Reviews

Freeman's: California by

pandasekh's review against another edition

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3.0

Recensione pubblicata originariamente sul mio blog Arte della Lettura

Recensione Freeman's. Scrittori dal futuro (senza spoiler)


Freeman's. Scrittori dal futuro è una raccolta di racconti brevi o di estratti curata da John Freeman.

Il tema di questa raccolta dovrebbero essere gli scrittori dal futuro, coloro che "nell'attuale clima di chiusura ed esclusione sono riusciti a guardare al di là delle barriere di identità nazionale, età o genere [...] per rivendicare il diritto a fare della scrittura uno strumento di comunicazione globale", citando la quarta di copertina.
Personalmente dissento da questa definizione, poiché i temi più presenti in ogni racconto sono la tristezza, l'angoscia e la depressione. Tutte le storie mettono tristezza al lettore, nessuna di essa è minimamente allegra o comica.
Leggere questo libro è stato difficile, non penso fosse il momento adatto per me.

A parte ciò, le storie sono tutte di buona qualità. Nessuna mi è sembrata eccelsa, ma allo stesso tempo nessuna mi è sembrata pessima.
Le antologie non mi entusiasmano, a volte le trovo addirittura confusionarie visto il fatto che si leggono storie diverse in breve tempo (un po' come in Hyperion).

Edizione


Black Coffee ormai la considero sinonimo di qualità e questo libro non fa eccezione. Seppur diverso dagli altri libri della casa editrice, anche questo stile mi è piaciuto parecchio. Ottima la qualità della copertina e della carta.

Conclusioni


Una lettura dai toni molto tristi e angoscianti, ma dalla qualità buona.

Altre recensioni sul mio blog Arte della Lettura

scrosby's review

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challenging dark emotional informative reflective sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes

3.75


Expand filter menu Content Warnings

silvianotsylvia's review against another edition

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5.0

Man, what a ride. Reading as traveling, really. 28 new, emerging, bold and wonderful writers, from 20 different countries, aged 25-70! If this is not diverse enough of an anthology, I don't know what is. I am always a fan of anthologies, I love to see and feel different styles once I turn the page onto a new story and I find it difficult to gather enough variety without it seeming too chaotic. In this sense, this collection is very well thought of. Of course, I gathered up some names to put on my to-read (evergrowing) list, such as Elaine Castillo, Mieko Kawakami, Heather O'Neill, Samanta Schweblin, Tania James, Sayaka Murata and Mariana Enriquez.


***
A bit of a spoiler:
***
For those wondering, I skipped the story about the dog - yeah, that one. I feel like this kind of explicit writing disturbs me to the core and I really can't deal with that right now. If there is special meaning or something deep about the characters I should understand or take away from stories like this, it never works out because my mind shuts down immediately at the first sign of distress. Call me hypocrite since I can read about violence on people (but even that takes me a long time and I skim through it, holding my breath) - fine, but reading explicit material about animals in pain is, to put it mildly, not my fucking cup of tea.

sgunther's review

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5.0

Let's not sleep on this book!! I find that most anthologies I've read are mixed bags of hits and misses, but not this one—the works here are almost all hits, and even the "misses" can hardly be described as such. A California-themed collection could have gone just about anywhere, but Freeman chose well.

maf010's review

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3.0

how to bartend (rabih alameddine)---the california pageant (lauren markham)--and bodies built for game (natalie diaz) particularly stood out.

towardinfinitybooks's review against another edition

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4.0

Favorites from this issue:

"Crossroads" - Aminatta Forna

"A Family Name - Garnette Cadogan

"A Tomb for Uncle Julius" - Aleksander Hemon

"One Day I Will Write About My Mother" - Marlon James

"Tell Me How It Ends (An Essay in Forty Questions)" - Valeria Luiselli

"Letter to a Warrior" - Athena Farrokhzad (tr. by Jennifer Hayashida)

"When Living is a Protest" - Ruddy Roye

"10-Item Edinburgh Postpartum Depression Scale" - Claire Vaye Watkins

silvianotsylvia's review against another edition

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4.0

Edouard Louis, Ben Okri, Eka Kurniawan, what have you done to me?

I loved this collection. Timeless and to the point. There are some parts that shined more than others, and the three authors that I mentioned above just broke my heart.

ashleyannrenz's review

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reflective medium-paced

4.25

librarimans's review against another edition

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3.0

An enjoyable collection of short stories and poems. As is the case with an anthology there were a few real stands outs and a few clunkers (I thought the last story went on far too long for example).

cgbeck's review against another edition

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5.0

An excellent collection of short stories and poetry; I couldn't put this down. It's the perfect sort of book that removes you from your own, seemingly banal life and throws you headfirst into someone else's. My favorite piece was "Black and Blue" by Garnette Cadogan, in which the mundane act of walking becomes a provocative story telling mechanism, waking us up to a reality many of us don't often experience.

This review is more of a 4.5, rather than a 5, but only because of the last essay, "On Learning Norwegian" by Lydia Davis. While this piece of nonfiction is a heady, interesting intellectual exercise, it lacks a simplicity and pungent story telling that the other works delivered so well. Certainly not enough to derail the entire book, however. A must read.
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