Ratings39
Average rating3.7
I've been lucky enough to read some excellent short story collections this year (Bad Thoughts by Nada Alic, Stories from the Tenants Downstairs by Sidik Fofana, You Never Get it Back by Cara Blue Adams), and Bliss Montage by Ling Ma is yet another standout. (How I'll manage to wedge it into my already-overcrowded “favorite short story collection” section of my bookshelf is unclear, but a great problem to have.)
The stories in this collection are surreal but they all feel real. This is the brilliance - Ma brings it all to life, as implausible (and at times grotesque) as some of it may be. She finds the universal in the specific (not to mention the impossible) and writes it in ways that stun in the moment and reverberate long after you've finished. Her style is detached, not intimate - so the fact that she manages to hit the emotional nail on the head in such an indirect way is all the more impressive. I loved this book and can't wait to reread.
Thanks to Farrar, Straus and Giroux and Netgalley for my ARC in exchange for an honest review.