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The Best Short Stories 2023

The O. Henry Prize Winners

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
The prestigious annual story anthology includes prize-winning stories by Jamil Jan Kochai, David Ryan, Kirstin Valdez Quade, Lisa Taddeo, Ling Ma, Catherine Lacey, and Cristina Rivera Garza.
“[A] standout collection . . . . Dazzling performances from some of today’s most exciting writers. . . . This is one of the best fiction anthologies in years.” —Publishers Weekly starred review

Continuing a century-long tradition of cutting-edge literary excellence, this year's edition contains twenty prizewinning stories chosen from the thousands published in magazines over the previous year. Guest editor Lauren Groff has brought her own refreshing perspective to the prize, selecting stories by an engaging mix of celebrated names and emerging voices and including several stories in translation. The winning stories are accompanied by an introduction by Groff, observations from the winning writers on what inspired them, and an extensive resource list of magazines that publish short fiction. AN ANCHOR BOOKS ORIGINAL.
THE WINNING STORIES:
“Office Hours,” by Ling Ma
“Man Mountain,” by Catherine Lacey
“Me, Rory and Aurora,” by Jonas Eika,
translated from the Danish by Sherilyn Nicolette Hellberg
“The Complete,” by Gabriel Smith
“The Haunting of Hajji Hotak," by Jamil Jan Kochai
“Wisconsin,” by Lisa Taddeo
“Ira & the Whale,” by Rachel B. Glaser
“The Commander’s Teeth,” by Naomi Shuyama-Gómez
“The Mad People of Paris,” Rodrigo Blanco Calderón,
translated from the Spanish by Thomas Bunstead
“Snake & Submarine,” by Shelby Kinney-Lang
“The Mother,” by Jacob M’hango
“The Hollow,” by ’Pemi Aguda
“Dream Man,” by Cristina Rivera Garza,
translated from the Spanish by Francisca González-Arias
“The Locksmith,” by Grey Wolfe LaJoie
“After Hours at the Acacia Park Pool,” by Kirstin Valdez Quade
“Happy Is a Doing Word,” by Arinze Ifeakandu
“Elision,” by David Ryan
“Xífù,” by K-Ming Chang
“Temporary Housing,” by Kathleen Alcott
“The Blackhills,” by Eamon McGuinness
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 10, 2023
      Novelist and story writer Groff (Florida) outlines in her introduction to this standout collection the criteria for judging the hundreds of submissions: do they thrill or take risks, do they challenge expectations, and do they have staying power? The answer, for each selection, is yes. They represent greatest hits from some of the best recent collections, including Ling Ma’s “Office Hours,” about a film professor who finds refuge in a fantastical outdoor setting accessed from her office closet, and “The Haunting of Hajji Hotak” by Jamil Jon Kochai, in which a second-person narrator puts together the story of his Afghan American family as if he’s a spy performing surveillance. Among other dazzling performances from some of today’s most exciting writers, Catherine Lacey’s “Man Mountain” encapsulates a woman’s ambivalence concerning men with a brief piece of fabulism about a kilometer-high pile of men that she sets out to climb. A sense of precarity and urgency defines many of the entries (“There was no time for time,” says Lacey’s narrator; “There isn’t enough air in the air,” laments the protagonist of Rachel B. Glaser’s funny and incisive “Ira and the Whale,” a gay man trapped in a leviathan’s stomach). This is one of the best fiction anthologies in years.

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  • English

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