I picked up this short story collection, with some expectations, given the author's high credentials. Previously, short stories by renowned novelists have not failed me. This dragged on for over three months for its completion, as I gave it only the scantiest of reading slots, given that after a promising start, most of the stories adopt a mixture of the Dystopian and the absurd - and reads as if the true interpretation is hidden under those layers. I for one am doubtful if the labours in any deciphering such meaning is worthy of my time, in a book of this nature.
Let's take a peak at few of the short stories ( It has a total of 13 - which too is a problem as I felt it was too long a collection ).
The Journey of a Lifetime : Is a short story I felt a lot. Mr. Moon, absorbed in his own hobbies looks forward to his one chance in his life time for a much cherished first class train journey. However he finds in the middle of his journey that his sacrifice has been in vain. The story is rich with nuances on how the rich are meted special treatment, and how for those who aspire that treatment at much personal cost, don't always receive the just rewards. Money may buy one special treatment, but still one is not immune from deception.
"Do you love me?" : Is a short story with a dystopian background. As the title of the story suggest, temporary power may not be able to protect one in times of crisis, as we find characters in this story begging for love to protect themselves, and how at times loving someone is difficult irrespective of how much one wants to. Other than the message that the story carries, the reader may feel that short story may fall of its literary expectations.
The Uses of Williamson Wood :
"People do not love those whose eyes show that they are somewhere else. Her mother had not liked it. Her mother's lovers, in varying degrees, had been enraged or irritated by her withdrawals. She had learned not to hear their words or feel their blows."
The protagonist in this story lives withdrawn in her own fantasy, as a ploy to save herself from the suffering. Clearly she is a little simple minded such that she cannot get away using the windfall that comes her way, but rather resorts to a meaningless petty revenge which brings upon everyone's downfall. Enjoyed reading this story.
A Schoolboy Prank :
Although one of the better short stories I've so far come to find in this collection, three former students meet their former teacher - who back then coached them of firmness as men, and the controlling of emotions. But soon the students and the teacher resort to subtle insults, each of their homosexual tendencies - the students in their adolescence, but for the teacher clearly a life long closeted one. The former students, now all in respectable positions aren't ready to reminded of their early teen affections, while the teacher, now old,is a lonely beaten man, who secretly isn't able overcome the loss of his dog.
He Found her in Late Summer :
This story is a rare non-Dystopian short story, and reads close to a realistic one. A girl who appears to have been the victim of her life style, is found by a hermit like man living in full appreciation of the river and natural life surrounding it. The story has its charm in the slow turn as Dermott shows immense patience, in waiting for the girl to make her own decision on how she wants to continue her life. Here too an ancient volume on draculas bring the book an element of shadow to its relative realism.
Most of the remaining eight short stories are steeped in Dystopian worlds and didn't quite capture my fancy. They felt like rather whimsical efforts toward how power affects people - those who are holding it and those who are under it, and reads like written with that intent, at the cost of whatever literary pleasure that the better stories in this collection - which are not quite a handful - deliver.
Clearly, this collection didn't deliver whatever literary pleasure that I had expected, given the author's credentials, despite one or two good short stories. But "Journey of a Lifetime" clearly can stand neck to neck with other good short stories.
Rating: **1/2

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