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Rating:  Summary: Canadian Gothic Review: Derek McCormack is the leading author of what might be called the Canadian Gothic. Grab Bag is a pairing of short novels by McCormack that have never before published in the USA. Both of these novellas are set in the desolate landscape of rural northern Canada. The first part of Grab Bag is titled Dark Rides and is about a teenager in the 1950's who has weird sexual fantasies. The second part, Wish Book, reads more like a collection of closely collected stories than a unified novella. This part is also about a teenager obsessed with fantasizing about sex who does not actually have any except that it is set during the Great Depression. Other than the Canadian setting, Grab Bag is classic gothic.
Rating:  Summary: Canadian Gothic Review: Derek McCormack is the leading author of what might be called the Canadian Gothic. Grab Bag is a pairing of short novels by McCormack that have never before published in the USA. Both of these novellas are set in the desolate landscape of rural northern Canada. The first part of Grab Bag is titled Dark Rides and is about a teenager in the 1950's who has weird sexual fantasies. The second part, Wish Book, reads more like a collection of closely collected stories than a unified novella. This part is also about a teenager obsessed with fantasizing about sex who does not actually have any except that it is set during the Great Depression. Other than the Canadian setting, Grab Bag is classic gothic.
Rating:  Summary: Magic Bag Review: Derek McCormack's GRAB BAG is literally a magic bag full of tricks and treats. One of the best books I've read all year, McCormack collects both his short novellas into his first U.S. release.
McCormack writes about dark and precocious young characters and takes written snapshots of their dark fantasies and abrupt interactions with the world around them. This world is set in rural Canada, in a Halloweenesque wonderland. McCormack's prose is short and sweet, detailing the sexual fantasies of a gay teenager, absurd morality tales of psychiatric trips and haunted hay rides.
GRAB BAG is amazingly complex and multi-layered. Yet, the book is an easy read. The prose is short, abrupt and to the point. The only details are the necessary ones. In a way, GRAB BAG feels like an experiment, spoken word fiction without poetic beats. McCormack is a master with his short-short fiction, able to introduce and submerge the reader in crisis and an unsentimental conclusion within a few paragraphs. I wouldn't trade it in for the world.
Rating:  Summary: Wish there were six stars. Or seven. Review: That New York's Akashic Books has had the wisdom to publish these stories by Derek McCormack is a happy gift to US readers. He has been a national treasure of Canada for some years, and now he can be ours as well. The stories are sharply told, fables crafted to within an inch of their lives by a stylist so obsessive he reminds me of one of those crotchety perfectionists who builds the London Bridge out of toothpicks over sixty years. At least it's a bridge. At any rate, McCormack's writing is so precise it burns a hole right through you. These little sentences, pared down to stilettos that pierce the heart. When I compile a short list of the writers whose work means most to me, he's usually on the list someplace. The stories in "Wish Book" are uniformly nasty but varied otherwise in tone, intention, mood. The older stories, from "Dark Rides," have I think a bit more melancholy and a different conception of formal experiment. Which you will prefer depends on your mood. As the French say, especially in Canada, "c'est bonnet blanc et blanc bonnet" (half a dozen of one, six of the other). I wish Amazon gave out more stars than 5. Let's see.
Rating:  Summary: Wish there were six stars. Or seven. Review: That New York's Akashic Books has had the wisdom to publish these stories by Derek McCormack is a happy gift to US readers. He has been a national treasure of Canada for some years, and now he can be ours as well. The stories are sharply told, fables crafted to within an inch of their lives by a stylist so obsessive he reminds me of one of those crotchety perfectionists who builds the London Bridge out of toothpicks over sixty years. At least it's a bridge. At any rate, McCormack's writing is so precise it burns a hole right through you. These little sentences, pared down to stilettos that pierce the heart. When I compile a short list of the writers whose work means most to me, he's usually on the list someplace. The stories in "Wish Book" are uniformly nasty but varied otherwise in tone, intention, mood. The older stories, from "Dark Rides," have I think a bit more melancholy and a different conception of formal experiment. Which you will prefer depends on your mood. As the French say, especially in Canada, "c'est bonnet blanc et blanc bonnet" (half a dozen of one, six of the other). I wish Amazon gave out more stars than 5. Let's see.
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