31 Days of Stories, Day 11: “Solitary” by John Edgar Wideman
The story is about the mother of an imprisoned son before, during, and after her bus trip to visit him.
A Blog About Books and Reading
A Blog About Books and Reading
The story is about the mother of an imprisoned son before, during, and after her bus trip to visit him.
Hurston’s story contains the folk idiom for which she is known, as well as being a signal example of her concern with women overcoming abuse at the hands of men.
Not a retread or homage, Bloch’s vampire story displays a momentum and technique typical of the author’s best work.
Samanta Schweblin’s story about paralysis and paranoia shares elements in common with Beckett and Kafka.
In this short, ironic work of feminist noir, the femme fatale turns the tables on the hapless men and their murderous scheme.
Catalan writer Soldana offers an outrageous premise for a story that serves as an acerbic satire of entitlement and power.
A Moscow oligarch becomes involved with a redheaded soprano and an eleven-year-old boy in a tragedy from the contemporary Russian realist.
Three female figures, and their carefully interwoven relationships, provide the backbone for this creepily fractured fairy tale.
Evans’s story deals with the fallout from a viral photo of a white woman in a Confederate flag bikini.
Dunnion’s story, about a gay teenager navigating the shoals of religious and sexual attraction, finds its momentum in the juxtaposition of the sacred and profane.