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If a Stranger Approaches You
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If a Stranger Approaches You
Unavailable
If a Stranger Approaches You
Ebook176 pages2 hours

If a Stranger Approaches You

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this ebook

Fifteen “alarming and gorgeous” stories from the National Book Critics Circle Award–winning author about the quiet terrors of American life (The Boston Globe).
 
Laura Kasischke, national bestselling author of The Life Before Her Eyes and White Bird in a Blizzard, both adapted for film, looks behind the quietude of domesticity to find the “strange and unexpected and sometimes extraordinary” in this collection of stories that “defies simple definition” (Booklist).
 
In “Mona,” a mother violates her daughter’s privacy certain she’s hiding a dreadful secret. In “You’re Going to Die,” a girl delights in the cruel power she has over her ailing father. In “Search Continues for Elderly Man,” a little boy’s invitation for a lonely old neighbor to come out and play takes a shocking turn. In “Our Father,” children camouflage their sleeping dad in dirty rags to protect him. But from what?; and in the title story, a woman agrees to carry a package aboard a plane for a stranger despite—or perhaps, because of—her fantasizes about potential disaster.
 
Populated by people coming to terms with a life that is just a little bit off—after there is a tiny mummified heart in a dresser drawer of a suburban home, If a Stranger Approaches You is “an important addition to [Kasischeke’s] own body of work and to the contemporary literature of end times” —NPR Books
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 5, 2013
ISBN9781936747511
Unavailable
If a Stranger Approaches You
Author

Laura Kasischke

Laura Kasischke teaches in the MFA program at the University of Michigan. A winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for poetry, she has published eight collections of poetry and ten novels, three of which have been made into films, including The Life Before Her Eyes.

Read more from Laura Kasischke

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Reviews for If a Stranger Approaches You

Rating: 3.75 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was quite a mix of stories. Melody, one of the stories and actually the longest, was one I really enjoyed. The first story in the book I wish someone else would read and let me know what they thought, because though I liked it, I am not sure what it meant. These were a mix of family malfunctions and other things, obsessive love, non trusting mother, and other things like a zombie and some magical realism thrown in for good measure. Interesting, some good.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Amazing. Although some stories were a bit surreal for my taste, Mona, Melody, I Hope This is Hell, and If a Stranger Approaches You about Carrying a Foreign Object with You onto the Plane, were brilliant. The title story was beyond chilling, and the writing throughout was exquisite.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book was filled with several short stories that hit you in the gut, heart or mind. The majority of them were rather good. They are not straight forth stories but ones that left some to your imagination and let your own attitudes, mind and heart finish. They are not happy, a glad perfect ending as life itself doesn’t always have the scripted endings we desire. The author reached out and pulled you into several separate little worlds with issues all their own and some will remind you of yourself in a certain point in time, or someone close to you. I personally love short stories, ones you can easily finish over lunch or waiting for someone or something. Some stories are better than others but over all a stirring read.I bought this book via Amazon and am excited to add it to my personal library.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Laura Kasischke continually impresses me with her writing. From my first experience with her writing, [The Life Before Her Eyes], to this latest volume, her first collection of short fiction, she has continued to grow in her storytelling ability. Truthfully, I don't usually enjoy short fiction. For me, there is never enough time to become invested in the characters or what if happening to them before the story is over and I'm usually left wanting more. Kasischke, however, proves that she is just as capable of writing short fiction as she is novels, and also left me wanting more, but in a completely different fashion. While usually I fell there isn't enough in a short story to make it worth my while, Kasischke's story make me feel like there is almost too much, and that each of these stories could easily be fleshed out into a longer, more involved story, yet they work perfectly as they are.I took down some brief notes on each story as I was reading them, so I will just copy those here: Mona - "First story in and I'm reminded why Laura Kasischke is one of my favorite authors. Eerie." Memorial - "Haunting" Melody - "Obsessive love crazy" Our Father - "This has to be an idea for a longer story. There is so much potential here!" Somebody's Mistress, Somebody's Wife - "What the what?! I don't even understand and I love it. This is particularly what I'm enjoying most about these stories: sometimes they make no sense whatsoever, and I'm good with that." Joyride - "A love story. Of sorts." The Foreclosure - "Obsessive craving meets ghost story." Search Continues for Elderly Man - "Death can come visiting in many forms." The Barge - "Probably my least favorite of the collection. Not even sure how to explain anything about the story." You're Going to Die - "The relationship between a parent and child is not always loving." The Flowering Staff - "Family isn't always something that needs to be shared." The Prisoners - "Again, another story that has a lot of potential to become something more." I Hope This is Hell - "Sometimes you just need to get away from your life." The Skill - "Knowing you can take a life and knowing when not to." "If a Stranger Approaches You about Carrying a Foreign Object with You onto the Plane" - "Everyone has heard this phrase at the airport. But what if it really happens to you?"Kasischke is a skilled artist at taking the mundane, everyday world and skewing it just enough to keep it recognizable but totally foreign. There is a disturbing familiarity to the world in her writing, yet parts are so strange that they almost seem like a dream, and these stories are no exception. There is a common thread of loneliness or despair throughout, but in some ways, I almost think these stories in some ways speak to our times. I don't know, maybe I'm reading too much into it, but even though these stories do seem a little skewed and not entirely grounded in reality, there is still an element of truth to them.Highly recommended!!