Edgar Award finalist Patricia Abbott, author of Shot in Detroit, Concrete Angel, and a new collection of short fiction, I Bring Sorrow and Other Stories of Transgression, has written more than 150 short stories that have appeared in print and online publications. She won the Derringer Award in 2008 for her story "My Hero." She is co-editor of the anthology Discount Noir. She has published two previous collection of short stories, Monkey Justice and Other Stories and Home Invasion. She also maintains one of the most entertaining blogs around, Pattinase, which features everything from author interviews, to a regular Friday column, "Forgotten Books." I don't know anyone I'd rather talk short stories with. Here are her favorite picks today.
My Ten Favorite Short Stories (today)
Since I have spent most of the last twenty years writing
short stories, I also read a lot of them. For me, a good short story is closer
to a good poem than a good novel. It manages to tell you something, hopefully
something important, in a few pages. I always read them in one sitting. (Except
perhaps here for the Munro story which is quite long.)
Here are a few of my favorites. Ask me next week and they
might change but for now this is the ten. Incidentally nearly all of them are
available in PDFs online.
1. So Much Water, So Close to Home, Raymond Carver
A group of men on a camping trip stumble on a dead girl as
soon as they arrive, but do not let this detail interfere with their good
times. Truly a chilling story and there is a good film of it called JINDABYNE.