#BookReview Night-Time Stories edited by Yen-Yen Lu

Night-Time StoriesAbout the Book

A child waits for the tooth fairy; a mother spends a night watching a recording of the previous night; two women face the ghosts that haunted their grandmothers. The nights in these ten stories are thick and substantial, ambiguous and alluring.

Eerie, magical, hushed and surprisingly alive, this anthology shows the night as a place where connections are made and daylit lives can be changed.

With stories from Valentine Carter, John Kitchen, Winifred Mok, Leanne Radojkovich, Angela Readman, Jane Roberts, Rebecca Rouillard, Miyuki Tatsuma, Zoë Wells and Sofija Ana Zovko.

Format: Paperback (72 pages)             Publisher: The Emma Press
Publication date:  1st December 2022 Genre: Short Stories

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My Review

Night-Time Stories is The Emma Press’ first short story anthology. In her introduction to the book, editor Yen-Yen Lu writes that her aim was ‘to find stories that capture the strangeness and subtle magic’ of the night. I think she has definitely succeeded. The stories in this anthology are night-time stories rather than bedtime stories ranging from – to quote Yen-Yen Lu once again – ‘the intense and surreal to wonderfully mundane’.

As imagined by the contributors to the collection the night is a time for dreams (as in ‘Dream Lovers’), a time to reflect, a time for encounters of various kinds or a time to work whilst others are sleeping. The stories vary in length – from a paragraph (as in ‘Dream Boats’ by Jane Roberts) to several pages. They also differ in style and in atmosphere. For example, there is an intense eroticism to ‘(hippocampus paradoxus)’ by Valentine Carter.

There’s an element of fantasy but also whimsical humour in ‘Kikomora’ by Sofija Ana Zovko in which a mischievous creature a woman’s late grandmother believed lived behind her stove appears to wreak havoc on a night-time outing. Perhaps the creature wasn’t merely a product of her grandmother’s imagination after all?  I particularly enjoyed ‘Sleeping in Shifts’ by Winifred Mok in which a couple’s work patterns mean their timelines cross only briefly ‘like a lunar eclipse’ and what is dinner for one is breakfast for the other.

I also liked ‘Whose Lounge?’ by Leanne Radojkovich in which a mother sets out to answer her daughter’s question, ‘What happens when no-one is in the lounge?’ with unexpected results. Similarly, ‘Even This Helps’ by Zoë Wells explores the notion that, although many of us may be asleep at night-time, it does not mean everything in the world is still or silent. Unable to sleep, a woman heads to a 24-hour supermarket at 3am, a time when ‘only the elements are in motion’. She observes the clouds ‘shuffle quietly across the cosmos’ and hears ‘the low hum of the universe’. And, as many of the stories illustrate, the night is never completely dark. There is the light from the moon, the headlights of a passing car or the distant glow of a city that never sleeps.

I love it when a piece of writing makes me consider something I’d never thought of before. In this case, it’s that there are some things that only take place at night, such as the times of the year when the clocks go forward or back. In ‘Daylight Saving Time’ by Rebecca Rouillard, a young woman gets the feeling she is travelling back in time when she lives through the hour between 1am and 2am for a second time.

Night-Time Stories is an absorbing collection of skilfully crafted, often thought-provoking stories. I considered scheduling this review to be published at midnight but of course it’s always night-time somewhere in the world.

I received a digital review copy courtesy of The Emma Press. If my review has piqued your interest in the book and you’d like to find out more, you can register for the online book launch on 2nd December here.

In three words: Imaginative, atmospheric, intriguing

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Yen-Yen LuAbout the Editor

Yen-Yen Lu is a freelance editor and writer. Her short stories have been published in online zines and the anthology In Which Dragons Are Real But (Fincham Press, 2018). As an editor, she is passionate about promoting underrepresented voices in independent publishing. She studied Creative Writing at the University of Roehampton. Her favourite things about the night-time are the lack of crowds, and sleeping.

About the Contributiors

Valentine Carter has short fiction published by The Fiction Pool, Bandit Fiction, In Yer Ear and The Mechanics’ Institute Review (Issue 15 and Issue 16), and poetry published by Perverse and Visual Verse. Her debut novel, These Great Athenians, published by Twenty Seven, has been shortlisted for the Polari First Book Prize 2022. She is studying for a PhD at Birkbeck, University of London

John Kitchen was a primary headteacher. After retirement he took a chance and signed up for a series of poetry workshops. He discovered he could write. It was life changing. Now he enjoys writing poems, plays, short stories; sharing these with a wide range of audiences; and the great thrill of seeing his work in print.

Winifred Mok is a filmmaker and podcaster (Kin: Fallen Star, Project FIA goes PC) with a passion for stories, books and site-specific theatre. She studied English Literature and Theatre Arts at the University of Birmingham. She likes exploring the spaces of language, culture and identity, and spends most of her time reading, learning, making, and wondering.

Leanne Radojkovich is the author of short story collections Hailman (2021) and First fox (2017), both published by The Emma Press. Recently her stories have appeared in Best Small Fictions 2021, Short Fiction Journal, Landfall and takahē. She holds a Master of Creative Writing (First Class Honours) from AUT Auckland University of Technology. Leanne has Dalmatian heritage and was born in Aotearoa New Zealand. She now lives in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland where she works as a librarian. ‘Whose lounge?’ was first published in the journal Firewords Quarterly (Issue 5, 2015).

Angela Readman lives in Northumberland. Her stories have won the Mslexia competition, the Costa Story Award and the New Flash Fiction Review Prize. Her collection Don’t Try This at Home was shortlisted in The Edge Hill Prize, and won The Rubery Book Award. In 2022 her second collection The Girls are Pretty Crocodiles & Other Fairy Tales was released. She also writes poetry. Her latest collection Bunny Girls is out with Nine Arches in November 2022.

Jane Roberts’s fiction features in a variety of publications and presses, including: 100 Stories for Haiti, 100 Voices for 100 Years (Unbound), Aberystwyth University, Arachne Press, Flash: The International Short-Short Story Magazine, Litro, NFFD Anthologies, Refugees Welcome, Retreat West, Seventy2One, Stories for Homes, The Emma Press, The Lonely Crowd, The Mechanic’s Institute Review, The Shadow Booth, Under The Radar (Nine Arches Press), Unthank Books, Wales Arts Review, Visual Verse and Valley Press’s High Spirits: A Round of Drinking Stories (Best Anthology, Saboteur Awards 2019).

Rebecca Rouillard has a Creative Writing degree from Birkbeck, University of London, and was the Managing Editor of the Birkbeck Writers’ Hub for four years. Her writing has appeared in various online and print anthologies, including Watermarks: Writing by Lido Lovers and Wild Swimmers (The Frogmore Press, 2017), Dragons of the Prime: An Anthology of Poems about Dinosaurs (The Emma Press, 2019), and 100 Voices (Unbound, 2022) She was the winner of the 2017 Mslexia Novel Competition and works as a school librarian in South-West London.

Miyuki Tatsuma’s writing has been published in digital and physical anthologies such as the PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE anthology by Forest Publications (Edinburgh), and Bounds Green Book Writers’ Lockdown Lit. Imagination in Isolation (London). She grew up in Kraków, Poland, in a Japanese-Polish-Italian household. Since moving to the UK in 2021, she has occupied a realm between four cultures – an existential status which greatly informs not just her writing but also her personal ontology. Though she had written in prose since age ten, one fateful day she woke up and has only created poetry since.

Zoë Wells is a writer, poet and translator from Geneva, Switzerland, currently based in Manchester, UK. Her writing has been featured in a number of publications, including STORGY, Poetry Wales, Bandit Fiction, Hypertrophic Press and Ink, Sweat and Tears. She has previously been longlisted for the BBC National Short Story Award, the White Review Short Story Prize, and the Bridport Prize. She is currently drafting an AI-based grief fiction novel, as well as editing a collection of translated poems from the French-language writer Renée Vivien.

Sofija Ana Zovko is a writer, editor, and translator from Zagreb, Croatia. She holds an MSt in Creative Writing from the University of Oxford, focusing on depictions of the Balkans. Her work can be found in Ash, Flash Fiction Magazine and harana poetry, and two of her stories were longlisted for the 2021 Mslexia Short Story Competition.

#BookReview Kezia and Rosie by Rebecca Burns

Kezia and RosieAbout the Book

When sisters Kezia and Rosie arrive at their grandparents’ house in the summer of 1986 they aren’t sure when they’ll see their Mum and Dad again.

While her younger sister Rosie is content playing on the allotment gate and having picnics in the garden, Kezia begins to realise that things aren’t quite what they seem. While embraced in Granddad and Grandma’s loving care, it’s not long before seven-year old Kezia begins to notice strange looks between them, hushed whispers, and secret phone calls. She realises she must step into the frightening adult world if she is to make sense of her parent’s troubled marriage.

Format: Paperback (128 pages)       Publisher: Dahlia Publishing
Publication date: 26th March 2022 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find Kezia and Rosie on Goodreads

Purchase link
Amazon UK
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My Review

Although described as a linked short story collection, I would characterise Kezia and Rosie as more like a novella.  There is a narrative thread that runs through the book which means that, in my opinion, the ‘stories’ are best read in sequence rather than dipping in and out in the way you might do with a short story collection.

Narrated from the point of view of seven-year old Kezia, the author really captures the experience of being at an age where you start to understand things you hear whilst not understanding others. In just one of the imaginative metaphors in the book, ‘Words give answers and are windows but sometimes the glass is glazed’. Her mind is full of questions: just why has their mother gone away, and to another country, why do her grandparents need to talk to Roy’s son, and why is their grandmother so antagonistic towards their father? There are also memories of an incident that she tries to push away.

As someone with a younger sister, whom of course I love, I could appreciate Kezia’s occasional frustration with her sister’s maddening antics and the way she is indulged by their grandparents. Sometimes a two year age gap can seem much more and the role of elder sibling can feel like an unwelcome burden especially when her grandfather reminds her ‘there are things that can’t be said around Rosie’. No wonder Kezia comes to think of the adult world as a ‘maze… a lattice of things that can and cannot be said’. Her frustration occasionally comes out in little acts of vandalism, such as the tearing to pieces of a flower.

The girls’ grandfather and grandmother are beautifully drawn characters. Although they find themselves in the unexpected position of looking after the two girls with their established domestic routine disrupted, their love and care for Kezia and Rosie is quite wonderful to witness. And, as we learn, they too have experienced sadness in their lives.

Whilst many scenes in the book are touching and funny, there’s a persistent sense of unease. Something not quite right has occurred in the family but for a long time we don’t know what. Kezia feels she has been thrust into an adult world she can’t understand. ‘The summer has been a mosaic of hints and overheard remarks. They gather around Kezia like stepping stones.’  However, whatever happens, Kezia and Rosie can rest assured they have the love and support of their grandparents. ‘For now, it’s enough to slip underneath Grandma’s arm and wedge into the warm space of her armpit, and elbow Rosie gently to tell her she loves her. And for Grandad to giggle to himself and head over to the allotment to fetch raspberries for tea.’

I really liked how the time period of the 1980s was evoked. Anyone old enough to remember that period will recognise the references to shopping in Fine Fare, or watching television programmes together such as The Generation Game, The Dukes of Hazzard or (Kezia and Rosie’s grandmother’s favourite) Wogan. Those of a certain age will experience a real sense of nostalgia and perhaps give a wry smile at the girls’ excitement at watching the wedding of Prince Andrew and Fergie.

I really enjoyed Kezia and Rosie. It’s a delightful, beautifully written book. My thanks to the author for my digital review copy.

In three words: Tender, insightful, heartwarming

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Rebecca BurnsAbout the Author

Rebecca Burns is an award-winning writer of short stories. Her story collections, Catching the Barramundi (2012) and The Settling Earth (2014) were both longlisted for the Edge Hill Short Story Award. Her debut novel, The Bishop’s Girl, was published by Odyssey Books in September 2016, followed by a third short story collection, Artefacts and Other Stories (2017). Beyond the Bay, a sequel to The Settling Earth, was published in 2018. Her first novella, Quilaq, was published by Next Chapter in 2020. (Photo: Author website)

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