enough to turn 30. He's seen a lot during those years, including a horrific massacre of civilians. When chance places a fortune in rubies in his hands, he's more than ready to make drastic changes. Back to England he goes, the England of a world just prior to the American Civil War, looking for a better way to spend his life. He finds it in two places. First, in a revolutionary business idea sparked by an encounter with a railway official; and second, in a runaway young woman. He marries the woman, factory heiress Henrietta Rawlinson (who's swiftly disinherited by her infuriated father), and he turns the idea into a hauling firm that deliberately fits itself into all the gaps the railway system cannot fill.

That's the bare outline. What makes this novel remarkable, though, isn't its plot. It's the characters, and the way author Delderfield lets them grow naturally out of the time and place in which he sets them. Adam Swann is in many ways a man ahead of that time, disgusted by what he's seen in war and determined to make his way in the world without committing outrages against basic human decency. In fact, he's determined to make a difference for the better while succeeding as a businessman. Henrietta, blessed with her enterpreneur father's sharp mind and quick wits for commerce, grows from a willful, uneducated and thoroughly spoiled girl into a worthy and even challenging partner for Adam in the course of the book's 800-some pages. Nothing seems forced, and none of the details of Victorian England ring false, in all of those pages. Some of the best reading comes from secondary characters who weave in and out of the main story, because each is well drawn and interesting - no matter how brief the appearance.

A tour-de-force, all in all. One of the best "family sagas" around, still, nearly 40 years after its publication.

Enthralling ... enchanting!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-27
R.F.Delderfield's "God Is An Englishman" begins a truly riveting history lesson of Britain's Victorian era and beyond. When I first read the book nearly 30 years ago fell in love with Adam and Henrietta Swann and their brood of children. You will, too!

Short Stories
Going to Meet the Man
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Laurel (1986-01-01)
Author: James Baldwin
List price: $4.95
New price: $57.75
Used price: $0.76
Collectible price: $11.95

Average review score:

TORTURED SOUL
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-17
James Baldwin is a tortured soul. He pours his whole soul onto every page. This makes him one of America's greatest writers. His word pictures take you into the church, on a picnic, into a country farm house and into the lives of all his characters. Long Live James Baldwin. In our hearts.

going to meet a young james baldwin
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-27
James Baldwin is one of the best writers
of all time. This semi-autobiographical
collection of short stories about different
male protagonists going to meet "the man"
which is different in every story is one
of the best story collections of all time.

Even today, after reading it, I could see
where there was a lesson to be learned from
each story. I wish James Baldwin was still
alive so I could tell him how much I love his
work. If you don't read anything else by James
Baldwin (although Giovanni's Room, Tell me how
long the train's been gone and Another Country
are also brilliant) read this, particularly Sonny's Blues.

Inspirational
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-21
The first story I read in this was "Sonny's Blues" and I realized there was more to it than just a story- and that the blues is more than just b5ths but a greater understanding of life - highly recommended.

Eight unforgettable stories of honest realism
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-02
James Baldwin is known primarily for his essays and his first two novels ("Go Tell It on the Mountain" and "Giovanni's Room"), but I often tell readers that the place to start is with his first story collection, "Going to Meet the Man." Baldwin's short fiction is more straightforward and accessible than are his essays (which are indeed excellent); each of the eight stories presents a different aspect of Baldwin's worldview; and unlike his early novels, where racism is treated as one aspect in the lives of characters, several of these stories confront the "racial issue" full on.

Baldwin's short fiction may be easier to read, but it does not avoid uncomfortable truths. In fact, some of Baldwin's most heated writing can be found in this volume, which was first published in 1965. It contains work written over a 20-year-period, including "Previous Condition," the first piece of fiction he ever published (in Commentary Magazine in 1948). A fledgling actor is torn between the black world of Harlem ("perfectly in his element, in his place, as the saying goes") and the white neighborhoods downtown. He stays at a friend's apartment in lower Manhattan, but has to hide from the landlord and leave the building at odd hours to avoid being seen by the other residents ("Why don't you go uptown, where you belong?").

Each of the other stories is unforgettable in its own way, but my two favorites open and close the volume. "The Rockpile" is an early (yet different) version of an episode in "Go Tell It on the Mountain"; two of Baldwin's strengths are his ability to capture the memories of youth and to present the complexities of family life. The incendiary title story that ends the volume depicts a white police officer whose racial attitudes were formed by a lynching he witnessed as a child. Baldwin pits the very real horror of the police brutality experienced by a young man who attempts to register to vote against the officer's wholly imagined fear of the oversexed black stereotype.

This last story--indeed, much of Baldwin's later fiction--has been criticized (by biographer James Campbell, for example) for lacking "a neutrality which Baldwin was finding harder than ever to maintain" and an unwillingness to "concede that somewhere, somehow, this corrupted man might incorporate genuine goodness." Such comments seem unfair on two counts: the actions of some racists, while "pitiable," are still beyond redemption or "goodness," and (more to the point) I don't agree that it's a storyteller's responsibility to make lemonade out of every lemon.

So ignore the critics who argue that Baldwin's fiction lost its shine as he grew older and more cynical and less "neutral," and pick up this excellent collection of stories. I think you'll find that their bluntness and honesty and gritty realism make up for whatever stylistic faults the critics might point to.

Painful. Almost too painful.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-20
I am slowly understanding why Mr. Baldwin elected to leave the United States for more than a decade in the 1940s and 1950s. He apparently is on record as saying that he needed to flee because his anger was going to destroy him if he did not seek a respite from American injustice.

Upon reading this collection, I think I am really beginning to understand what must have been going through his mind. Read "Previous Condition" where a young African American man keeps being thrown out of hotels and denied jobs simply because of the color of his skin. There is nowhere he can go without meeting the hostile glances and conspiratorial whispers of people on the street simply because of his skin color. And there is a moment where it all came into focus for me, standing in the kitchen of his Jewish friend's Jules' apartment. And I quote:

"Oh," I cried, "I know you think I'm making it dramatic, that I'm paranoiac and just inventing trouble! Maybe I think so sometimes, how can I tell? You get so used to being hit you find you're always waiting for it. Oh, I know, you're Jewish, you get kicked around, too, but you can walk into a bar and nobody knows you're Jewish and if you go looking for job you'll get a better job than mine!" (78)

It is deeply disturbing to think that a person has the suspicion and rage of the world cocked against their temple, but that was how it was (and still is). I have read much about the Civil Rights struggle and as a Jew myself, have listened to many stories from members of my family about prejudice but these stories, they uncover something. After seeing what happened in New Orleans with Katrina and listening to the empty discussions of "good schools", No Child Left Behind and test score mania, it opens your eyes to the fact that performance, optimism and opportunity are perceptions that, when absent, can ruin lives in ways that are hard to qualify.

I highly recommend these stories but be prepared to become deeply uncomfortable because Baldwin had a powerful case to make about American hypocrisy and he makes it.

Short Stories
Have You Seen My Duckling?
Published in Board book by Greenwillow (1996-09-20)
Author:
List price: $6.99
New price: $2.82
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

A few words, and a search
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-29
This book is about a mother duck that cannot find one of her ducklings. She goes around asking the other denizens of the pond if they have seen it. The fun thing is that, if you look, you will find where the duckling is.

There are few words in this book, so be aware of the reading level (baby-preschool). However, the artwork is very well done, and the fun of having the little reader find the missing duckling on each page makes the whole thing worthwhile.

A GREAT "CRITTER" SEARCH BOOK FOR THE WEE ONES.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-22
What a delightful work for the very young. A Mom Duck is searching for her one "lost" duckling and searches the pond, asking the other creatures "have you seen my duckling?" Of course the duckling is not actually lost, and if you and your child look close, the duckling can be found here and there, hidden (as little ducks should be) in various locations. The kids get quite a kick out of this one as it is interactive an they must search for the little "lost" duck. The art work in this one is great and quite appearling. The simple text is repetitive and fun for the child. This is simply a fun read for the small child and a fun read for the adult reader as they help the child find the duckling. Highly recommend.

Great for kids that love animals
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-23
My boys LOVE animals, especially ducks, so this is a big hit. If you like "Silly Little Goose" by the same author, this one's sure to be popular in your house.

Perfect interactive book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-22
At first I thought this book was going to bomb with my 13 month old. I thought the pictures were complicated and there was not much text. But I was wrong. She loves it. She has memorized where the lost duckling is on every page and she really can't get enough of it. So, surprisingly, I highly recommend this one!

A great picture book for young kids.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-26
I like Wheres my Duckling, it wass a great book.Children that are just learning to read will really enjo this book. They will be able to tell what is going on in the story by just looking at the pictures.The pictures in the story are very well illustrated. I would recommend this book to early childhood teachers.

Short Stories
Heat
Published in Kindle Edition by Broadway (2007-06-26)
Author: Geneva Holliday
List price: $9.95
New price: $7.96

Average review score:

Heat? More like a spark!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-14
I think this book was not titled appropriately. This book was an easy and juicy read like all the Geneva Holliday books, but it had no heat. It had a few sex scenes, but they were not hot at all. The storyline also wasn't that hot. The storyline was just busy. Here is a brief summarization:

Noah and his partner are separated because Noah's partner, Zahn wants to have a child and Noah does not.

Chevy ends up homeless because of irresponsible spending.

Crystal is dating a gigolo head-quartered out of Antigua. She is also sleeping with her former drug addict boyfriend.

Geneva is hooked on dieting pills that are damaging to her health.

Heat is that Hotness!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-06
Geneva Holliday has done it again!!!!! Heat, the third book in the Geneva Holliday series, is a great read. It kept me wanting more. I found myself upset when the book ended for the simple fact that the book was over. Loved it!!!!

Ms. H has a new fan
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-23
this is a must read, I don't have a lot of leasure time; however, I will find time to read every book Ms. Holliday has written based on this hot and very exciting novel. I loved the book "Heat"

Geneva always brings dat heat!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-11
If you enjoyed Groove and Fever, you'll definitely enjoy reading more on Noah, Chevy, Geneva and Crystal. These four friends have always had drama and this time around it's nothing different.
Noah's man wants to have a child, but Noah isn't feeling it. Their relationship is beginning to strain and Noah is trying to figure out if he loves him man or his childless life more.
Chevy is still Chevy, mooching off her friends whenever she can and living way above her means. Time's running out and she can't hold up the charade much longer.
Geneva is still doing everything she can to do something about her weight, and nothing at all. Even having a fine man that loves her isn't enough to make her accept her for herself. Can she throw away the crash diets for good and be happy?
Crystal is going through a mid life crisis and while she's running across the country to share stolen moments with a gigaloo, she's trying to get what she's missing in life.

I liked how this was part of a series, but you didn't feel like you missed something if you didn't read a book. You'd want to read them all of course because they all are great, but it isn't heavily required. Geneva Holliday did her thang once more and the novel is full of drama, humor and of course HEAT!

Reviewed by Leila

Real Divas of Literature

LOVED IT!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-03
I loved this book and hated when it ended. Noah and his crazy neighbors had me cracking up!!!! The book was funny but also had serious parts and made me realize how one's life can change in an instance. I enjoyed all of Ms. Holliday's books and I can't wait for the next one. Keep up the good work.

Short Stories
High Cotton: Selected Stories of Joe R. Lansdale
Published in Hardcover by Golden Gryphon Press (2000-09-01)
Author: Joe R. Lansdale
List price: $23.95
New price: $15.13
Used price: $7.45
Collectible price: $35.00

Average review score:

Pour it on, Mr. Lansdale.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-17
As a fledgling horror writer, I'm trying to digest some bits and pieces from masters of the genre. Consider this review more of a discussion of what I liked in the book. Like I said, I'm a fledgling writer myself, and once you start creating something, you realize how much easier it is to criticize than create--so I'm trying to keep it on the positive.

I enjoyed much of High Cotton. Personal highlights include "Mister Weed-Eater", "The Night They Missed the Horror Show", "Incident on and Off a Mountain Road", and my favorite, "Steppin' Out, Summer, '68". Each of these tales forced my hand, made me keep turning those pages to see what bizzare sight waited around the corner. Each contained just the right mix of black humor for my taste.

In this mix of 21 tales, the reader really gains a respect for Lansdale's style of storytelling. He is from East Texas, and you hear the voice throughout, even when the story might be a bit wide of the darkly humorous horror for which he's known. A warning to the squeamish: this book will offend your senses and offers enough racial ephitats to make political correctness roll around in it's grave.

Lansdale knows how to entertain, and when he's on his game, he's among the best.

Enter the dark world of Joe R. Lansdale
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-05
I bought this book because I wanted to read the original story from which a first season episode of Showtime's "Masters of Horror" was built around. The episode was "Incident On and Off a Mountain Road", and both the television adaptation and- I was happy to learn when I received "High Cotton" from Amazon- the original Lansdale story are top notch. In fact, the TV show was excellent largely due to its sticking extremely close to the Lansdale original.

Happily, there are many other great stories in this collection other than "Incident". As other reviewers have pointed out here, the stories range from darkly humorous to dark & gritty, the dark & gritty ones being my favorites. There are also a few good stories of the ironic and darkly poetic variety, where some poor schmuck gets an undeserved ton of bricks dropped on his life for no other reason than fate sometimes does that (I'm thinking mostly of the story involving the guy who tries to help the seemingly pathetic blind groundskeeper). The outright "funny" stories, like the one about Godzilla being in the twelve-step program (he wants to stop stomping on tourists), and the story about the inflatable dinosaur who wanted to visit Disneyland so he could meet Mickey Mouse, are also okay, but less memorable than the dark & gritty stories, which usually involve hapless characters taking a wrong turn somewhere and in short order finding themselves in the midst of one form or another of earthly hell.

Sensitive readers should note that there are many instances of racist humor, and many racist observations, throughout the book, as this or that character spouts something ignorant. In fact, there's so much of it that I started thinking that the author perhaps had a benign view of such things, or maybe even held those views himself. But, no, it ultimately becomes clear that Mr. Lansdale is just trying to accurately show how many people talk and think, and also demonstrate that such thoughts and observations can mean one of several things: that the character in question truly IS racist, or might just be a little ignorant and stupid but not truly bad. I say this because in several instances (especially in the last story), a couple of SEEMING racists meet up (after one of those wrong turns) with a group of true, hateful, monstrous racists, and... well, let's just say Mr. Lansdale makes it clear that there's a difference between dumb, ignorant spoutings and true evil.

With the exception of the occasional inflatable dinosaur and the not-as-friendly-as-it-seems housecat (and even the tales containing those offbeat elements were perfectly engaging), these are intense, dark, memorable stories, and I look forward to experiencing more Joe R. Lansdale in the near future. Just not quite yet. There's some grim stuff here, and I could use a breather.

Country Fried Horror
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-22
"High Cotton" is representative of the period when Joe Lansdale was still writing hardcore horror - and no one did it better. The stories in this collection are truly disturbing and graphic, reaching splattery heights without ever straying too far from Joe's East Texas sensibilities. Plenty of sick twists and thinly veiled stabs at racial injustice to keep our more "sophisticated" readers interested. For those of us who like down and dirty country-fried horror, you can't do any better than this collection.

The best short story collection EVER!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-17
High Cotton by Joe R. Lansdale is the best short story collection I have ever read so far! The stories are funny and will make you laugh aloud -- so don't read this book in public places! Funny story: I was reading this book whilst waiting to board the plane in the airport, and I could not stop laughing! Security guards started to crowd around me -- just because I was acting in a 'peculiar manner' due to the loud laughing... so Joe R. Lansdale, it's your fault people are laughing out loud in public places whilst reading your book! Read this book and you will know what all the fuss is about.

Lansdale's Best-Of Collection
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-09
So, "High Cotton" reprints several of Lansdale's personally selected best stories. These stories, all of them except for one are also featured in his original collections "By Bizarre Hands", "Bestsellers Guaranteed", and "Writer of the Purple Rage", and are arguably the best of the stories featured in the original (and out of print) books.

Lansdale's follow-up, "Bumper Crop" collects many of the rest, but not very many stories from "Writer of the Purple Rage." If you can get a copy of "Purple Rage" get it. It has the original "Bubba Ho-Tep" novella, which is one of Lansdale's best stories and was made into the wonderful movie starring Bruce Campbell, which may be one of the most faithful adaptations of a writer's work ever put on film.

Anyway, "Booty and the Beast" is the newest (to me) story in this collection, which centers around a specific item associated with the Virgin Mary that brings doom to those who possess it. It is an entertaining story. The best stories here, however, are the ones his true fans have read before: "The Night They Missed the Horror Show" (his signature story), "The Phone Woman", and "Tight Little Stitches in a Dead Man's Back", "Not From Detroit", and many others. The stories also have introductions by Lansdale telling how they were conceived. There is also an introduction at the front of the book explaining how he came to write short stories and why he deosn't write as many anymore.

Overall, I really enjoyed reading the stories again and I hope this one stays in print for a long time, so that readers don't have to track down out of print collections to see what a fabulous writer this man is. These are the stories that made him famous, using his unique blend of humor, horror, and gritty realism to form a truly effective story. Highly Recommended!

Short Stories
Highlander: An Evening at Joe's
Published in Paperback by Berkley Trade (2000-09-01)
Author: Various
List price: $12.95
New price: $0.96
Used price: $0.89

Average review score:

Evening at Joe's
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-29
Interesting insight into some of the actors and a beautifully written story about Methos and his love.

great for fans
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-04
If your a fan of the show grab this book!!!! Just a fan of the movies? You will be lost.

A GREAT HIGHLANDER ADDITION
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-13
I thought this book did a terrific job of adding highlights and details to the immortals we have come to love watching and hearing about. I thoroughly enjoyed the stories by Laura Brennan, Anthony De Longis, The Postcards from Alexa (series), and Ken Gord. I did not however like a few of the stories, because they droned on, such as the staircase and death shall have no dominion. I am sure they are good stories on their own, but they did not fit in this collection of stories very well, in my opinion.

Simply a "Must Read" for all Highlander fans!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-20
This is a wonderful book and a must read for all fans of "Highlander". The cast and crew did a marvelous job of joining forces one last time to give us several wonderful short stories. "Post Cards From Alexa" is moving and beautiful. While "Pants" is sure to give you a good laugh. I would recommend this book to any fan of the show or the movies.

A book worth reading
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-28
Very interesting book. Written not only by professional writers, but also by members of the cast and crew, it turns out to be a good source for new Highlander related stories, for the delight of those who followed the TV series -- and always wanted more.

Some of the short stories complete the ones developed on TV, filling those blanks you didn't see on the show; others, makes you feel as if you were watching a brand-new episode of Highlander. The stories varies from writer to writer, but yet you are able to enjoy all of them equally.

My favorites are "Post Cards From Alexa" (if you like Methos, you'll love it), "The Star of Athena" (Amanda in her better shape), "Pants" (very funny), "Consone's Diary" (MacLeod from Consone's point of view), "The Methos Chronicles Part I" (centuries of Methos' life are covered here) and "The Other Side of The Mirror" (Adrian Paul trapped in an alternative world).

Short Stories
Holding Up the Earth
Published in Hardcover by Thorndike Press (2002-02-02)
Author: Dianne E. Gray
List price: $22.95
New price: $22.95
Used price: $1.00

Average review score:

excellent read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-22
A treasured stretch of land and a lonely 14 year old named Hope lie at the heart of this exquisite story of the ties that bind us to the earth itself and to each other.

Hope has spent her life being shuffled from one foster home to the next - until she finds herself with Sarah. A kind and undemanding woman, Sarah takes Hope to her family's farm in Nebraska where, through a series of letters and journals, we come to know the former inhabitants who also loved that same plot of ground. We meet the teenage girl who helped build the original sod house, a mail order bride's daughter who comes to work the land as a hired hand and others, who found pain and hardship as well as peace and joy, under that same Nebraska sky.

The author deftly captures the voices and tones of these predecessors - I fell into their worlds so deeply that when the story switched back to Hope, I found I'd forgotten her. This isn't meant to imply that Hope's story isn't as meaningful as those who homesteaded there - what struck me about Hope's modern story is the way that Gray has woven these other loves and lives into Hope's experiences as she unknowingly tries to find a place where she truly belongs.

Without getting sentimental or sappy (the end comes right to the edge, but I think she pulls it off), Holding up the Earth deals with the issue of loosing a loved one with a gentle hand, while also inspiring in readers a love of the earth and the power of belonging. Highly recommended for teenage girls, especially.

Gripping reading.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-07
Five teen girls are separated by decades but united by their love of a Nebraska farm: this focal point ties their lives together in this first novel centered around powerful female protagonists who are searching for a powerful place in the world. Letter entries explore their very different worlds and the concerns that connect them and make for gripping reading.

Kayla's Book Review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-11
Hope's mom got in an accident. Ever since then she's been in a series of foster homes. Every time she goes to a foster home she takes a keepsake with her. She keeps all of her stuff in an old backpack. When her mother died, at that time, she was living at a foster home with a beautiful meadow, she took her mmother's urn and spread it across the meadow. The meadow was so beautiful! She saved a ziplock baggy with some of her mother's ashes in it. When she left that foster home, she was bound and determined to find it again. A few years after the meadow, Hope finally found the perfect family. Anna and Sarah. When Sarah wanted to take Hope to the meadow, Hope didn't realize it was the same meadow she spread her mother's ashes in.

Takes Your Breath Away
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-21
I think that this book was really exciting and interesting. There like mysteries in the letters that "Hope" reads. It really got my attention while i read the first pages. When i started reading this book i actually didn't want to stop. I would recommend this book to other people.

ALYSSA;THE FOSTER CHILD.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-05
The book, Holding Up the Earth, was about a girl, Hope, whose mother died when Hope was six. She went to seven foster families before she went to a lady's named Sarah. This is about how Hope overcomes her mother's death, and learns to live with Sarah. I think that this book is well written,because about every other chapter the author has a diary or a journal explaning what has happened at the farm where they live in the past. I think that this helps you better understand the book. I would recommend this book to someone who likes Realistic Fiction. As far as age groups go I would recommend this book to children ten and up because there are words that younger children probably shouldn't be reading. If you love books that will lift your spirits this is the one for you!


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Authors-->T-->Troncoso, Sergio-->Short Stories-->38
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