Member Reviews

I guess this wasn't my type of horror story collection. The stories didn't keep me as engaged as they should have. It's a quick read with an intriguing theme of technology throughout the stories but just wasn't for me. Short stories seem to be hit or miss so I think that anyone who would find the premise of the collection interesting should give it a try for themselves.

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I wasn’t particularly won over by these stories. The pacing seemed a little slow for the intention and I had a persistent feeling that the author was continuously winking at me, breaking the fourth wall in a metaphorical way, I guess you could say, to remind me of how witty the writing is, and in the meantime pulling me out of the story.

There is an alchemy to telling a witty tongue-in-cheek ghost story, and it’s apparently harder than it looks to pull it off.

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Reality, subjective and increasingly surreal as is, gets a literary going over by a first rate talent with a dangerously dark imagination.
Oh how I loved this book, lemme count the ways…
1. Originality.
2. Terrific writing.
3. Atmosphere.
4. Clever plotting.
5. The social commentary.
I can go on, really, but it’s more fun to just write about it. Didn’t know what to expect with this one, never read the author, but the Black Mirroresque scenarios with horrific tinges were too intriguing to resist. And sure enough, this collection had me from the get go.
The main thing here, me thinks, is that Lanchester is a literary author, so he approaches these stories from that angle and they end up as these very well written thinking man’s nightmares about the modern world’s increasing reliance of technology and gadgetry the development of which is steadily outpacing social progress. In fact, an argument might be made that socially people are regressing, in some way potentially proportionately to the rates at which the technology is evolving. The phones get smarter and the people get dumber. That’s a scary thing in and of itself, but Lanchester takes it further, with Matrix like scenarios and haunted selfie sticks, ghosts attached to their mobile phones and families who assemble their own…well, let’s not give away too much, because the surprises in this collection are just too good to even hint at. You just have to read it.
Black Mirror, especially at its earlier best, set the bar really high for socially relevant speculative scenarios. Now all sorts of things get compared to it to grab at audiences and very few actually live up to it, but this one actually did, all the way. It went darker too, all the way to the classic scary tales of the bygone era, it has the language and the formality that would delight the fans of M.R. James and the like without the ponderous slowness that’s typically associated with those. The stories in this collection are very modern thematically and timeless stylistically. There is an undeniable elegance to the writing. And it’s so excellently clever too.
In fact, We Happy Few might very well be the best short story I’ve read all year and one of all time greats in general. It’s just…awesome.
There’s something weird about the way my brain processes short fiction and my reviews of short story collections and anthologies usually reflect it…the individual stories tend to get deleted, usually there are just general impressions of the overall quality. But not with this book, this one was way too memorable for that. Which is as high of a praise as I can provide for it, really, on top of the awesome and excellent and clever.
So yeah, a great read. I enjoyed it tremendously. Recommended. Thanks Netgalley.

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With such an interesting cover and short story concept, I was thrilled to have my wish granted by NetGalley for an eARC and quickly dove in.

A reality show. An annoying in-law. A mysterious guest at an exclusive retreat. All of these and more are subjects found in Reality and Other Stories.

I liked this collection. Right off the bat, I will say I love a good short story collection and went in with high hopes based on Lanchester's writing and accolades. I wasn't disappointed, but I also didn't fall head over heels in love, either.

For the most part, I found the twists to be on the predictable side and the exposition to get there didn't produce as big a pay off as warranted. I enjoyed the set up and writing style a great deal. But take, for example, Reality: The characters are flat (purposely) and the conflict isn't urgent. I expected there to be a bigger twist or a reveal that turned my stomach, and while I thought the composition was done well, I was left wanting more.

Overall, Reality and Other Stories is a quick read and a decent collection that might pair well with some literary classics in a classroom setting, but I'm not sure I would eagerly revisit on my own.

Big thanks to Norton and NetGalley for granting my wish in exchange for honest review consideration.

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