Reviews

Nothing Gold Can Stay: Stories by Ron Rash

kieranhealy's review

Go to review page

3.0

Some good short stories. Some ok ones. Think I'm done with Ron Rash.

jess_ika's review

Go to review page

dark emotional reflective sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

alienclans's review

Go to review page

4.0

My favorite was Night Hawk, followed by Those Who are Dead are Only Now Forgiven and The Magic Bus.

holacandita's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

#2018readharder An Assigned Book you hated (or never finished). I got this book at a LBS as a blind pick so it wasn't something I would have gravitated towards on my own and struggled for about a year to get going with it since it short stories are not my genre and Appalachia is not a setting I am typically interested in. However, as part of the Read Harder challenge, I wanted to give it a real try and I'm glad I did. Some of these were truly marvelous and all were extremely well written. There's something special about a short story and while I don't find myself reading them often, I do admire the challenge the author has in making the reader feel all the swing of emotions and character or story arc in such a small amount of words. Ron Rash does that masterfully. He really has grasp on prose and descriptive imagery and paints beautiful pictures of this area of the country and I don't think I would have appreciated it as much if I didn't live in NC and spent some time in the area he writes about. I'm glad I gave this a real chance.

pammella's review

Go to review page

4.0

I didn't realize many of these stories are also in "Something Rich and Strange," so only a couple of the stories in this book were new to me. Still great reading, though, and I love how in just a few pages Ron Rash can paint a picture and tell a story that lingers in my mind.

rpmohn's review

Go to review page

5.0

This is the best book of short stories I've read in many years!

hollymc28's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

I consider a collection of short stories an excellent introduction to a new author. This collection was no exception. I enjoyed Ron Rash's stories and his take on Southern life. I look forward to reading more books and stories by him in the future.

zoes_human's review against another edition

Go to review page

emotional

4.5

He's like an Appalachian Chekhov with this book. This is an absolutely gorgeous collection of short stories.

briandice's review

Go to review page

5.0


One of the reasons short fiction is my favorite genre is the requisite economy of words an author must employ. A virtuoso can make you feel all of the unsaid things; fleeting djinns seen with peripheral vision that may/not be there. My solid measuring stick of fantastic writing is reaching the end of a story and getting that unsettled just what the fuck is going on here feeling - a sensation that can come from something genre-stretching from Ben Marcus as much as a writer penning a piece in a classical style. Ron Rash is one of the latter and one of the most talented writers in the genre today.

Rash's southern roots show in all of the pieces in this collection - and that's a good thing. Those djinns aren't hidden from him - he can write a heartbreaking piece set in the shadow of the Civil War as well as a modern day love story centered around meth. He could teach a doctorate course on how to write dialogue. And then there are those passages that catch the reader unaware. The eyes mist, the throat lumps:

Maybe it's because the picture's a little blurry, but one second I see something in Kerrie's face that reminds me of when she was a baby, then something else reminds me of her in first grade and after that high school. It's like the slightest flicker or shift makes ones show more than the other. But that's not it, I realize. All those different faces are inside me, not on the screen, and I can't help thinking that if I remember every one, enough of Kerrie's alive inside me to keep safe the part that isn't.


That's from the story "Twenty-Six Days" in this collection; a mother's thoughts after a Skype video chat with a daughter deployed in Iraq. Any reader that comes across this paragraph that has ever held these fragmented images of a child far away, rarely seen, can understand exactly what Rash is talking about (regardless of the situation surrounding that part of us that is growing older). This is what we talk about when we talk about love.

Rash is about to become so very much more famous when the movie Serena is released later this year, and he deserves all of the attention he will get from penning a great novel that became that movie. But it is the short stories that have me in his orbit. I entreat you to sample his work. You won't be disappointed.

chiyeungreads's review

Go to review page

4.0

All set in the Appalachia, these are the stories of the poor, the lonely, the desperate, and the hopeful.