Reviews

The Dark and Other Love Stories by Deborah Willis

lindy_b's review against another edition

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2.0

Not anywhere near as magical, creepy, or just plain weird as the book's description would have you believe. The author is very fond of having young precocious women serving as inspiration for deadbeat dudes in the process of spiraling their way out of society. Despite this, I did enjoy the story "Girlfriend on Mars."

pay1510's review

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challenging dark emotional mysterious reflective tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? N/A
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.0

grespages's review against another edition

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1.0

1.5 stars
Another “I’m reading this as an entertainment” kind of book. Some stories where pretty nice and I enjoyed them, others were very bland and disappointing

spiderfelt's review against another edition

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4.0

This punchy little collection of off-beat stories provided an enjoyabler escape. It's always fun to read collection set in places I recognize, in this case, the Lower Mainland (Vancouver BC and the surrounding region).

idebraba's review against another edition

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5.0

LOVE.

zoemig's review against another edition

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3.0

After adoring her first collection when it was released in 2010, I was really looking forward to The Dark and Other Love Stories by Deborah Willis. While I also enjoyed these stories, they have a quiet elegance and emotion to them, I found them less consistently magical than the previous collection. Still, Willis' take on love in its many forms are often beautiful and subtle at the same time, in particular those that deal with coming-of-age, which, while not always feeling realistic, have a dark and surreal beauty to them.

In the title story, The Dark, two girls at summer camp sneak away at night, while in Welcome to Paradise, two teenage best friends start breaking into houses during a boring summer. There are some weird stories, like Girlfriend on Mars about a guy whose girlfriend applies for a reality show where she will be sent to Mars, but they still manage to work. There was some repetition in theme: best female friends doing things they aren't supposed to, a teenage girl with an uncomfortable relationship with an older male, but the stories felt different enough. It is also always special to read stories set in Canada.

I didn't care as much for the historical fiction, like Last One to Leave, about a woman who works at a rural newspaper and a Ukrainian immigrant, or most of the stories with older men, like Hard Currency, about a novelist who revisits his homeland of Russia, and Steve and Lauren: Three Love Stories, three short stories that tie together to tell important moments in the relationship of a relationship. I think the issue with these stories is that despite the lovely writing, I really do not care about the characters, and they weren't dark and mysterious enough to intrigue me either. That said, throughout The Dark and Other Love Stories, Willis' writing is thoughtful and beautiful, the words feel sharp and carefully placed, so although this collection was uneven for me, I am still glad that I read it.

la_lela's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional mysterious reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

5.0


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exurbanis's review against another edition

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5.0

4.5 stars

THE DARK and Other Love Stories by Deborah Willis (Fiction, Canadian, Short Stories)

What an incredible range of characters and POVs! - and not a romance in the bunch ;-)

Just some:

THE DARK about two girls at summer camp who dare each other to go out in the dark when everyone is asleep.

THE GIRLFRIEND ON MARS- weed grower & dealer & his live-in. She decides to sign up for a reality show on which the winning couple mans the first flight to Mars. He narrates what he sees on the show but all he says is not accurate.

(FORGET THE TITLE) A middle-aged American man visits the site of his late grandmother’s apartment in St. Petersburg and, not wanting to go alone, he hires a prostitute to go with him.

LAST ONE TO LEAVE is a very touching story of two survivors of different events who find each other but are eventually parted by death.

I liked best - TODD about a recovered addict just starting out in a new life, wanting his 10-year-old daughter to live with him, and in the meantime living with Todd, a crow that finds its way into the apartment through an open window.

FLIGHT: a teenaged girl runs away from her home in Victoria and hits the streets of Vancouver. She meets Eddie – that saves her from prostitution and drugs. She eventually returns home & carries on with her life. Years later, on the Sky Train, Eddie recognizes her and she denies knowing him.

THE ARK: Leanna and Toby as kids hate each other. We follow them from age six to adulthood in just a few pages.

THE HOLE and THE NAP touch on the fantastical.

with_coffee_n_cream's review against another edition

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2.0

As I've seen a few other people point out, these stories had a penchant for pairing grown men with precocious young girls. Actually, these stories had a preoccupation with big age differences in general. It made me really uncomfortable. Many of the stories were just downers, I felt hopeless when I finished them, and rather frustrated. They just seemed like they were supposed to have a lot of meaning, they were written like they had a lot of meaning, but I just found a lack of meaning. I don't know. Mostly I was confused, bored, frustrated, depressed, etc. I considered dropping it quite often.

"Last One to Leave" was cute, though.

Oh, and for a bunch of stories centered around all the different forms of love, there sure weren't enough queer relationships.

briarsreviews's review

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4.0

Deborah Willis has crafted one lovely group of stories in The Dark and Other Love Stories.

This collection is full of humor and intriguing content. No, seriously. I was thoroughly impressed by not only Deborah's incredible writing style but the imagination behind these stories. Some of them were just wild! The weirdest yet most interesting was a girl falling in love with a man who wants her to be a bird. Like... what? How does one come up with THAT idea? Impressive.

My favourite was the story about a woman going behind her boyfriend's back and trying to go to Mars. It was funny and yet really moving. My heart ached for the poor man as we watched the scenario unfold. But my gosh, so good! It's hard to get emotions like that for a book!

I would highly recommend this book. Not only is it not your typical anthology full of love stories and dark and twisted humor, but it's also just really well written. Deborah has a real talent and it'd be a waste for this book not to find a bigger audience (also, she's Canadian. Represent!).

I do think this book may fit into a niche category for some readers, since it's not purely about love and romance. This book is not a romance book, it is a contemporary novel written with love themes. That being said, if you go into it understanding that this isn't a romance novel and it's purely based on theming and creative stories, you'll love it. I sure did! I thought it was a fun ride and I'd love to pick up more by Deborah in the future.

Overall, I'm thoroughly impressed by this book. I will continue to recommend it until my dying days, because it's a real, secret, Canadian gem!

Four out of five stars!

I received this book for free through Goodreads First Reads.