"No one can be lonely who has a book for company." ~ Nelle Reagan

Showing posts with label Short Story Collection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Short Story Collection. Show all posts

Thursday, November 8, 2012

What the Zhang Boys Know by Clifford Garstang (A TLC Book Tour Review)

What the Zhang Boys Know
Author:  Clifford Garstang
Published: October 2012
Publisher: Press 53
Pages: 218
ISBN 9781935708612
Source:  A complimentary copy was provided by TLC Book Tours and the publisher which in no way influenced my opinion nor my review of this book.  All opinions expressed here are my own.



The author's website:  cliffordgarstang.com


Set in a condominium building on the edge of Chinatown in Washington, D.C., these stories present the practical and emotional struggles of Zhang Feng-qi, originally from Shanghai, to find a new mother for his sons following the death of his American wife. Along the way, the stories spotlight Zhang’s neighbors as they seek to fill gaps in their own lives: the young bookseller diagnosed with a life-threatening illness; the young lawyer trying to cope with a failed marriage; the obsessive painter haunted by the image of a face; the middle-aged woman forced to sell her possessions in order to survive; the sculptor, overwhelmed by longing for the son he didn’t know he had. And then there are the Zhang boys, who firmly believe that their mother is coming back. What is it that they know?


My Thoughts:

Each chapter comprising What the Zhang Boys Know belongs to a different resident in a condo complex, which is a unique method of story-telling.  The characters' lives intertwine to an extent, making the sum of the short stories into a short novel.  All the residents are neighbours of Zhang Feng-qi, a recent widower raising two young sons and in search of a mother for his children.  As the individuals' stories reveal their lives, trials and loves; we learn that the young Zhang boys know a lot more than one could imagine. Are they, perhaps, the thread that unites the residents of the condominium?  What are the secrets they have been entrusted with and are they good at keeping them? The reveal comes piece by piece, little by little with What the Zhang Boys Know.

I like the unique approach in connecting the characters, making a community from the people.  In the short time given to allow the reader to get to know the residents, it is rather easy to empathize with some.  I consider this a feat of talent!  Clifford Garstang writes in an easy, fluid manner though I found some of the subject matter not to my personal reading tastes.  Overall, it's much like a soap opera mini-series which is carried off very well by Mr. Garstang.  The ending surprised me and I found myself adding to the story to resolve the story to my liking.  I like things tied up in a perfect little bow.  Perhaps that is what he intended from the reader after all? Let's just say it is.

Warning:  mature situations, sexual situations, violence and profanity


Clifford Garstang is the author of What the Zhang Boys Know (Press 53, 2012) and the prize-winning linked story collection In an Uncharted Country (Press 53, 2009). His work has appeared in numerous literary magazines including Bellevue Literary Review, Blackbird, Cream City Review, ShenandoahTampa Review, and Virginia Quarterly Review, and has received Distinguished Mention in the Best American Series. He has received fellowships from the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts, and the Sewanee Writers’ Conference. He holds an MFA in Fiction from Queens University of Charlotte and is the co-founder and editor of Prime Number Magazine. He is also the author of the popular literary blog Perpetual Folly.
After receiving a BA in Philosophy from Northwestern University, Garstang served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in South Korea, where he taught English at Jonbuk University. He then earned an MA in English and a JD, magna cum laude, both from Indiana University, and practiced international law in Chicago, Los Angeles, and Singapore with one of the largest law firms in the United States. Subsequently, he earned a Master of Public Administration from Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government and worked for Harvard Law School as a legal reform consultant in Almaty, Kazakhstan. From 1996 to 2001, he was Senior Counsel for East Asia at the World Bank in Washington, D.C., where his work focused on China, Vietnam, Korea, and Indonesia.
Garstang teaches creative writing at Writers.com and elsewhere. He currently lives in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia.
For more information on Cliff and his work, visit his website: cliffordgarstang.com.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Book Review: Merry Christmas Stories by Jeff R. Spalsbury

Merry Christmas Stories
Author:  Jeff R. Spalsbury
Published:  2010
Publisher:  Black Rose Writing
Pages:  211
# Short Stories:  25
ISBN 9781935605676
Note:  This copy was autographed by the author

Source:  This book was provided by the author, as part of the TLC virtual book tour, in exchange for an honest review.

http://www.jeffrspalsbury.com/

Bound together in one volume are 25 short stories of Christmas.  Within these stories you will find heartwarming tales of love, life, lost Santas and found, new loves and old, an alien or two and a family of ghosts.  Mr. Spalsbury pens them all and even includes one of his mother's poems, Think of Me, in the story "Loneliness is My Mistress".  There is something for everyone.  You need only a few minutes to select and enjoy any one of the twenty-five stories.  You will laugh, smile and you may even shed a tear, but one thing is for sure, you will feel of the spirit of Christmas within these pages. Three of my favourites are Santa's Missing, Santa's Found and Willie Putt-Putt which made me laugh. Merry Christmas stories is available in the US at Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble, and in Canada at Amazon.ca

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