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How they spend their sundays (2013)

por Courtney McDermott

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1871,194,648 (4.22)5
Set in Lesotho and South Africa, Courtney McDermott's debut story collection unveils a perspective of African life that is both startling and intimate. An Afrikaner woman sleeps with a shotgun because she fears black Africans, an undead garbage man "saves" lives by taking them, a modern day Cinderella struggles to escape the bitter residual constraints of colonialism. These twenty-two tales embrace graphic realism, energetic bursts of truths that may otherwise go unnoticed, and magic.… (más)
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Mostrando 1-5 de 8 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I received this book from LT Early Reviewers. A book of short stories was the perfect format for the stark and depressing stories about life in South African and Lesotho. McDermott is a very talented writer, but I found the second section of the book distracting. These were the 1-2 page stories that ended just as I was getting into them. My favorite story, and the most hopeful, was the last of the book, 'The Ashen Shoes' - the clever, modern interpretation of Cinderella with an African twist. ( )
  aliciamay | Jan 3, 2014 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I really loved this collection of stories. ..but they are brutal.
Part one is a hard look at modern Post Colonial Lesotho and South Africa.
Part two is edgier, with strong hints of violence and danger.
Part three moves into the fantastic.
I found all the stories totally unsentimental but not without hope. The writing is excellent. It's a book I will keep and reread. ( )
  suniru | Nov 10, 2013 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
Amazing, but be prepared to clench your teeth. Reading about this sort of thing in the newspaper is so different than when it's fictionalized well, and McDermott does a fine job with both the posh and poverty stricken side of the culture of South Africa and Lesotho (which i had never heard of until reading this book). I also was not aware that gang rape (see title story) was a traditional "claiming" rite for some sects, and it was interesting to think about the fact that as a paid or volunteer teacher, you might have to remain neutral and turn the other cheek, though you'd be sick inside. What is your way is not everyone's.
Throughout many of the stories of this book (which is laid out pretty nifty, but i'll get to that), there is very much the underlying current that we take education for granted, that for so many of these kids, it's the only way they'll have any chance at a better life. There's also a fair amount of snippets about tourists, always exploitative, black/white cultural stews, and the rampancy of hunger and AIDS. In the third section, which are short retellings of fairy tales or otherwise fantastical, i found "Evenings with Hilda" particularly creative. It is the story of a lonely vampire in somewhat love with an ordinary woman, who is struck with "the diagnosis" and given short shrift. What could be trite turns out to be a really lovely story in McDermott's hands.
Most of the book are quick little reads, Part One being traditional short stories, Part Two flash fiction, Part Three the fantastical. To say "I learned a lot about South Africa from reading this book" sounds rather 9th grade ridiculous; however the author's acerbic side, spot-on dialogue, and straightforward, no-frills, no-comparisons style earns her some major chops. One to watch, for sure. ( )
  munkygone2hevn | Oct 4, 2013 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I received Courtney McDermott's How They Spend Their Sundays as an Early Reviewer on LibraryThing. It's an easily read collection of short stories, all based in Lesotho and sharing insight into the lives of the people there trying to survive through poverty, violence, and racism. The book is divided into three parts, the first a group of standard-length short stories, the second flash fiction, and the third, in which all the stories share some form of the supernatural. McDermott's prose, for the most part, is well done. Her characters will grab your heart. In fact, I found some of the stories hard to take, especially the title tale (wherein I wish the POV had been the rape victim's and not the jerk who did nothing to help her), with so many voiceless victims. Just so many victims, in general. That's probably why I liked the third part of the book the best. Magic allows the characters in these stories to succeed in ways they aren't able to in the more realistic ones. They were a pleasant relief.

Favorite stories: part one: "The Secrets of Mothers and Daughters," "Fag Hag in Fuchsia"
part two: "A Bottle Full of Nothing," "Prince Harry Flew Into the Village"
part three: "Evenings With Hilda," "The Ashen Shoes" (these two are my favorites of all three parts) ( )
  MFenn | Aug 29, 2013 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
How They Spend Their Sundays is an excellent book of short stories. All of the stories take place in Lesotho, a small country completely encircled by South Africa.

The book is divided into three sections. The first contains several standard short stories. They are what you would expect from a short story in length, character development, etc. The stories are excellent and superbly written.

The second and third sections are where Ms. McDermott won me over. The second section contains a number of 1-2 page stories. They are compact and beautiful. They read in a way that reminds me of poetry (as another reviewer mentioned). They are complete glimpses into the lives of the characters. Beautiful. The third section is a bit whimsical. There is a story of a vampire, a revamped Cinderella, and a post apocalyptic vision. These stories are beautiful in content and recast the perspective on the various topics.

Overall, this is a superb book and I would highly recommend it. ( )
  jcervone | Aug 7, 2013 |
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My biological family: Patrick, Laura, Maggie and Quinn

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My Basotho family: the Makaras of Maluba-lube and 'Me Makabi
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Set in Lesotho and South Africa, Courtney McDermott's debut story collection unveils a perspective of African life that is both startling and intimate. An Afrikaner woman sleeps with a shotgun because she fears black Africans, an undead garbage man "saves" lives by taking them, a modern day Cinderella struggles to escape the bitter residual constraints of colonialism. These twenty-two tales embrace graphic realism, energetic bursts of truths that may otherwise go unnoticed, and magic.

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