Short stories

Kyriakos

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Which short story or stories are you most fond of? And why is that?

Here is a list of my five favourite short stories:

5. The outsider, HP Lovecraft

The outsider is the story of a person who is trying to discover what he is. However already in the first paragraph we are being told that he has made a gruesome discovery and he now wants to move as far away from it as possible. Complete with a memorable climax, and also another climactic moment half way through the story, it is regarded by me as one of the best works by this author :)

4. In the penal colony, Franz Kafka

Around 40 pages long, this is the account of a visit to an penal colony, which appears to have very unussual customs, or at least its old customs were peculiar, and someone still wants to enforce them. Arguably the most graphically violent of all of Kafka's work, it is, perhaps (consciously or not to its author) a striking allegory of the bipolism a son can have in regards to his emotions for his father: the officer on the one hand is set to maintain the old order, that of the father-figure in the story, and the traveller seeks to, hesitantly, dismiss it.

3. The dream of a ridiculous man, Fyodor Dostoevsky

Although Dostoevsky is mostly known for his novels, he has written a few great shorter stories. The dream of the ridiculous man is the narrative of a dream, and also the notes of a resolution to change oneself. Born out of despair, the dream provides a solution to the inner conflict of the narrator between dismissal of the world, and love for it, presenting an utopia of kindness.

2. The sleeping machine, Guy De Maupassant

This is also the account of a dream, but of an entirely different kind. The statistics of suicides, read in the morning paper, make the narrator imagine a world where society would have solved the problem of suicidal depression, by means of an organisation that offered quick and painless death. The entire story is formed masterfully, and its ending is very memorable as a juxtaposition to the dream :)

1. The recluse of Bayswater, Arthur Machen

I placed this at the first spot, after some thought. Surely there exist a number of other stories i could have picked, but this one means something special to me, perhaps not entirely without any connection to the fact that i once lead a reclusive life in Bayswater, which is a part of central London. The story follows the life of a student of Law, who becomes increasingly isolated, and finally gets sick. He is prescribed medication, but someone has made a mistake, and he is now taking something he should have never come to contact with. The result is arguably one of the most persisting in memory episodes, where only the struggle to break down the door of the main characters room keeps us from learning what his plight was all this time :)

Ok, that was my list. In your own you can include a different number of stories, even just one. It would be great if you had something interesting to share about them as well, so as to inform others who might be interested in reading them ;)
 
as mentioned before, probably in a thread started by you some months ago :p , I do not like short stories as a rule. heck, even Gaiman's are trite and annoying and he is one of my favourite authors.

I realise they are a tool to help struggling writers but just keep that stuff where I used to keep my porn as a teen. safely hidden away.
 
Asimov wrote plenty of great short stories, some of them deep and others humorous. I, Robot is obviously his most famous short story collection, and is on the whole very good.

I'm a big fan of short stories, though I prefer them to be anthologies set in a larger universe, such as the Star Wars anthologies or H.P. Lovecraft's stories. Or Asimov's for that matter. I can't think of my favourites off the top of my head, but I'm a big fan of Edgar Allen Poe's stuff as well. I can't remember the names of short stories nearly as well as I can novels, probably because I don't see their titles every time I walk past my bookshelves, but I'll put up a list when I get the chance to flick through my collection.
 
Which short story or stories are you most fond of? And why is that?

Here is a list of my five favourite short stories:

5. The outsider, HP Lovecraft

The outsider is the story of a person who is trying to discover what he is. However already in the first paragraph we are being told that he has made a gruesome discovery and he now wants to move as far away from it as possible. Complete with a memorable climax, and also another climactic moment half way through the story, it is regarded by me as one of the best works by this author :)

Really? It was one of my least favorite of his. Haunter of the Dark or the Rats in the Walls were definitely my favorite so far of his. Maybe Picture in the house as well.
 
I too love Rats in the Walls :)

Spoiler :
But i adore the fact that in the Outsider, the being was living in an underground world without even realising it.
 
Another vote for Isaac Asimov; The Nine Billion Names of God.

Honorable mention: Daniel Keyes; Flowers for Algernon.
 
I had once read that, the 9 billion names of god. It is by Arthur C. Clarke (i had to google it ;) ).

I love Flowers for Algernon :) Has he written anything else of note?
 
Hey kyriakos have you read any gogol? I bet you'd enjoy gogol short stories.
 
Asimov's "The ugly little boy" is very good. I think "The dead past" is the best of his short stories, though, at least of the ones I've read.

All of H.G. Wells' short stories are excellent. Here are some of the ones I especially like, although really I like them all:

"The door in the wall"
"The pearl of love"
"The country of the blind"
"A deal in ostriches"
"The moth" (you would like this one, Kyriakos)
"The story of the late Mr Elvesham"
"A story of the stone age" and "A story of the days to come" which really constitute a novella together.
"The truth about Pyecraft"
"The inexperienced ghost"
 
>745 Maurita: I found it once in an old (50's)collection of sci-fi stories and I could never find it again. Basicaly these miners are on an asteroid and the captain claims he is Hitlers son and is in turn killed by the ghost of the Jewish astronomer who found the asteroid. The plot is a bit dull but it was very creepy.
>Most of Larry Nivens middle short stories such as At the Core, The Soft Weapon, Neutron Star, ect.
>THe Dominic Flandrey series by Poul Anderson. I'm not sure if they are short enough to be considered short stories though.
>And Poe, mainly the Black Cat.
 
I had once read that, the 9 billion names of god. It is by Arthur C. Clarke (i had to google it ;) ).

I stand corrected. I really liked how it ended, the stars winking out...
 
as mentioned before, probably in a thread started by you some months ago :p , I do not like short stories as a rule. heck, even Gaiman's are trite and annoying and he is one of my favourite authors.

I realise they are a tool to help struggling writers but just keep that stuff where I used to keep my porn as a teen. safely hidden away.

Master and Man? The Death of Ivan Ilyich? Literature doesn't get much better...
 
oh hey

In no particular order:

"Super Frog Saves Tokyo" - Haruki Murakami
"The Library of Babel" - Jorge Luis Borges
"The Enormous Radio" - John Cheever
"The Continuity of Parks" - Julio Cortazar
"Sredni Vashtar" - Saki
"A Perfect Day for Bananafish" - J.D. Salinger

When reading each of these six, something just resonated with me. I don't know which six short stories I would pick based on literary merit.
 
The Outsider - Albert Camus

That's a short story right?
 
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