The 10 Best Short Stories You’ve Never Read

in #ministories7 years ago

One thing that's great about short stories is how quickly they can ruin your life. Maybe you start reading one over your lunch break and, if it's the right one, before that peanut butter cup you bought for dessert even has a chance to finish its melting shape-shift into some kind of sugary cement, the whole world has been destroyed around you and then rebuilt, and nothing is quite the same again.This happens whether you like it or not. Great stories practice this violent beauty on you in a variety of ways: some by making an absurd world familiar (or vice versa), some with a slow burn, some with a voice that colonizes your thoughts. Some do it quietly, almost without you even noticing, and some do it with high wire acts of imagination or intellect that make you into a breathless witness.The trick, then, is finding the right story, one that is capable of such a thing. This is no easy task. Tastes different, of course, and it can be confusing to spot the small boat of a great story on the wide sea of fiction. What any reader can offer you in terms of guidance is actually the same thing that any good writer can offer you with the story itself: a way of saying, This is what moved me and made me feel strange and alive in some way; here, why do not you give it a try?In that spirit and in no particular order, here are ten short stories you might have missed that that impressed me with their odd wonder:1. "The Zero Meter Diving Team" by Jim Shepard (BOMB Magazine)This curious, masterful story is about a set of brothers who work as managing engineers overseeing the Chernobyl power station on April 26, 1986, but, as with most of Shepard's work, it's also about the invisible planets of loss that our personal lives orbit. It is both an education and an elegy. Shepard's forthcoming novel of the Warsaw Ghetto, Aaron Only Thinks of Himself, promises more of the same.2. "A Tiny Feast" by Chris Adrian (The New Yorker)Titania and Oberon, the immortal Queen and King of the Fairies, live under a hill in a modern city park. To save their marriage, they adopt a mortal toddler and begin to raise him, only to discover he has developed terminal leukemia. What follows, set in a fairy den and an oncology ward, is one of the best (and, somehow, realest) short stories ever written, a haunting exploration of love and death that has followed this reader, at least, into marriage, parenthood , and nearly every hidden day spent on this earth.3. "Lorry Raja" by Madhuri Vijay (Narrative Magazine)One of the newest voices on this list, Vijay tells the story of Indian children mining the ore used to construct Olympic stadiums in China with remarkable poise and vision. While the inherently political nature of the story is certainly important and the writing is ruthless in its detail, to approach "Lorry Raja" in only that way is to miss the quiet power of Vijay's prose, as well as its ability to look honestly into the subtleties of family and the scales of desire without denying beauty where it lurks.4. "Bluebell Meadow" by Benedict Kiely (The New Yorker)Published in 1975 at the peak of The Troubles in Ireland, Kely's unlucky story of a small country park and the two young people who spend a few afternoon together in it is sly, funny, and tremendously affecting. A lesson simultaneously in understatement and heart, this story is really about the near misses of the lives we almost live, as well as what time does to the things that could've been. Long forgotten by most, author Colum McCann miraculously resurrected it for The New Yorker's fiction podcast, and it is best experienced in his wonderful voice.5. "Some Other, Better Otto" by Deborah Eisenberg (The Yale Review)It's difficult to say exactly why this story-the reflections of intelligent, grumpy Otto about his aging partner William, his own aging, his uneasy relationship with his family, the sanity of his troubled sister, loneliness, and the new baby of his upstairs renter -is as wonderful as it very much is. The story is, in the end, a testament to the power of a whole person-caustic, funny, articulate, alone, lost and found, cruel and loving-given life on the page. Originally published in The Yale Review, eager readers can find it in The Best American Short Stories 2004 anthology.6. "City Lovers" by Nadine Gordimer (The New Yorker)Also published in 1975, sixteen years before she would have awarded the Nobel Prize, this is Gordimer's story of the relationship between Austrian geologist Dr. Franz-Josef Von Leinsdorf and a mixed-race Johannesburg shop girl, an affair that is illegal in apartheid-era South Africa. One of the most overlooked pieces of Gordimer's writing, this is also one of the quietest, and most effective. The uneasy dynamics of race, class, and power (especially when it comes to love and sex) are nimbly explored here, and build to a devastating end. It was simply saved from obscurity, this time by author Tessa Hadley, for The New Yorker's fiction podcast.7. "images (20).jpgimages (19).jpg