Tuesday, 12 May 2020
Review by Judy Darley
Another lovely advance review today for Scratched Enamel Heart from Judy Darley.
Here's a preview:
There’s a conciseness to Amanda Huggins’ writing that makes me think of a stitch being drawn taut – her words pull the core of you to the core of a story until you gasp for breath.
Her Costa Short Story Award shortlisted tale ‘Red’ uses crimson dust to create a vivid, slightly melancholy landscape where a lone stray dog provides the hope, and a memory of better times provide the drive to reach like a scrawny sapling for light. Like Rowe, the protagonist of the preceding story “Where The Sky Starts’, Mollie needs to leave the place she’s supposed to call home or risk being trapped in a life that could suck her beyond sight of all hope, drive and light.
Huggins has a vivid mastery of words that whips up a setting you can virtually walk into, and uses that mastery to construct scenery that weaves the story’s mood around you: “Mollie hated the dark, brooding weight of the house, the trees so dense they held a part of the night’s heart within them even when the sun shone.”
It’s poetically precise and powerful.
You can read the full review here
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Something Very Human by Hannah Retallick
SOMETHING VERY HUMAN The debut short story collection from award-winning author, Hannah Retallick THE BLURB This collection takes the read...
-
ABOUT GHOST MOUNTAIN : "Shimmering and haunting in equal measure, this profound fable from the author of Leonard and Hungry Paul and ...
-
Homer’s Odyssey tells us of Odysseus’ descent to the underworld in Book XI, where he meets his dead mother Anticlia and learns that she died...
No comments:
Post a Comment