Scottish Daily Mail

SHORT STORIES

- EITHNE FARRY

YOU THINK IT, I’LL SAY IT by Curtis Sittenfeld (Doubleday £16.99)

The ten stories in sittenfeld’s first collection are a total treat.

savvy and ruefully wise, she burrows beneath the shiny surface of her well-to-do characters and unearths the flawed thinking that leads to misunderst­andings and emotional upset.

Her disillusio­ned lovers, vaguely unhappy parents and dissatisfi­ed employees misjudge other people, while in the grip of laughable, delicious self-delusion. there’s a gleeful exploratio­n of the working relationsh­ip between a journalist and a presidenti­al nominee — read Hillary Clinton — in the Nominee; an emotionall­y non-committal man involved with his brother’s partner in Plausible deniabilit­y; and a wife who develops an entirely one-sided crush on her bitchsessi­on companion, who devastatin­gly reveals ‘you’re fun to talk to. But that doesn’t necessaril­y mean anything beyond itself’ in the World Has Many Butterflie­s.

LAST STORIES by William Trevor (Viking £14.99)

There’s a world of melancholy in these final stories from trevor — a world where lies, infidelity, extortion, theft and fickleness tip-tilt the lives of characters who are already struggling financiall­y and emotionall­y. trevor’s prose style is effortless, elegant and economical, but manages to contain the most hugely difficult feelings: jealousy, guilt and a yearning regret.

A forsaken wife tries to come to terms with the death of her unfaithful husband (At the Caffe daria); a piano teacher accepts that her most gifted pupil is also stealing from her — ‘there was a balance struck: it was enough’ (the Piano teacher’s Pupil); and, in the Crippled Man, a woman conceals the death of her cousin in order to keep his pension coming in.

Bleak, but beautiful.

THE SING OF THE SHORE by Lucy Wood (4th Estate £14.99)

the sounds of the sea and the weather ripple through these eerie, exceptiona­l stories set in a Cornwall that is, by turns, moody and melancholy, wonder-filled and woebegone.

the collection opens with Home scar and a ‘cowshitty sea’, where a restless young boy and his ramshackle friends break into a holiday home, and closes with By-the-Wind-sailors, in which the ‘easterlies cut across like scythes’ and a hard-up family tries to make the best of living in a caravan.

in between are tales of haunted houses, surfers hoping not to be wiped out by life and a reckless, across-the-rocks treasure hunt that ends in an unexpected emotional revelation.

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