Wednesday, November 08, 2023

Best British Short Stories 2023

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SALT PUBLISHING 2022

Edited by Nicholas Royle

My previous reviews of —

Nicholas Royle:  https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/14748-2/ 

Salt Publishing: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/tag/salt-publishing/ 

Best British Short Stories: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2023/01/04/best-british-short-stories-2011-2022-edited-by-nicholas-royle-as-as-linked-and-listed-to-my-real-time-reviews-of-them/

Stories: Alinah Azadeh, David Bevan, AK Blakemore, Gabriel Flynn, Jim Gibson, Lydia Gill, Miles Greenwood, Kerry Hadley-Pryce, Philip Jennings, Sharon Kivland, Alison Moore, Georgina Parfitt, Gareth E Rees, Leone Ross, John Saul, DJ Taylor, Briony Thompson, Matthew Turner, Mark Valentine and David Wheldon.

When I read the stories, my thoughts will appear in the comment stream below…

24 thoughts on “Best British Short Stories 2023

  1. MILES GREENWOOD Islands

    “feel a beating with a stick of choice,…”

    a poignant, pidgin almost, story of coming and going and returning inter-race between countries, with depleted upper cases, ripe with disappointment and hope and regret and stoicism. noting, I do, simple actual and potential refrains, choosing the one with saltfish not breadfruit…

    “saltfish 

    callaloo”

  2. LYDIA GILL The Lowing

    “A cow bell rang.”

    Without the spoiling of it, that quote says all I can say about this snowy and bloodily tactile ghost story about birth and misbirth. Other than, yes, the fact the title takes on a new resonant meaning in my mind like a lot of phrases that have the start-‘the’ and the end-‘ing.’

  3. DAVID WHELDON The Statistics Rebellion

    “Suddenly I was wakened by a short whistle from the steam locomotive; someone simultaneously touched me on the elbow.”

    Involving that perfect elbow-trigger, this story is one of the most delightful I have ever read.
    The story of tall and non-detainable Martha, in a boring statistics lecture and also about Facit calculators one of which I actually used in real life in 1970. And I heard the workings of words, as well as numbers, in this story inside my head, and, transgressively, I hope they will detain me forever.

    My previous review of this author: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2017/07/01/de-curzon-wheldon/

  4. SHARON KIVLAND The Incorruptible

    “The mob howled, oh, how that cowardly rabble howled,…”

    A stylishly written extract from the historiography of the French Revolution as strikingly witnessed by a woman admirer of Maximilien Robespierre, making me think a Thermidor was also perhaps another lexically audial version of the Facit calculator…. (see the ‘rebellion’ above!)

    “Hah! she did not even know her alphabet, that one.”

  5. DJ TAYLOR Somewhere Out There West of Thetford

    “Everyone in west Norfolk seemed to be estranged from somebody.”

    This is a most poignant story of a seventy-something woman who lives in a seedy caravan in a car park and the lorry driver who sometimes helps her. A memorable portrait of parts of Norfolk and nearby Fens. About cold estrangement and a warm stranger. With a twist in its tail. I loved it, and, as an aside, it reminded me of the old Tesco woman who haunts my written-down dreams regularly with her shopping bags. And also a moment that echoed much more…

    “… staring out across the debatable lands where warring armies lurked.”

    My previous review of this author: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2018/02/18/best-british-short-stories-2016/#comment-12491

  6. BRIONY THOMPSON The Nights

    “Maybe she should try the book group. It would save on the logs.”

    This is an engaging tranche of Country Matters, involving a suckled lamb babysat by a dog, a woman with a baby, two young people canoodling in a derelict property in the hills, another woman with a torch and the hint of a ghostly mole-man called Black Peter. The log here spat the bang of a bullet.

  7. PHILIP JENNINGS Elephant 

    “…their respective wings of the mansion, she’d say to me with a grim laugh and a wiggle-waggle of her empty glass:”

    A Mansion Miniature the Dallows Way. A Dynasty that becomes reconstituted by a large lumbering big-headed re-changeling yet gradual were-elephant by Zeno stages, as seen by a Coco (versus Compo) ethos who shared it, where alcoholic drinks and their effects are literally measured precisely, from the ‘Pearly Way’ to the ‘pearly tray’, and much more, this is a genuine comic masterpiece to be placed, with its eccentric characters, in the seasoned canon of the vintage of best British stories ever in their own right (some less comic than others, some more believable than others, but all eccentric) that I have reviewed  HERE. And those that are similarly British HERE.

  8. KERRY HADLEY-PRYCE Chimera

    “none of your beeswax”

    A deeply disturbing vignette where I felt myself, as an ageing man, taken temporarily out of some sort of lockdown to places where dark or sexual habits and DJ music and young people prevailed, including one of them of the female persuasion that led me like a pet. So much more to say that is beyond my beeswax to divulge here about this and that, and about you who was in it.

    My previous review of this author: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2018/08/18/gamble-by-kerry-hadley-price/

  9. “Within the tremulous spaces of this immature dance is enacted the play of a human soul, a soul that voices the sorrow and revolt of a dying race, of a dying poet. They are epigrammatic, fluctuating, crazy, and tender, these Mazurkas, and some of them have a soft, melancholy light, as if shining through alabaster—true corpse light leading to a morass of doubt and terror. But a fantastic, dishevelled, debonair spirit is the guide, and to him we abandon ourselves in these precise and vertiginous dances.”
    — James Huneker (in 1966) on Chopin’s Mazurkas 

    JOHN SAUL The Clearance

    “– to stand importantly, leaning an elbow on the mantelpiece, where he splays the covers open at an early page. Ah, he says: Kraszna.”

    That elbow moment stands at the core of this monologue by an estate agent called Mazurka and his most memorable monologue written for him by an inferred proto-Joycean author with Proustian sentences standing outside his mind but within it, too, as a property deal is gradually clinched within the seething patterns of the universe and alongside hangers-on hoping to get a good deal on the property (sounds like one of my recent mansions? ) and other relatives getting keepsakes from inside before the clearance men arrive. I always thought ceilings were stretched out ghosts, but I had not realised, until now, they may contain asbestos.

    “…in the inner life of the agent and the outer life too already he knows, as an ONoMAStIciaN, as an aficionado of name-giving he knows, this house could not possibly or ever belong…” (my upper case)

    My previous review of this author: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2018/02/18/best-british-short-stories-2016/#comment-12575

  10. JIM GIBSON The Thinker

    “; no one wants to be mad at Peter.”

    Review without boundaries, but I need to take a hammer and do it myself. A deadpan story that features much that I enjoy in fiction, almost out of keeping with the rest of this book so far, and there is much, too, that I can’t tell you about publicly let alone think about privately, including the poetic symbols on the walls like Walter de la Mare’s etchings on gravestones, and also what was found trapped by the boundaries of a wayside cage.

    “…think without ‘boundaries’ or something…”

    My previous review of this author: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2023/03/27/quadrilateral-nightjars-continued/

  11. GEORGINA PARFITT Middle Ground

    “…she propped herself up on her elbows and watched the flower between those two girls’ faces.”

    An enchanting tale of schoolgirls (one in particular) and their boy equivalents on the cusp of what promises to be a glorious future at High School, involving the secret powers of emergent primroses for the girls and sporadic screams on the sports pitch by boys, and the singular girl’s doll’s house as house or where Mrs Lewis “took them inside her house. People had said it was a mansion,…” I wondered if the latter could be seen in the vistas possible from a swing-boat in the spectacular fêted finale.

    “…the world was a tumbling assembly of still lives:”

  12. MATTHEW TURNER Still Life

    “With a limp elbow he gestured towards a door blowing open in the wind.”

    An OCD study in words as a room’s Feng Shui and a broken or breaking relationship, “like some kind of inner city beachcomber uncovering meaning and intentions in discarded items,…”, later made circular from that elbow above to the same man looking outside a house similar, but quite different, to the ELBOW man being circular in my novella LADIES written in the 1990s and simultaneously first published when this story was first published, if I can be so self-parochial.
    I simply loved this original story beyond measure. Just up my street. Should have been published first by a Nightjar, I say!

    “Birds were always at a glide rather than flying.”

    My previous review of this author: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2021/11/09/best-british-short-stories-2021/#comment-23467

  13. LEONE ROSS When We Went Gallivanting

    “Didn’t tower blocks usually sway in the wind?”

    I have just read this synchronously at the near-hurricane height of Storm Ciarán where I live in Clacton just AFTER having posted this old picture with a screaming door as impelled by a Facebook memory!
    Fearful of spoilers, I cannot tel you much about the buxom sex and the swimming lessons and the cocktails and the prehensile building, and the significant absurdist pointlessness of oblique meaning vis à vis Grenfell and perhaps prophetically of today’s horizontal strip of inflamed land when the police attach a bomb to the walking tower block with the residents still in it.

    “There was no way to get past her without full body contact, and he was sure that would be like a hurricane: swept up into trouble.”

    Previous reviews of Leone Ross: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/tag/leone-ross/

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  14. “…gathering his forces it is Quincunx, Quincunx, all the way until the very sky itself is darkened with revolving Chess-boards” — Sir Edmund Gosse (1849-1928) on Sir Thomas Browne’s “Garden of Cyrus”

    MARK VALENTINE Qx

    “They had emerged from a large second-hand bookshop…”

    As a miniature, this is an almost perfect fiction. It is written by an author I have reviewed several times before here: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/my-reviews-of-mark-valentine/?frame-nonce=7cb9f3f82f
    Why merely ‘almost’ when it so obviously perfect? Well, while it being the most perfect or almost perfect fiction ever, I know, in my heart’s instinctive love of literature as well as in my head’s sceptical spadework into it, that there is an even more perfect such work yet to be written or hidden somewhere and yet unread.
    I apologise for perhaps gauchely resorting to the Suspectibility theory of there being possible degrees of perfection in such circumstances of highest expectation.

  15. ALINAH AZADEH The Beard

    The Platonic Form of Beard or a mass hairball, this is a powerfully Swiftian fable of our times veering from the Taliban to absurdist themes of trans-gender to my own personal medical need to take Enzalutamide.
    From macho mysogyny politics in the West to perhaps even worse elsewhere, except the end results are “distorted musical notes” with which I can live, even welcome. Powerful is not strong enough an adjective to describe the power of this paradoxically amoral work with a moral.
    As a fan of the eminent Salman Rushdie’s work, I am bound to highly recommend it.

  16. GARETH E REES The Slime Factory

    “Salt, drink, lemon. All these objects were conscious at some level. / Nia licked the salt,…”

    This is an amazing Orwellian extravaganza based on a sort of Elon Musk ‘mad scientist’ concept, with some interesting other characterisations, and, arguably, it is about AI as slime alongside the explicitly interconnectedness of the human mind with inanimate things such as Salt, particularly amazing to me as I just finished my HIGH SUSPICION fiction miniatures here: https://nemonymousnight.wordpress.com/2023/10/29/high-suspicion/ a series of eleven miniatures, finished only an hour before reading this life-changing work by Rees, and that HS series has now proved to be a sort of epilogue to one of my earlier 226 Mansion Miniatures (this specific one about trains) here: https://howivi.wordpress.com/2023/09/29/there-are-no-more-trains-today/.
    And this story now proves that all my miniatures linked above have now proved to be a humble prologue to the Rees work, although they were written and posted on-line long after the Rees work was first published, a work that I have just read for the first time a few minutes ago. Hope that’s clear!
    Whatever the case, I am somehow doubly inspired. And all this seems perfect for the process of gestalt real-time reviewing with all its synchronicities first started in 2008 now become merging slime in 2023!

  17. AK BLAKEMORE Bonsoir (after Ithell Colquhoun)

    “moon’s only mansion”

    This is a painterly Parisian prose poem at extended length. It is intensely gorgeous and tactile. Think Cesar Franck or Baudelaire or Mallarmé or a Proustian Blake. I want more Blakemore!

    “commissioners of miniature enterprise”

  18. ALISON MOORE Common Ground

    “If he wanted an onion, she gave it to him on the doorstep.”

    
At first I misread that as ‘union’, in this insidious tale of a woman teacher being pestered by her new male neighbour, and an equivalent to the recent (more recent than this story itself!) Sycamore Gap incident, and alongside her own mothering backstory, this is a short work that deals ingeniously with finality and regret across borders as well as gaps.

    My many previous reviews of this author: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/tag/alison-moore/

  19. I reviewed the next story when it was first published, as follows…

    ==================================
    THE BULL by David Bevan


    “Other times he would just say, ‘Hello,’ his deep voice dropping the word like a stone in a lake.”


    This is a dual-timed relationship between a sporadically raging father and a daughter, as narrated  by the daughter, Chloe, whom her father called Bluebell. “Fragmentary images began to flutter in my mind. I laid them out in sequence as I walked.” — and as I read. Father and daughter more alike than unalike. Like a commonwealth of two matching friends as potential enemies, the bull emblem of which appeared last night in our own real-time? A backstory of dysfunction, a family and her baby brother. Duplicating the walk years ago with her Dad to again encounter that shed-like container in a field, a mohican cut path near the two separate reservoirs leading to her maritally estranged father, in later years, asking her, as a barber, for a mohawk…


    That earlier time when clocks stopped, and another different time when her father witnessed, with subsequent trauma, a drowning of a coworker in the meaty downside gory offal ironically equivalence to Gol’s snorkelling yesterday HERE.  What  did we see in that shed, alongside them then, and alongside  just Chloe today? Hints of an answer within that earlier meatiness and her dad’s motorbike’s growling brute of an engine (see the chance concurrent engines of equivalence HERE) and the later contrastive pent-up silence  that had “the solemn quality of a long-held oath…” A pent-up story in itself that will ever snarl in the mental background. Expressing somehow otherwise inexpressible emotions.


     “What? What? What?”

    ==========================================
    My other review of this author: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/2022/07/28/the-golden-frog-by-david-bevan/

  20. GABRIEL FLYNN Tinhead

    “But then one might also see him in The Bull,…”

    A substantive work that has believable characterisation of base instincts and less base intuitions and is compelling and suspenseful with an eventual musical ‘dying fall’, as if through chance connections from boots to books and back again, the narrator, after some period of years, touches base with the village near Manchester where he lived as a bit of a loner maverick youth and with the Tinhead nicknamed lad who — well, I must not describe this too closely for fear of spoilers, while the story takes us into the declining ambiance of pub closures and factories etc as a well as of Tinhead’s own decline, the nature of maps and living in one’s head and the eventual escape routes for some, either by the simulation of trains or by real trains. It was a sweet factory that made it all so bitter, so final, I guess.

    A major work worthy of the traditional British short story craft embodied HERE, but, even more so, as embodied in this more immediate ‘Best British Short Stories’ canon, of which the latest volume for 2023 is a prime example, ever on a high level. Full of dying falls or not.


    “That there were patterns in all things was the inevitable final topic…”

    END

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