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Great Love Stories, from Chekhov to Munro
by Jeffrey Eugenides
If you liked My Mistress's Sparrow Is Dead, try these:
by A.L. Kennedy
Published Apr 2011
Read ReviewsPowerful and funny, intimate and profound, the stories in What Becomes capture the spirit of our times with dark humor, poignant hopefulness, and brilliant evocation of contemporary social and spiritual malaise.
by Cynthia Zarin
Published Sep 2010
Read ReviewsA dazzling story of obsessive love emerges in Cynthia Zarin's luminous new book inspired and inhabited by the title character of Nabokovs novel Ada, or Ardor: A Family Chronicle, who was the lifelong love of her half brother, Van.
Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned
by Wells Tower
Published Feb 2010
Read ReviewsIn the stories of Wells Tower, families fall apart and messily try to reassemble themselves. His version of America is touched with the seamy splendor of the dropout, the misfit: failed inventors, boozy dreamers, hapless fathers, wayward sons.
by Aleksandar Hemon
Published Dec 2009
Read ReviewsThe inaugural installment of what will become an annual anthology of stories from across Europe.
by Andrew Sean Greer
Published Mar 2009
Read ReviewsFrom the bestselling author of The Confessions of Max Tivoli, a love story full of secrets and astonishments set in 1950s San Francisco.
by Cate Kennedy
Published Feb 2008
Read ReviewsDevastating, evocative, and richly comic, Dark Roots deftly unveils the traumas that incite us to desperate measures and the coincidences that drive our lives. This arresting collection introduces a new master of the short story.
by Olaf Olafsson
Published Jan 2008
Read ReviewsA haunting collection of thematically linked stories that encompasses the twelve months of a year, capturing the most candid moments between lovers, husbands and wives, parents and children.
by Alice Munro
Published Nov 2005
Read ReviewsHere are the infinite betrayals and surprises of lovebetween men and women, between friends, between parents and childrenthat are the stuff of all our lives.
by Bernhard Schlink
Published Nov 2002
Read ReviewsA collection of stories that weave themselves around the idea of love---love to seek and love to flee; love as desire, as guilt, as confusion or self-betrayal; love as habit, as affair, and as life-changing rebellion.
A Blind Man Can See How Much I Love You
by Amy Bloom
Published Jul 2001
Read ReviewsTranscendent stories: about the uncertain gestures of love, about the betrayals and gifts of the body, about the surprises and bounties of the heart, and about what comes to us unbidden and what we choose.
by Nick Hornby
Published Feb 2001
Read ReviewsTwelve completely new stories, written by twelve undeniably imaginative voices. Speaking with the Angel is at turns clever, outrageous, witty, edgy, tender, and wicked. This is what they meant by original.
by Lorrie Moore
Published Sep 1999
Read ReviewsExplores the personal and the universal, the idiosyncratic and the mundane, with all the wit, brio, and verve that have made her one of the best storytellers of our time.
Good as it is to inherit a library, it is better to collect one.
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