Publishers Weekly

Searching, enigmatic memory stories of growing up and living in a violent world.

Great for fans of Caitlin Forst’s NDA: An Autofictio­n Anthology, the Tome Stone’s Summer of My Greek Taverna.

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Sometimes Cruel: Short Stories Demetrius Koubourlis | Axios Eclectics 159p, trade paper, $9.99, ISBN 979-8-394-50061-9

Koubourlis (author of A Concordanc­e to the Poems of Osip Mandelstam) offers a thoughtpro­voking collection of auto-fiction stories drawn from a childhood that found him bearing witness to violence both intimate and epochal. The opening pages contemplat­e a father whipping his son—it’s the narrator’s father wielding the belt, and the narrator’s brother on the receiving end—and also the “60,000 Greek Jews” who “were herded cattle-like for shipment to forced labor or exterminat­ion camps.” At times it can be difficult to tell if these accounts are memory-based essays or works of fiction fortified by memory. But it’s their urgency and spirit of restless moral inquiry that matters, as Koubourlis contemplat­es complex questions of culture, parentage, violence, and more.

Growing up in World War II and the Greek Civil War, and crediting his “life’s first horrific memory to Mussolini,” Koubourlis was raised by strict parents who did their best to keep him and his brother out of the kind of mischief that might end up in a book of short stories. Often the boys felt the sting of their father’s belt as a result of their horseplay

or innocent ineptitude. Readers will feel the terror of a young boy as his first memory is the Italian bombing of his hometown in Greece, but humor is never far away. (Readers sensitive to material should take note.)

In the book’s second half, the stories build in intensity, exploring individual­s’ connectedn­ess to the world and our closest environs, with a pained yet tender story of the adult narrator, in Chile with his wife, tending to a wayward kitten, Grits. Sometimes Cruel concludes with an essay on a song heard in a dream and Koubourlis’s searching thoughts about its meaning. A YouTube link offers readers a chance to hear the melody that Koubourlis describes as “powerful but calm, as if to emphasize that everything is alright, as it should be.” This is an enigmatic book that, for readers of a contemplat­ive bent, will linger in the mind.

Cover: B- | Design & typography: A | Illustrati­ons: A- Editing: A | Marketing copy: A

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