Category Archives: ShortStories

Lone Survivor (2013)

From NetFlix:

Mark Wahlberg stars as Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell in this action-drama based on an ill-fated real-life mission to bring down a Taliban boss. The stakes get even higher when Luttrell and his unit are ambushed in the Hindu Kush region of Afghanistan.

Photography in this film is very explicitly bloody and violent. Plot is simple: SEALs train hard; SEAL mission ambushed and all killed but Marcus Luttrell; Luttrell reaches Pashtun village which protects him; Helicopters arrive to rescue Luttrell.

As usual the devil is in the details. Whatever your feelings about the war in Afghanistan, you have to admire the courage and dedication of these SEALs.

For me the most notable scene was the moral debate about what to do with villagers tending their goats. Sadly their moral decision sealed their fate.

Be sure to watch till the very end so that you can see the slide show of the actual men and their families. Also there Is some explanation about why the villagers helped Luttrell.

Not easy to watch!

Ghostwritten (1999)

Currently (2010) David Mitchell is the “it” author. There have been many articles about him, especially one in the New York Times Sunday magazine section. He is said to have re-defined the novel. You can read about him in the Wikipedia article.

Mitchell’s novels are as follows:

  • Ghostwritten (1999)
  • number9dream (2001)
  • Cloud Atlas (2004)
  • Black Swan Green (2006)
  • The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet (2010)

If you like T.C. Boyle (especially his short stories), you will also enjoy David Mitchell.

Let me tempt you with “Ghostwritten”, his first novel. Each chapter is a somewhat self-contained short story, but not really. The chapters eventually wrap around to where they started. But the fun “trick” is that each chapter after the first contains within some sly reference back to the previous chapter. If you did not read that previous chapter carefully then you might just miss the reference in the succeeding chapter. I’ll give you a hint for chapter one, namely, “telephone call”.

To tempt you a bit more I’ll describe chapter one. All chapters are written in the first person as I recall. In chapter one the speaker is the Japanese cult fanatic who personally released the sarin gas in the Tokyo subway. In the entire chapter while he is fleeing the scene and hiding in some remote guest house he is ruminating about his cult under the leadership of someone always referred to as “His Serendipity”. He interprets each and every event in the unwavering context of someone so completely brain-washed that he is deceived about everything.

Mitchell has a clever and often witty way with words. I do worry that his choice of words may be trendy enough that his book might some day be outdated.

Some chapters are manic (think Thom Jones), but not all. There is a somewhat poignant chapter in which a brilliant woman scientist tries to retire to her beloved small Irish (Celtic) island in order to escape being forceably employed by the CIA. This chapter relates to a following chapter about a nighttime radio talk show in an astoundingly clever way.

T.C. Boyle Short Stories (1998)

If you like quirky, imaginative, outrageous, ambiguous short stories with no promise of a happy ending, you will love T.C. Boyle. One of our Movie Fans, Melissa, suggested T.C.Boyle years ago. Thanks Melissa!

T.C.Boyle is in the tradition of Thom Jones and possibly Dennis Johnson. Here is a list of the short stories of T.C.Boyle.

Stories (1998)
Collects the four earlier volums of short fiction as well as seven previously uncollected stories.
After the Plague (2001)
I just finished this one. I found only one story that I didn’t really care about.
Tooth and Claw (2005)
Wild Child & Other Stories (2010)

For more information on T.C. Boyle see the Wikipedia article.

The Pugilist At Rest (1993)

Pugilist 1 Pugilist 2 Pugilist 3

For background on the author Thom Jones see the Wikipedia article.

If you read nothing else from this set of short stories, you must read the short story entitled “The Pugilist At Rest” for which the book is named. The above photos are different views of a Roman copy of the Greek original “Pugilist At Rest” attributed to Apollonius which copy is found in the Palazzo Massimo, Rome, Italy.

It helps if you read each of Jones’ short stories quickly as if you were having a manic attack because that’s fairly close to the author’s reality. Note that he suffers from temporal lobe epilepsy and diabetes. As noted in the Wikipedia, he has two more collection of short stories: Cold Snap (1995) and Sonny Liston Was a Friend of Mine (1999).

I just finished “Cold Snap” and I assure you it is just as manic as “Pugilist”. There are some wild and very explicit sex scenes. There is a lot of drug use. Don’t say I didn’t warn you!

Enjoy the roller-coaster ride!

The Best American Mystery Stories (2008)

For 2008 the guest editor is George Pelecanos who, as usual, had to pick 20 short stories from the hundreds submitted to him by the series editor Otto Penzler. Note that this book is NOT “The Best American Short Stories (2008)” which is a different book in the same series. Lately I have enjoyed the mystery stories more than the general short stories. Beware: “mystery” does NOT mean detective or murder. Instead, there is something as yet undiscovered in the story which is generally revealed at the end.

Please note that at the back of the book there are biographies of the authors as well as the author’s comments on the short story in the book. Even the biographies are fun because it always amazes me how people’s lives change.

Mist James Lee Burke
Drug addict fighting overpowering odds after having suffered through hurricane Katrina.

Mulholland Dive Michael Connelly
Really cool plot twist and surprise ending from a well-known detective author. Clever title.

The Hour When The Ship Comes In Robert Ferrigno
Redemption for a thug.

One Good One Chuck Hogan
What one lie can lead to. Terrific surprise ending.

The Monks of the Abbey Victoria Rupert Holmes
Incredibly well architected scam.

Proof of God Holly Goddard Jones
Marvelous suspense right up to the end.

Tunis and Time Peter Lasalle
FBI versus CIA, who is using whom ? Ramblings of an aging agent. Surprise ending.

A Day Meant To Do Less Kyle Minor
Near the end of the life of an aged stroke-victim mother who has suffered from a brutal rape (explicitly described in the story), there is a scene of bathing care as viewed first by her minister son and then by the woman herself in her own distorted way.

Child’s Play Alice Munro
Alice Munro (Canadian, born 1931, age 78 AND STILL WRITING !!!) strikes again. At first this story about young girls seemed too genteel, almost dull. But hang in there, the ending blew me away. This story also appeared in “The Best American Short Stories (2008)”. So somebody must have really liked this story!

Win’s Girl Thisbe Nissen
A woman down on her luck is taken advantage of. Good revenge ending.

The Blind Man’s Sighted Daughters Joyce Carol Oates
Joyce Carol Oates just doesn’t write anything easy to read. In this case a truly horrible father has aged and is making life very difficult for his two daughters. The mystery is the past sins of the father.

The Empty House Nathan Oates
Powerful and fateful story about the murderous government of Guatemala in the 1980’s.

Car Trouble Jas. R. Petrin
Aging gangster protects his elderly woman barber from being victimized by a car salesman.

The Emerson, 1950 Scott Phillips
Series of connected vignettes involving a newspaper crime reporter.

At The Top Of His Game Steve Rhodes
Don’t miss this tense and exciting story of Wall Street warriors trying to destroy one another.

Hothouse S.J. Rozan
Unusual story about a escaped convict who helps a woman fix a city plant conservatory (hothouse) whose windows have broken in a snowstorm.

The Invisibles Hugh Sheehy
An “invisible” is someone that others just don’t notice. An imaginative (delusional ?) young girl thinks she is an invisible and the notion influences this story about serial killings.

A Different Road Elizabeth Strout
An older woman goes to a hospital with something like food-poisoning. Two young men try to hold-up the hospital for drugs. The stressful situation causes the woman to say hurtful things to her husband.

Given Her History Melissa Vanbeck
Girl orphaned because her sociopath brother Billy killed the family is passed among families until finally a somewhat strange woman takes her in. And then Billy shows up. Great ending.

St. Gabriel Scott Wolven
Man avenges five men who tried to kill his younger logger brother.