Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Night-Gaunts and Other Tales of Suspense
Night-Gaunts and Other Tales of Suspense | Joyce Carol Oates
5 posts | 3 read | 1 reading | 1 to read
In the title story of her taut new fiction collection, Night-Gaunts and Other Tales of Suspense, Joyce Carol Oates writes: Life was not of the surface like the glossy skin of an apple, but deep inside the fruit where seeds are harbored. There is no writer more capable of picking out those seeds and exposing all their secret tastes and poisons than Oates herselfas brilliantly demonstrated in these six stories. The book opens with a woman, naked except for her high-heeled shoes, seated in front of the window in an apartment she cannot, on her own, afford. In this exquisitely tense narrative reimagining of Edward Hoppers Eleven A.M., 1926, the reader enters the minds of both the woman and her married lover, each consumed by alternating thoughts of disgust and arousal, as he rushes, amorously, murderously, to her door. In The Long-Legged Girl, an aging, jealous wife crafts an unusual game of Russian roulette involving a pair of Wedgewood teacups, a strong Bengal brew, and a lethal concoction of medicine. Who will drink from the wrong cup, the wife or the dance student she believes to be her husbands latest conquest? In The Sign of the Beast, when a former Sunday school teachers corpse turns up, the blighted adolescent she had by turns petted and ridiculed confesses to her murderbut is he really responsible? Another young outsider, Horace Phineas Love, Jr., is haunted by apparitions at the very edge of the spectrum of visibility after the death of his tortured father in Night-Gaunts, a fantastic ode to H.P. Lovecraft. Reveling in the uncanny and richly in conversation with other creative minds, Night-Gaunts and Other Tales of Suspense stands at the crossroads of sex, violence, and longingand asks us to interrogate the intersection of these impulses within ourselves.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
Alicepondpoe
post image
Pickpick

I love Joyce Carol Oates. Her dark tales are always written with something terrible just lurking under the surface of a regular story. I can understand why some might find her tales drawn out, might not connect with them, but I feel JCO writes in such a way as to make you become the outsider looking in. You're on the otherside of a two way mirror unable to intervene in what's to come. And that's the point, to force the reader to become a bystander

blurb
bookandcat
post image
Reviewsbylola Omg 😮😍😍 6y
40 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
LonesomeReader
post image

A powerful collection of imaginative short stories that portray conflict in dramatic & mesmerising ways.

review
DarcysMom
post image
Panpan

🌟🌟
#Netgalley

blurb
DarcysMom
post image