31 Days of Stories 2020, Day 12: “Slumming” by Ottessa Moshfegh
Ottessa Moshfegh uses humour to drive home a deadly serious point.
A Blog About Books and Reading
A Blog About Books and Reading
Ottessa Moshfegh uses humour to drive home a deadly serious point.
Matsuda Aoko's story is a surrealistic allegory about the psychological fallout from the 2011 Japanese tsunami.
Seyward Goodhand's ambitious and risky alternate history imagines a meeting between Simone Weil and Leni Riefenstahl.
Varlam Shalamov's intense short fiction provides an intense and unvarnished glimpse of life inside Stalin's Gulag.
Dashiell Hammett's story about a promising boxer and his venal brother represents a departure for the author.
Zsuzsi Gartner's precisely calibrated, vicious little parable is about the things we want but can't have.
Amparo Dávila's uncanny story of psychological torment has echoes of Poe and Kafka.
Jean Stafford's story is a close and incisive work of psychological fiction.
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah's story is a satire about the cascading violence that results from institutional racism.
Short stories offer a different kind of pleasure from other forms of literature, a pleasure not curtailed by a story's relatively small size.