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Best or worst short stories you've ever read?
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Dan
(last edited Jun 26, 2013 11:18AM)
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Jun 26, 2013 10:18AM

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I'm sure I've read some stories I don't care for, but as a result, they merely escape my memory.

Other favorites include Flannery O'Connor's "A Good Man Is Hard to Find" (echoing earlier posts), Kij Johnson's "Ponies," Robert Silverberg's "Sundance," Michael Swanwick's "Triceratops Summer," and Ken Liu's "Mono No Aware."

"To Build a Fire"! I can remember reading that during class in high school and you could tell when every student got done because there was a "Whew!" or a "Shit!" or whatever. Powerful stuff.
Other favorites from over the years. And I can only think of favorites, I'm having a hard time recollecting short stories I didn't like.
"Ylla"
"The Third Expedition"
"...And the Moon Be Still as Bright"
"The Sound of Thunder"
"The Small Assassin"
"Fever Dream"
"Zero Hour"
"Rocket Man"
"Chrysalis"
"Pillars of Fire"
"Kaleidoscope"
...all by Ray Bradbury. Badass. "Ylla" and "Rocket Man" in particular, changed my life. I'm not even sure why.
"Crouch End"
"Survivor Type"
"I Am the Doorway"
Stephen King. There are a bunch of his that I love that I don't hold in the same regard as these, but I love King in the short form. Crouch End scared the pants off me.
"The Monkey's Paw" W.W. Jacobs. Wow, really, wow. This is the only thing of his I've ever read or even heard of. And if I was only known for one thing, and it was this short story, that would be okay.
"I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream"
"All the Sounds of Fear"
"The Whimper of Whipped Dogs"
Harlan Ellison
"In the Hills, the Cities"
"The Body Politic"
Clive Barker is freaking insane. "In the Hills, the Cities" to me, is what great art is all about. I find it deeply unsettling, nightmarish and I can't -- quite -- put -- my finger on why. I only have two listed here but I was shocked by how good he was.
"Something Nice"
"Trying to Be"
Mary Gaitskill
"The Roaches" Thomas M. Disch WILD!

Speaking of some that I forgot:
"Ringing the Changes" Robert Aickman
POE! Freaking Poe! How could I forget Poe???
"The Black Cat" (my favorite Poe)
"Hop Frog"
"The Tell-Tale Heart"
"The Whistling Room" William Hope Hodgson
Okay, okay, I'm done!


I'm super excited to read some of the stories listed here that I haven't heard of. :D

I just looked up that story the other day because of this thread. I can't remember if I read it in school but I definitely read it around the same age and it was absolutely painful.

As for what I like in short stories, the twisted endings are always nice, but I just love how focused shorter fiction is. It makes it pack more into a shorter space, I just love it.
For my favourites, I'd definitely say "Janus" by Ann Beattie, which is incredible. And also "Cathedral" by Raymond Carver.

Both are excellent. "To Build a Fire" is one my top ten favorites of all time.


The Open Window was a masterpiece. Have you ever read two bottles of relish?

As for best short story, I have to give my nod to "Travels with My Cats" by Mike Resnick (Best Short Story Hugo Award in 2005; nominated in 2004 for the Nebula Award).


"Briar Rose"
by a woman named Kim Antieau. Strangely, it's the only story I've ever read by her. It was an astonishing, poetic story about memory and abuse and tattoos and ritual. It was and is unlike anything else I've ever read. It was a story only a woman could write. Absolutely breathtaking.

Painful in a good way, though, right?

..."
Absolutely.

I can’t get into Borges at all. I wouldn’t ever say his work is bad, but I can’t even get into his short stories. Simply not my cup of tea.

I read it in her The Collected Stories. I'd just gotten used to the behavior and attitudes of her characters - around the middle of the book - when that twist smacked me. I like that, though. Those are the kind of stories you never forget.



Odour of Chrysanthemums - DH Lawrence
A Rose for Emily - Faulkner
The Second Bakery Attack - Murakami
Yasunari Kawabata's Palm-of-the-Hand Stories, which might best be described as "micro stories"

"Bullet in the Brain" is also my favorite--it's one of the few short stories I can read again and again, enjoying it just as much each time. It's "the best they is."


I'm rather glad I didn't know this subgenre existed. :)

I'm actually a little curious to read one, now. I never have.

Thanks for giving us a at least a group of bad ones. I can't think of one. And I know I've read them, I think that one of the beauties of short stories is that the time commitment stakes are so low, that if you don't like it, a lot of times it just doesn't stick with you and you move on. I know for me, most of the time any short story I read is in a collection of short stories, so after reading one I didn't care for, I just move on to the next one.

I find myself rereading this odd story called "What Happened to me on Holiday" by Martin Amis (in the collection Heavy Water). I also adore another strange little story in the collection Circumnavigation, by Steve Lattimore, called "Answer Me This".
I can't really get into Lorrie Moore, though I need to try her again. I also have difficulty with Joyce Carol Oates, but I admit I have liked her stories better than her novels.



Sounds utterly painful!
I cut my teeth on Agatha Christie shorts, but haven't really read many short stories since my college days. I've just gotten started again and will use many of the faves on this list to round out my education!

Worst short stories? I stop when they are obvious, so I let that kind of judgment go.

counts as a short story anthology--you can read them separately or in order as a complete story. Heartbreaking, intense, sooo clever and style for miles.

I would like correct myself and say (red-faced) that "The Willows" was written by another excellent horror writer, Algernon Blackwood, not Ambrose Bierce. But at least I recalled the correct initials :)

Could be you made the mistake because they were in the same anthology, Tales of Terror: The World's Most Terrifying Stories Presented by a Leading Icon of Fear. And I'll bet there's been a few other times they've appeared together as well.

However, a list of great (IMHO) short story writers would necessarily have to include T. C. Boyle (living), Erskine Caldwell and Carson McCullers (both dead).
And for novella-length stories, Herman Melville and John Steinbeck.
RRB

However, a list of great (IMHO) short story writers would necessarily have to include T. C. Boyle (living), Erskine Caldwell..."
My favorite literary Novella is The Old Man and the Sea"

However, a list of great (IMHO) short story writers would necessarily have to include T. C. Boyle (living), ..."
Huh. I just think of The Old Man and the Sea as a great novel not a great novella but it is pretty short...


I bought it for a long plane journey to the Frisco.
After a while the anodyne inflight films were more attractive. It is a collection of essays and not stories and most lack narrative - well the ones I read before I gave up more than halfway thru. A lot of navel-gazing stuff by the authors that is all.
Shane is that there are plenty of short stories out there by German authors (or in German) that I'd recommend but this collection needs to be recycled into something more useful.


Books mentioned in this topic
We Live in Water: Stories (other topics)The Old Man and the Sea (other topics)
Tales of Terror: The world's most terrifying stories presented by a leading icon of fear (other topics)
Red as Blood, or Tales from the Sisters Grimmer (other topics)
Vampires in the Lemon Grove: Stories (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Jess Walter (other topics)Martin Amis (other topics)
Steve Lattimore (other topics)