short stories

The Chicken Chronicles

I like Alice Walker. I like chickens. Or actually, I think I have learned that I like the idea of Alice Walker and the idea of Chickens. There’s a slight difference and I think it took Walker’s The Chicken Chronicles for me to learn it.

I’ve always been a fan of Walker’s writing but while reading her books or poems, I always find myself troubled by something. Some niggling little something that I shush away because I LIKE ALICE WALKER.

I’ve always been a fan of chickens and I’ve told TW and those kids who want chickens that someday we could have them. But some niggling something about that troubled me. But, I shushed that away too because I LIKE CHICKENS.

So reading The Chicken Chronicles, I have finally decided to those niggling little feelings that something’s not quite right or not quite as wonderful as I might wish. I no longer want chickens. I’d like to visit them. I’d like to babysit a few for awhile. But I don’t think I really want to own them. I’d get attached. They’re messy.  No. I’ve decided I don’t really want chickens.

I’ve also decided what it is that has troubled me about Walker – I still like her writing. I still admire her as a woman. I’ll keep reading what she writes. But I don’t think I’ll be overlooking the little things about her that do truly bug me. Like calling herself mommy while writing letters to chickens. That’s totally an Alice Walker thing and that’s fine, it’s who she is. Great. But I don’t really like it. I don’t feel it. I’m not that kind of woman. I’m ok with her being the kind of woman who writes that way, I just don’t have to pretend I like it.

Other than that, The Chicken Chronicles was interesting. I liked it – overlooking the mommy stuff, of course. I liked the idea of her writing to chickens. I like her honesty when it comes to learning how to live with the chickens, how to take care of them, how she didn’t always do the best job or take the best care because she didn’t know. Didn’t understand. Had to learn. That’s really what I like about Walker, that’s what always keeps me overlooking the little things that really bug me about her work. Underneath it all – she’s real and she’s honest and there’s not enough of that in the world.

And I’ve re-subscribed to her blog because I liked the book enough to want to keep reading more of Walker’s letters to her chickens. Check it out at Alice Walker’s Garden. (Thank goodness Agnes of God is ok… the most recent entry scared the holy hell out of me. Not Agnes of God!… )

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Edible Stories

Edible Stories took me forever to read. Mostly because I was reading it when I almost died and went to the ER. (OK I didn’t almost die but it felt like it.)  I was confused – I thought it was just short stories, “just” being the important word here. I didn’t realize the stories were all tied to each other, even though TW started telling me stuff about the characters in the first story that weren’t in the first story. I thought it was just TW making stuff up or reading stuff into the story that wasn’t there… because she does that. But no, the stories are all tied together and that helped me get through the book eventually. A couple of the stories… I didn’t much like. But overall, it wasn’t a bad book. I’d have probably liked it more if I’d read it while I was not on my death bed.

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Full Dark, No Stars

When I reserved Full Dark, No Stars I didn’t know it was short stories, so that threw me right off the bat. Then the opening story, about rats (among other things) creeped me the hell out. Which is what I expect from a Stephen King novel. So I’m not complaining but UGH. The next story – was a hard read. A woman is raped and then seeks revenge. Hard, hard story but beyond that, I found some of the lesbian languaging to be “off” – at the end of the book, King talks about writing real people and not pulling punches and writing about things people would never really do. Well I hear him and normally I think he does a good job of this but in this case, it didn’t feel true to the character(s) for some reason. So color me unhappy with the second story. The rest of the stories – excellent in every way. Just creepy enough, amusing when they need to be and hardcore evil when they need to be that, too.

Overall, good stories. I’m not sorry I read them. But the rats, ugh.

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Fat Girls and Lawn Chairs

Doesn’t it seem like all of the books (by color) from my From the Stacks Challenge have been short stories? OK maybe not all of them but a lot? I think I should pay more attention to the books I’m choosing for this particular challenge because I’m just not a big short story fan. BUT… Fat Girls and Lawn Chairs was pretty darn good. Cheryl Peck needs to write more books – or more short stories. I don’t care which, I liked her. Hmmm does she have a blog? Because if she doesn’t, she needs one.

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Zombies vs Unicorns

Unicorns FTW!

Last night when I was just a wee bit into Zombies vs Unicorns, Michelle wandered into my bedroom and plopped herself down on my bed – which led me to gripe about kids always laying on my darn bed. My griping didn’t send her away so I figured I’d try asking her some stupid question, a normal surefire way to get her to wander off to do something more interesting… “Zombies or Unicorns?”

She said Unicorns (smart girl) which led TW to try and argue that Zombies were better… unfortunately TW is not very good at debating and she proved the Unicorn’s side over and over and over again with her arguments, which caused Michelle to continue to lay on my bed laughing her a** off. So much for surefire ways to get a kid to get off of your bed.

The zombies vs unicorn debate seems like a good debate but it isn’t. Unicorns win hands down. They’re smarter. They’re magic. The stories about them are better. Not that that zombie stories in Zombies vs Unicorns were bad, they were excellent – but they just proved that Unicorns are just plain smarter, meaner, more magnificent and BETTER.

Don’t believe me? Read the book. Princess Prettypants, the prettiest, sweetest, rainbowyest (that’s totally a word) unicorn in the entire book will kick your ASS and make you like it. No zombie would stand a chance.

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Lips Touch Three Times

Really interesting that author Laini Taylor has two books on the Cybils shortlist – a middle grade fantasy/scifi, Dreamdark, and a YA fantasy/scifi, Lips Touch Three Times. I liked Dreamdark a lot, even though it was a sequel and I had not read the first book. I liked Lips Touch Three Times too – though I’m not a big short story fan. Brilliant idea, to write three stories related to kissing. Very very smart idea – and interesting stories, too. And stories that don’t exactly have a happily ever after, woken with a kiss, prince and princess ending. Very smart. I like Laini Taylor.

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I know I am but what are you

I am not a Samantha Bee fan. I didn’t have any intention of reading her book, I Know I Am But What Are You. TW picked it up from the “just back” shelf. I rolled my eyes. I rolled my eyes as she read it, too. Even though she was laughing out loud – over and over again. I don’t remember exactly what it was that caused me to change my mind – but something TW said, about one of the stories. I don’t think it was the stolen stockpot – I think it was after that. Whatever it was, it swayed me. I read it. It was funny. I like Samantha Bee a little bit now. But just a little.

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M is for Magic

How the heck did I miss M is for Magic? I mean I know I’m not the biggest Gaiman fan in the world (I like him but I don’t go crazy or anything) but I do tend to read new releases by “big” children’s fiction and YA fiction authors pretty quickly. Still, I missed it and was glad I happened to see it on the YA shelf the other day. Great short stories. I did indeed laugh out loud several times. And I learned what a “gonk” is, so that was cool, too.  That’s what I like about Gaiman, I always learn something new while being entertained.

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What to Wear to See the Pope

We bought What to Wear to See the Pope ages ago, at the Gainesville Friends of the Library Sale, I think. When I put it on my From the Stacks (by Color) Challenge, I didn’t realize it was short stories. I sighed in frustration during the first story because I really wasn’t in the mood for short stories – and I was afraid I was just going to slog my way through it and hate it. Luckily, all of the stories were fun – and interesting and it wasn’t a slog at all.

I wonder if TW would let us rename the #prairiedogs after Saints… that would be awesome.

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The Serial Garden

I’ve read a couple of Joan Aiken’s stories before and I’ve always been interested in reading more, thank goodness for The Serial Garden – a compilation of Aiken stories. Nice. Loads of fun. Except for The Serial Garden where I gasped at the ending (TW didn’t find this nearly as troubling as I did) or The Goblin Music where I couldn’t believe the goblin child … well I won’t spoil it for you.

Another great Cybil Middle Grade Fantasy/Science Fiction selection. I have no idea how a winner can be picked from this group. They’re just too bloody good.

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