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#18: Weightlessness by Karen Hitchcock
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#18: Weightlessness by Karen Hitchcock

I first came accross Karen Hitchcock in Best Australian Stories 2006, and she has been in every edition of  Best Australian Stories since. This is not by chance; reading Karen Hitchcock's work, you are drawn in from the first line. She takes her motivations from marginal people, and by this I mean people who find the very act of living throws them to the margins: people who have distant husbands; people who eat for comfort and protection; people who struggle to connect with 'difficult' fathers...

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#17: Work by Denis Johnson
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#17: Work by Denis Johnson

I read a lot of short fiction, but rarely have I been more spoilt than last weekend, reading this and Wells Tower's Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned, back to back. I will get onto Wells Tower later this month (and indeed, he's no major discovery, having received deserved attention around the world for his short fiction). Denis Johnson is a rarer find. Chuck Palahniuk recommends him at his personal website, but I was otherwise unfamiliar with his work...

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#15: Fiesta, 1980 by Junot Diaz
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#15: Fiesta, 1980 by Junot Diaz

Junot Diaz is probably best known for his first novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, but Drown, released in 1996, is well worth a look. In tales that explore the barrios of the Dominican Republic and the rougher parts of New Jersey, Diaz creates a paradoxical world where ugliness and beauty lie awkwardly together, where characters are the walking semi conscious, half drunk from the kick of drugs, alcohol, and unreliable relationships...

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#14: I Can Speak! by George Saunders
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#14: I Can Speak! by George Saunders

Zadie Smith was riding on the success of her debut novel White Teeth in 2001. By strange circumstance, she met Italian publishers Marco Cassini and Martina Testa during a literary festival in Mantova. Cassini and Testa ran a publishing house from home and one of the manuscripts they were working on was a collection of US fiction writers exploring what it meant to be an American citizen. David Foster Wallace once described it as “a stomach level sadness... a kind of lostness (sic).” Smith took this original collection and pitched it to Penguin, with her own words as a new introduction. By 2003, The Burned Children of America was released, including Dave EggersJonathan Safran FoerMyla Goldberg, and David Foster Wallace, all of whom were either already on their way or went on to major literary success...

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#13: True Short Story by Ali Smith
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#13: True Short Story by Ali Smith

Given that we here at the Gum Wall are all about celebrating the short story, it is only fitting that Ali Smith's True Short Story is the next inclusion on the site. While this book is uniformly strong throughout (The Child is a fine example of Alice Munro's adage that every short story is at least two stories, and No Exit is impressively creepy given it has fire-exits as its main topic),..

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#12: Singing My Sister Down by Margo Lanagan ~ Guest Post by Vicki Thornton
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#12: Singing My Sister Down by Margo Lanagan ~ Guest Post by Vicki Thornton

Singing My Sister Down, the first story in the collection, is about a young boy watching his sister being executed, by tar pit, for the murder of her husband. This is the basic premise, but in truth there is so much more to the story. We are drawn along as Ikky’s young brother and her family walk out onto the tar with her. They feast, play music, talk to her as the tar slowly draws her down. Surrounded by friends and onlookers, as well as those who wish to see justice delivered, Ikky’s family sing...

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#9 Dance in America by Lorrie Moore
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#9 Dance in America by Lorrie Moore

I first read this story in a writing class in 2004. What struck me was the combination of humour and compassion within, an intricacy of emotion beneath what seems like a simple story...

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#6: Big Sky Paradise by Anna Krien
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#6: Big Sky Paradise by Anna Krien

Ok, this is isn't actually short fiction. But after reading it again (and again) last night, I did not see necessary prescribed classifcations on what does and doesn't constitute narrative form; I saw my own restrictions, hemming in experience by nature of a preferred structure. Because make no mistake, Blue Sky Paradise is a story, a seeing, breathing roadtrip, both in and out of oblivion...and it is so full of imagery that it makes some stories seem positively blind by comparison...

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