A collection of 15 short and rough-edged stories, first published
in the U.K. The contributing writers were asked to pen stories that
would make good travel reading. The editor favors first-person
narrators, some of whom just want to vent. There's the female
attendant in an underground restroom ("In Attendance," by Paula
Rawsthorne), who, after losing home and husband, lives illegally in
a supply closet; the tale's grimness feels self-indulgent. Almost
as grim but much more lively is the Asian-British cab driver's
situation in M.Y. Alam's "Taxi Driver"; he's working in a part of
Yorkshire unsettled by the arrest of terror suspects. The young
widow in Tania Hershman's "On a Roll," rather than bemoaning her
fate, actually has a story to tell, and it's a good one, about a
dream on a transatlantic flight and its outcome in a Vegas casino.
Another engaging story, the cream of the crop, is Sophie Hannah's
"Always Swing Upright." Sonia is traveling by train to give a
lecture on happiness; her eventful journey will reveal that, for
her, the greatest rush comes from an act of pure folly. Far less
successful are the portraits of a lesbian, consumed by airport
angst, waiting for the return of her lover ("Missing You," by Rosa
Ainley), and the addled museum ticket clerk with a whimsical
project ("Aubrey," by Alexis Clements). The third-person narratives
don't fare well either. The meeting between biological father and
the son he gave up for adoption in "Side Exit," by Daithidh
MacEochaidh, is too heavy-handed, as is Nathan Ramsden's "The
Categories of Ernest Bookbinder," about a man headed for the
asylum. The husband and wife whose marriage is breaking up in Penny
Aldred's "It's a Hard Rain," meanwhile, are too generic. Hats off,
though, to Anthony Cropper; his very short "Love of Fate," almost
all dialogue, is a perfect snapshot of a small boy and one of his
mother's lovers enjoying each other's company. There's more chaff
than wheat in this uneven book. (Kirkus Reviews)
Someone is waiting for a train, or it could be a bus or an
aeroplane. They are alone. For company, in their coat pocket, they
are carrying a book of stories. They sit down and take out the
book. It falls open on the first page of a new story. What would be
the perfect read for them to find there? Fifteen writers have risen
to the challenge to put the ideal story into their fellow
traveller's hand. The results are inside this book. "Ideas Above
Our Station" is a title in the acclaimed "Route Series of
Contemporary Stories".
General
Imprint: |
Route Publishing
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Series: |
Route Series of Contemporary Stories |
Release date: |
August 2006 |
First published: |
August 2007 |
Authors: |
Ian Daley
|
Dimensions: |
131 x 250 x 18mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback
|
Pages: |
224 |
Edition: |
New |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-901927-28-3 |
Categories: |
Books >
Fiction >
Special features >
Short stories
|
LSN: |
1-901927-28-8 |
Barcode: |
9781901927283 |
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