Literary reviews by Tim Love.
Warning: Rather than reviews, these are often notes in preparation for reviews that were never finished, or pleas for help with understanding pieces. See Litref Reviews - a rationale for details.

Saturday 20 July 2024

"The Time Out Book of London Short Stories" by Maria Lexton (ed) (Penguin, 1993)

  • Clive Barker - No
  • Nicola Barker - Better. Parts are ok.
  • Ronan Bennett - OK. Set in a prison. The self-sabotage isn't well enough motivated.
  • Anne Billson - Yes. Charlie "saves" women. 12 lived with him in Croydon, far enough from the dangers of London - there you could stand "on the edge, and peer into it without falling in". They do tasks for him (cheering up Tube users, etc) competing for his affection, until there's a little rebellion.
  • Glyn Brown - No
  • Julie Burchill - No. Some good one-liners but some bad ones too.
  • Gordon Burn - Ok. A bit too long. Interesting ending
  • Jonathan Carroll - No
  • Christopher Fowler - Nearly. The "woman = London" idea saves it
  • Neil Gaiman - No
  • Steve Grant – Yes. Anecdote and observation ok. Would have liked more in Beryl’s voice
  • Robert Grossmith - Yes. Frida and Desmond have ops to become hermaphrodites (Frida's idea. Desmond's not keen). Other people have ops so they can have sex with themselves. A drug lets babies be hermaphrodites from birth. Frida added more penises. Then society decides enough is enough - people aren't having kids any more because sex is too interesting. They revert and Frida suggests they start a family - he using an exo-womb.
  • Charles Higson - Ok. Multi-PoV. Starts well.
  • Nick Hornby - Yes.
  • John McVicar - No. I don't like the proportions of the info/story mix
  • Hilary Mantel - Yes, as a character study
  • John Milne - Yes. A private investigator has a job
  • Kim Newman - Best so far. A Blitz Spirit craze has taken over London, so much so that reality seems to be changing.
  • Lawrence Norfolk - Ok. Clever.
  • Christopher Petit - Ok. A spoof bio of a Soho writer/drunker
  • Will Self - Yes. I've read this before. In LA, cafe staff are wannabe actors. In London they're novelists.
  • Adam Thorpe - Don't think I understood it
  • Mark Timlin - No twist?
  • Lisa Tuttle - Twist doesn't work for me
  • Nigel Watts - The ending isn't enough to save the piece

No comments:

Post a Comment