Building a World

SHARON TELFER demonstrates how the world of a short story can be just as absorbing as that of a novel, through William Faulkner’s ‘Dry September’: ‘…there it was, a world complete in itself, at once believable yet unsettlingly strange, resonating long after the book is closed…’

These Seven

SUSMITA BHATTACHARYA discovers a city through the eyes of its resident writers in the Nottingham UNESCO bid anthology These Seven: ‘It is a unique exercise in delving into the everyday lives of people in this city, making Nottingham sparkle and breathe and come to life…’

The Mysterious Mrs Bathurst

DAVID FRANKEL finds unsettling qualities in Rudyard Kipling’s ‘Mrs Bathurst’: ‘Written in 1904, ‘Mrs Bathurst’ is a story that doesn’t fit readily with a modern reader’s expectations of Rudyard Kipling. There is no imperialism or the fairy tale charm of The Jungle Book. Instead, it is filled with unease and an air of melancholy that set it apart from all but a very few of his other stories…’

Flashes of Insight

MARCELLA O’CONNOR takes a look at the writing of flash fiction, in particular, that of Stuart Dybek: ‘Although flash fiction has gained recognition among writers themselves, criticism and theory have been slow to catch up and Dybek’s flash fictions are often relegated to the poetry section of literary magazines…’