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An Astonishment of Stars
An Astonishment of Stars: Stories | Kirti Bhadresa
1 post | 1 read
A beautifully written short story collection that charts the lives of racialized women as they navigate their relationships, aspirations, and the burdens of memory and expectations This collection of finely wrought short stories explores the often invisible lives of racialized women as they walk through their days, navigating mundane microaggressions, trying on ill-fitting roles, and managing emotions they never allow others to see. There is the wife who uses the name of her white husband in public. There is the mother who cleans the small-town hospital while her daughter moves to the city and suppresses their shared past. There is the teen girl who obeys her parents even as she watches her rebellious older sister slip further and further away. Each of these characters is both familiar and singular, reminding us of women we have been, of our mothers and daughters, neighbors and adversaries. Like Alice Munro, Kirti Bhadresa is a keen observer of humanity, especially of the BIPOC women whose domestic and professional work is the backbone of late-stage capitalism but whose lives receive so little attention in mainstream culture. An Astonishment of Stars is a collection that sees those who are unseen and cuts to the heart of contemporary womanhood, community collisions, and relationships both chosen and forced upon us.
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Mattsbookaday
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Mehso-so

An Astonishment of Stars, by Kirti Bhadresa (2024 🇨🇦)
⭐️⭐️⭐️

Premise: A collection of short stories largely about life for women of colour in contemporary Canada.

Review: I‘ve had a lot of big wins for story collections the past couple of years, but this really disappointed me, and I‘m a bit surprised it made it onto the Giller Prize longlist. ⬇️

Mattsbookaday Nothing is bad about any of the stories, but they were mostly perfunctory, with little to surprise or impress me as a reader. One notable exception is the story “Lighten Up,” which I greatly enjoyed.

Bookish Pair: For a more successful collection on the list, Andre Alexis‘s Other Worlds (2025 🇨🇦)
3w
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