Reviews

Awayland by Ramona Ausubel

spiderfelt's review against another edition

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5.0

Creative and engaging, this book was everything I love in a short story collection. 

servemethesky's review against another edition

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emotional mysterious reflective sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.75

Picked this up at an indie bookstore on a whim and absolutely loved it. Her writing is beautiful. I found myself underlining many of the sentences because they just hit so hard with wisdom and beauty. Motherhood and mother/daughter relationships are a big theme, along with feeling lost/like you don’t belong, love (and losing it or never having it). Gorgeous. Not every story hit just right, but if you’re the kind of person who likes feeling sad sometimes, there’s probably something for you here.

lelex's review against another edition

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4.0

I really enjoyed these short stories. They were intense and a little dicey but so different in tone and topic both. My favorites were "You Can Find Love Now" and "The Animal Mummies Wish to Thank the Following."

"They were alive and together and God, whichever god was theirs, had shaken this day out like a crisp sheet for them to lie down on."

"High school showed up and she started smoking and watched every meteor shower for four years."

"The problem is not her affliction, which is painless and possible to remedy. The problem is that her body was once a house where her daughter lived. The problem is that the two of them lived there together."

"Will they become crocodiles or hens? Surely, when the egg mummies finally crack, it will be a god who has broken them."

swamp_witch's review

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dark emotional mysterious reflective medium-paced

3.0

buggy's review against another edition

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Triggering content .

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betweenbookends's review

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3.0

‘Tragedy lends authority, especially with teenagers. There was a whole hierarchy: divorce, absent father, physical abuse, sexual abuse, dead father, dead mother, and then, at the top: dead both. It was the rarest loss, the most terrible, and the sufferer was like a precious gem, pressed by unthinkable forces into shimmering sadness, shimmering beauty.’

Ramona Ausubel’s newest collection of stories in Awayland, published on March 6th 2018, lends itself to be wholly original, whimsical, inventive and endearing. This is my second brush with the author's work having read and enjoyed her other collection, ‘A Guide to Being Born’ and I do think this is a stronger collection on the whole. Of course, there is the factor of recency to consider, however I did feel a majority of the stories were more fully realised in this collection compared to her previous.

The underlying thread that holds this collection together is the feeling of isolation and loneliness. Not in a depressing way, but in a rather melancholic, everyday, yet elusively off-beat way. What I really find commendable is that though there is an existing theme, every story feels so titular in its standing. The setting for each story is so widely diverse, ranging from Beirut, to small town America to the Caribbean islands, to Africa and even one in a simulated environment of Mars. Most of the stories felt realistic with a tinge of the otherworldly, fantastical in the most unexpected ways.

As is common in most collections, they were few stories that fell through the cracks for me, but the ones I enjoyed, I truly loved! Her writing style is so imaginative without being overwrought. My favourites from this collection were Fresh Water from the Sea, Template for a Proclamation to Save the Species, Remedy & The Animal Mummies Wish to Thank the Following.

madelyn91's review against another edition

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3.0

When it comes to Ramona Ausubel -- you either love her work or you hate it. I happened to love it and Awayland was hard to get through for me. Each story is imaginative but overall it fell flat, I enjoyed it and took a break between each story to reflect but the minute I closed the book I forgot everything I read.

If you like speculative fiction/ fantasy realism, check it out...if not, pass it up.

readingindreams's review

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emotional mysterious slow-paced

3.0

hebeshebewebe's review against another edition

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challenging emotional mysterious sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

saguaros's review against another edition

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2.0

2.5 stars. I really enjoyed her previous collection, A Guide to Being Born, and was looking forward to reading this, unfortunately I did not connect as much to this one as the other one. There was something almost... unsettling about some of the stories, in ways I can't quite pinpoint. Not necessarily a bad thing, mind, but it was an uncomfortable sort of unsettling, vague spikes of existential anxiety--perhaps for the recurring themes of dying, of loss, but in a way that didn't quite enchant me, or moved me, or didn't get under my skin.
There is something also about so many impersonal characters (the woman, the man, the daughter, instead of names) that I think is supposed to feel universal but instead just leaves me kind of disconnected and uncaring instead. There was something beautiful in the language, but I couldn't quite let myself be moved by it.

Nevertheless, I enjoyed:

You Can't Find Love Now
Departure Lounge
Club Zeus
The Animal Mummies Wish to Thank the Following
Do No Save the Ferocious, Save the Tender