Terrarium: New and Selected Stories
By (Author) Valerie Trueblood
Counterpoint
Counterpoint
27th August 2019
United States
General
Fiction
Narrative theme: Coming of age
Short stories
Contemporary lifestyle fiction
813.6
Paperback
400
Width 142mm, Height 219mm
Shortlisted for the Pacific Northwest Book Award "Urgent, unnerving and tightly packed short fiction that covers enough ground for a library of novels." -The New York Times Book Review, Editors' Choice Valerie Trueblood's writing has been praised by The New York Times as "an exercise in literary restraint and extreme empathy." Selected here are stories from her previous collections-finalists for the PEN/Faulkner Award and the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award-alongside her newest collection, which lends this book its name. The new stories collected within Terrarium represent an exciting direction for the author- a condensing of narrative and, in some cases, a departure from it into another state of mind. It's hard to describe any of Trueblood's stories as "typical." She does not write about people from a single class, or caste, or geographical area. She has not written a single story emblematic of her work. She does not write stories fantastical or eccentric. Ordinary life, her stories may be saying, is fantastical enough. She is more like Babel than Chekhov. In all her writing, it's clear that Trueblood believes that the short story can carry both the lightest and heaviest of loads. Terrarium highlights the achievement of simply living, the stories within often unresolved but in a state of continuation, expansion. Trueblood's stories aren't merely about their subjects, they're inside them.
The New York Times Book Review, Editor's Choice
Shortlisted for the 2019 Pacific Northwest Book Award
1 of 10 Books to Read in August (BBC Culture)
Truebloods stories are like the Tardis in Dr. Who. Theyre small on the outside, but once youve stepped through the door they expand in all directions until, by the end, surely its a novel you just finished reading . . . Urgent and unnerving. The New York Times Book Review
Terrarium [is] a careerspanning collection that brings together her classic work and dozens of new stories. Its a statement piece, a book that seems to be intended to mark her as a real American master of the short story. The Seattle Review of Books
The 49 stories here . . . speak to Truebloods mastery and the spaciousness of her vision. BBC Culture, 1 of 10 Books to Read in August
If youre unfamiliar with Seattle author Valerie Trueblood, her new book, Terrarium: New and Selected Stories, offers a fine introduction. It handpicks tales from her three previous collections, Marry or Burn, Search Party: Stories of Rescue and Criminals: Love Stories, and rounds them out with new and more experimental pieces . . . Trueblood is at her best when deciphering ambiguities of the heart. She makes uncertainty luminous. Shes also wonderful on the geography of Seattle, where many of the stories are set. Crosscut
In the meantime, theres more to Trueblood than her word count. Even her shortshort storiesmere fragments of a feeling or memory . . . underline the most distinctive quality of her work. Even the longest stories go light on plot and read more like meditations that flow downstream, carrying with them the remembrance of things past, the mysterious alchemy of relationships and the elusive nature of love . . . In total, Terrarium is a compendium of thoughtful and often insightful pieces that deal with the most incomprehensible parts of our being. The Seattle Times
Urgent, unnerving and tightly packed short fiction that covers enough ground for a library of novels. The New York Times Book Review, Editors' Choice
This big collection gives readerswhether new to Truebloods work, or nota great overview of her accomplished, varied style. Omnivoracious, One of Four New Story Collections from Innovative Women Writers
Selections from three previous collections, as well as 30 new stories (also headed Terrarium) comprise this excellent volume from Trueblood . . . Across these 49 stories, Trueblood provides breadth, depth, and something even morea window into her evolution as a writer. The earlier stories bear resemblance to Alice Munros, while the later are reminiscent of Lydia Daviss; but throughout, Trueblood projects her own unique voice. Publishers Weekly
A new collection from one of our finest short story writers, preceded by condensed versions of her last three books . . . There are indeed some great stories here, praised for their unsettling combination of empathy and ruthlessness, for their elegant, uncommonly quick development, for their diverse, unexpected subject matter . . . She is still a cleareyed and compassionate reporter of the complexities and contradictions of human nature. Kirkus Reviews
Terrarium offers a landmark collection of stories from a distinguished author . . . Closing out the collection is a substantial set of new stories and vignettes, which feature notably succinct ruminations that manage to capture the nuance of her earlier works . . . Truebloods stories question, explore, and expose as they offer unexpected connections and deeply human realizations. Booklist
Valerie Trueblood is the author of the novel Seven Loves, and the short story collections Search Party, Marry or Burn, and Criminals. She's been a finalist for the 2014 PEN/Faulkner Award, a finalist for the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award, and a recipient of the B&N Discover Award. She lives in Seattle.