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That Glimpse of Truth




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  About this Book

  About the Author

  Table of Contents

  www.headofzeus.com

  in memory of Deborah Rogers

  CONTENTS

  * * *

  Welcome Page

  Main Text

  Introduction

  Anon.

  The Book of Jonah

  Miguel de Cervantes

  The Deceitful Marriage

  The Brothers Grimm

  The Children of Hameln

  Edgar Allan Poe

  The Tell-Tale Heart

  Nikolai Gogol

  The Nose

  Charles Dickens

  The Signal-Man

  Gustave Flaubert

  A Simple Heart

  Kate Chopin

  Desiree’s Baby

  Guy de Maupassant

  The Horla

  Joseph Conrad

  The Lagoon

  George Gissing

  Fleet-Footed Hester

  Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

  A Scandal in Bohemia

  Knut Hamsun

  A Lecture Tour

  J.M. Barrie

  Cree Queery and Mysy Drolly

  Anton Chekhov

  The Lady with the Dog

  O. Henry

  The Cop and the Anthem

  Edith Wharton

  The Other Two

  M.R. James

  “Oh Whistle, and I’ll Come to You, My Lad”

  Rudyard Kipling

  Mary Postgate

  Henry Lawson

  The Loaded Dog

  Ivan Bunin

  A Cold Autumn

  Saki

  Sredni Vashtar

  Willa Cather

  Consequences

  G.K. Chesterton

  The Three Horsemen

  W. Somerset Maugham

  Mr Know-all

  Robert Walser

  A Little Ramble

  P.G. Wodehouse

  Lord Emsworth and the Girl Friend

  Stefan Zweig

  Forgotten Dreams

  Virginia Woolf

  Solid Objects

  James Joyce

  Eveline

  Franz Kafka

  A Hunger Artist

  Isak Dinesen

  The Ring

  D.H. Lawrence

  The Rocking-Horse Winner

  Katherine Mansfield

  A Married Man’s Story

  Richmal Crompton

  The Fall of the Idol

  Isaac Babel

  My First Fee

  Aesop

  The Hare and the Tortoise

  F. Scott Fitzgerald

  Babylon Revisited

  Jorge Luis Borges

  Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote

  Elizabeth Bowen

  Sunday Afternoon

  Sean O’Faolain

  How to Write a Short Story

  V.S. Pritchett

  A Family Man

  Isaac Bashevis Singer

  Gimpel the Fool

  Frank O’Connor

  Guests of the Nation

  Hans Christian Andersen

  The Red Shoes

  William Maxwell

  Love

  Eudora Welty

  Petrified Man

  John Cheever

  The Swimmer

  Elizabeth Taylor

  The Blush

  Delmore Schwartz

  In Dreams Begin Responsibilities

  Angus Wilson

  Raspberry Jam

  Bernard Malamud

  The Last Mohican

  Roald Dahl

  Parson’s Pleasure

  Penelope Fitzgerald

  The Red-Haired Girl

  Shirley Jackson

  The Lottery

  Muriel Spark

  The Executor

  Clarice Lispector

  The Smallest Woman in the World

  Mavis Gallant

  The Wedding Ring

  Flannery O’Connor

  A Good Man is Hard to Find

  Stephen Crane

  The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky

  Frank Tuohy

  Live Bait

  Cynthia Ozick

  The Pagan Rabbi

  William Trevor

  Broken Homes

  J.G. Ballard

  Dream Cargoes

  Alice Munro

  The Children Stay

  Julia O’Faolain

  Under the Rose

  John McGahern

  The Wine Breath

  Edith Pearlman

  ToyFolk

  Anita Desai

  Private Tuition by Mr Bose

  Thomas Pynchon

  Entropy

  Raymond Carver

  Errand

  Georgina Hammick

  The Dying Room

  Angela Carter

  Lizzie’s Tiger

  Bernard MacLaverty

  At the Beach

  Peter Carey

  Report on the Shadow Industry

  Gita Mehta

  The Teacher’s Story

  Shena Mackay

  Radio Gannet

  Julian Barnes

  Marriage Lines

  Ian McEwan

  Solid Geometry

  Denis Johnson

  Emergency

  Martin Amis

  Let Me Count the Times

  Nguyen Huy Thiep

  Cun

  Kate Atkinson

  Unseen Translation

  Hanif Kureishi

  D’accord, Baby

  Tim Parks

  The Tangling Point

  John Burnside

  The Cold Outside

  Colm Toíbín

  Summer of ’38

  Lorrie Moore

  Two Boys

  Tim Winton

  Boner McPharlin’s Moll

  George Saunders

  The Wavemaker Falters

  A.M. Homes

  A Real Doll

  Joanne Harris

  The Toymaker and his Wife

  Keith Ridgway

  Marching Songs

  Nicola Barker

  Mixed Breeding

  James Bradley

  Beauty’s Sister

  Siddhartha Deb

  Nothing Visible

  Anthony Doerr

  The Deep

  Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

  The Thing Around Your Neck

  Extended Copyright

  J.G. Ballard

  The Index

  About this Book

  About the Editor

  An Invitation from the Publisher

  Copyright

  GLIMPSING WHO WE ARE

  * * *

  Tell me what you want, and I shall tell you who you are.

  Anton Chekhov

  A Dreary Story (1889)

  Any anthology is a weird, wonky wonder: the one you hold in your hands is no different. Are all the short stories selected here really the “finest”? Who says – and why, let alone how?

  There are several things to be stated at the outset: (1) choosing one hundred stories and stating they are the “finest” is an excellent way to start a discussion; (2) the form itself, the short story, exemplifies some of the finest writing that isn’t poetry, that couldn’t be a novel and (3) we are all aggravatingly, hopelessly, usefully, desperately subjective. Finally (4) the task is, frankly, impossible. How can anyone select a hundred short stories above the hundreds of thousands that sit beside them? Describing the process of judging a literary prize (for a novel), the British novelist Penelope Fitzgerald wrote in 1998:

  It’s always the same, you make up your mind to remain calm, dispassionate and civilised. And then
as the meetings go on, you become increasingly heated and quarrelsome. The book I wanted to win… didn’t win, and I felt like weeping. And everyone complained, as they always do, that the judges must have lost their wits anyway.

  Selecting the stories included here has had a similar feel. I’ve tried to remain dispassionate, searching for the finest, ending up being wholly and, I’d argue, usefully, passionate. I have spent weeks, then months, quarrelling with myself (and others) and, now there is a result, some will complain I’ve not included a or y, or h or z or given due attention to the burgeoning literary genre or scene in delete as appropriate. There are stories originally written in Hebrew, Spanish, French, Norwegian, Danish, Yiddish, Russian, German, Vietnamese, Japanese, and written in English from most continents, but it will be said there could be more Commonwealth writing here, that there is not enough science fiction, there’s too much Russian, Irish and American and not enough Indian writing; that I have neglected gay, ghost (or gay ghost) stories, or crime fiction – and some of that is true, and not true, but I suspect each of those genres could hold a selection of over one hundred stories within their categories. We know that these days, whatever happens, someone will be there to complain, but this is a quality exercise, not a quota project. All I can say is that the experience of selecting the stories here has been blackly exhilarating, perhaps a little bit like it might be to appear on the literary equivalent of Desert Island Discs – my fate now has to be being told I’ve missed out authors whose names begin with X, Y, Z and the whole of the rest of the alphabet and, just, got it wrong, caused vast offence and – well, the list is as endless as this book could have been.

  Philip Roth might – just – be a useful, if ignorant, ally here. He has written superb novels but is not a fine short story writer (according to me). In American Pastoral (1997) he wrote:

  The fact remains that getting people right is not what living is all about anyway. It’s getting them wrong that is living, getting them wrong and wrong and wrong and then, on careful reconsideration, getting them wrong again. That’s how we know we’re alive: we’re wrong.

  What I have attempted to do is not get things right, but to reflect as many genres, as many moods, as many voices as I can curate, to show that a short story can do pretty much anything – tell the tale, untell the tale told, hide the teller; make you laugh, make you cry, show a world, be political, play and work and expand what fiction can do, and so on and so forth – as can any novel but, as a short story is already a distillation, it gives the writer a far harder task to achieve everything, not just any thing. Every thing in this book is as good as it can get.

  It turns out, also, the choices made are personal, but they have to be: each of our reactions to any author is: most of our reading is reading what others have read before. The book is ordered by chronological date of birth of the author, as that seemed easiest. I have attempted to spread the notion of “finest” throughout the story of the “short story,” as that should show how the world has changed since a man wrote how another could live in a fish (very magical realist) to how we simply look at one another when things go wrong (Cheever).

  Given my own stipulations, I am still irritated by what I have not been able to include, for simple reasons of space, as much as I am surprised by who is not in the book – the novelists I admire who, for me, write better novels than stories (like Roth, or George Eliot, Shirley Hazzard, Graham Greene, John Updike, Evelyn Waugh) and who seem rarely to have written a short story (Anita Brookner, Robertson Davies, Alan Hollinghurst, Brian Moore), or the stories that were on their way to becoming novels (Raymond Chandler, Michael Cunningham, Evelyn Waugh) – the sort of short stories that read like five-finger exercises on a keyboard meant to be turned into a symphony.

  Sometimes it is good to see a novelist as a novelist and realize short stories are for others, that they are – to use one of my most steady friend’s best words – “beyond.” The genre seems to be, for example, beyond V.S. Naipaul.

  I hope the stories collected here reflect what writing is about: life, and its complications. The short story can be the most surprising form of fiction because it offers a magnitude of tellings. One or two pages can do it (Saki, Walser, Beckett). So can many more (Carter, Pritchett). So can a series of questions, or answers, or footnotes (Ballard, Lydia Davis). Writers tell us how hard a short story is to get right: they are not wrong. One story included here was published originally on Twitter, which shows what you can do with as few words as you wish – FOR SALE: BABY’S SHOES. NEVER WORN.1

  When Carver was twenty-seven, “back in 1966,” he found he was

  having trouble concentrating my attention on long narrative fiction. For a time I experienced difficulty in trying to read it as well as in attempting to write it. My attention span had gone out on me; I no longer had the patience to try to write novels. It’s an involved story, too tedious to talk about here. But I know it has much to do now with why I write poems and short stories. Get in, get out. Don’t linger. Go on.

  I had to look that last bit up, as I’d recalled the quote as a similarly snappy “Get in, get out, as quickly as you can.”2 Carver was a useful influence on my reading, as were those just before him, and his peers – but I had grown up with Saki being read to me at school, and then Roald Dahl’s Tales of the Unexpected manipulating my adolescence, on television. At the same time, in my teens, each school-day morning when I opened my bedroom curtains, I could gaze on where Somerset Maugham’s ashes had been interred.3 One Christmas holiday, after he’d just won the 1982 Nobel Prize for Literature, and when I was nearly seventeen and stricken with some glandular thing, I asked my mother if she could buy anything by Gabriel García Márquez, and she came back from the WHSmith in Burgess Hill with the whole sodding lot reissued by Picador just to shut me up (which it did: I began reading his short stories, Innocent Eréndira).4 I remember, very vividly, nipping out of school with £1.25 to buy Ian McEwan’s First Love, Last Rites – short stories that seemed to me then, and still do now, to allow any writer to explore what can be done – and to which the answer is: almost anything.

  At some stage I also realized writing can work at its most sublime when it does less. Carver admired one of the writers I hold most dear, V.S. Pritchett. Leo Carey, writing recently in The New Yorker noted of Pritchett that:

  When he died, in 1997, the BBC ran an old documentary in which an actor read some of the stories (I can still remember how brilliantly he read “The Oedipus Complex”) and Pritchett himself was interviewed. After a reading of a story that ends almost in medias res, the interviewer asked, “And we don’t know what’s going to happen next?” Pritchett said, “Yes. People don’t know what’s going to happen next in their lives, so we don’t either.”

  In Carver’s words, Pritchett’s

  definition of a short story is “something glimpsed from the corner of the eye, in passing.” Notice the “glimpse” part of this. First the glimpse. Then the glimpse gives life, turned into something that illuminates the moment and may, if we’re lucky – that word again – have even further ranging consequences and meaning. The short story writer’s task is to invest the glimpse with all that is in his power. He’ll bring his intelligence and literary skill to bear (his talent), his sense of proportion and sense of the fitness of things: of how things out there really are and how he sees those things – like no one else sees them. And this is done through the use of clear and specific language, language used so as to bring to life the details that will light up the story for the reader. For the details to be concrete and convey meaning, the language must be accurate and precisely given. The words can be so precise they may even sound flat, but they can still carry; if used right they can hit all the notes.

  For exactly half my life I have been lucky enough to hear writers hitting the right notes by working at a literary agency. The first story I placed was by Lorrie Moore (“Community Life”), the second was the last story by Angela Carter. I’ve come to work for Nicola Barker, John Burns
ide, Magnus Mills and Cynthia Ozick but also came to read for pleasure Muriel Spark, Denis Johnson, Shirley Hazzard, Alice Munro, Mavis Gallant, Richard Yates, Lydia Davis, and Jhumpa Lahiri. I remember standing to hear John McGahern read from his Collected Stories at Waterstones, Charing Cross Road, and peeing beside Joseph O’Connor in the urinals at the Purcell Rooms immediately after he had held an audience spell-bound with his story “True Believers” (not, sadly, included here for reasons of space) – not the moment to introduce yourself, or say anything, much.

  Together with the reading I was doing by people who were alive, I tried to check myself, my taste: retain quality control – so, whilst I had Pritchett, I kept reading Chekhov, and in my mid-thirties, I discovered Joseph Conrad. Conrad is a great writer, but none of his novels are truly great: his short fiction is almost better than the baggy brilliance of Nostromo, or the clenched splendour of Under Western Eyes – “The Return”, Heart of Darkness, “The Secret Sharer” or The Shadow Line count, but are all too long for inclusion here.5 Conrad also wrote this, which is why the volume you have has the title it does: