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PEN America Best Debut Short Stories 2017

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Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
THE INAUGURAL ANTHOLOGY OF LITERATURE'S MOST PROMISING NEW VOICES
"A welcome addition to the run of established short story annuals, promising good work to come." —Kirkus Reviews
Many writers who are household names today got their start when an editor encountered their work for the first time and took a chance. This book celebrates twelve such moments of discovery. The first volume of an annual anthology, launched alongside PEN's new Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers, it recognizes writers who have had outstanding fiction debuts in a print or online literary magazine.
The winning stories collected here—selected this year by judges Marie–Helene Bertino, Kelly Link, and Nina McConigley—take place in South Carolina and in South Korea, on a farm in the eighteenth century and among the cubicles of a computer– engineering firm in the present day. They narrate age–old themes with current urgency: migration, memory, technology, language, love, ecology, identity, family.
Each work comes with an introduction by the editor who originally published it, explaining why he or she chose it. The commentaries provide insight into a process that often remains opaque to readers and students of writing, and showcase the vital work literary magazines do to nurture contemporary literature's new voices.
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    • Kirkus

      June 15, 2017
      Worthy showcase of winning short fiction by recipients of a newly established PEN prize.The Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize honors work by emerging writers published in North America, and the range of publications represented here is refreshingly broad: it includes not just the usual suspects (Boston Review, Southwest Review), but also journals that are themselves emerging into broader view (Epiphany, Hyphen). The judges' choices are uniformly solid; the stories are widely situated but with some points in common. Many feature family members in dramatic situations. In Ruth Serven's very short story "A Message," a mysterious father is revealed to have households scattered across the Balkans: "You say that someday you'll find each of your siblings. Your father will buy a house and you'll all live together. Like Full House." The pop-culture references aren't confined to 1980s nostalgia; in Emily Chammah's lovely "Tell Me, Please," two Jordanian sisters reveal only so much of themselves on their Facebook pages, disguising the fact that they're "from the Beni Hasan tribe, that we live in Mafrag, that we attend Al al-Bayt University." When their father discovers that one of the girls is reading Animal Farm, in which, as one of the sisters puts it, pigs take over a farm, he moans, "My God, what is happening in my home?" Here a Russian emigree of indeterminate age sees a golden hawk that, she is impatiently told, does not exist; there a Korean couple drink like fish, "as if we girls are invisible," as one daughter puts it, just one moment of the familial minefield the children have to traverse. Perhaps the best single moment, from a story by writer Grace Oluseyi, involves two Nigerians, tentatively dating, who bond over sushi, the woman saying to the man, "I was thinking about my grandmother, back home. And how she would be horrified that we would pay to eat raw fish." A welcome addition to the run of established short story annuals, promising good work to come.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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