Kirjailijakuva
4 teosta 18 jäsentä 10 arvostelua

Tekijän teokset

Dead Tree Tales (2021) 5 kappaletta
The Whole of the Moon (2018) 2 kappaletta
Don't Go, Ramanya (2016) 1 kappale

Merkitty avainsanalla

Yleistieto

There is no Common Knowledge data for this author yet. You can help.

Jäseniä

Keskustelut

Dead Tree Tales, Early Reviewers (kesäkuu 2021)

Kirja-arvosteluja

Tämä arvostelu kirjoitettiin LibraryThingin Varhaisia arvostelijoita varten.
I am a sucker for a freshly released short story collection from a small publisher. With not everyone being in on the short-stories-are-better-than-novels secret, the press is taking a risk believing in a book that, by its very nature, is not going to sell as well. And a self-published collection? Try and stop me. So, when The Man Who Screams at Nightfall and Other Stories popped up on LibraryThing’s Early Reviewers, and the author’s note read: Get the third-best short story collection ever created! I had a good feeling when I clicked request. And I got it!


While not the third-best collection I’ve read (sorry, Mr Leaming), it is an enjoyable departure from your typical collection and worth the read. You see, right away, Leaming broke the rules. Short stories are fiction, and these stories are 93% true. So, if you’re an uber short story nerd diving into this book, you won’t find the tightly written sort of stories that knock you back and require rereading to grasp what the author just did. Leaming isn’t pushing the edge of the form, or even really approaching it. In many cases, they aren’t even short stories, more like stories that are short or anecdotes with resolutions that fade rather than end. But that’s how things are in life, and this collection is about a life.


If I’m interpreting the back-cover blurb right, each piece features the same main character, an American named Michael, at various points in his life and in different countries and communities around the globe. But since he remains unnamed in most, and the character’s development in the stories alters him, each piece could be about different young men in various places in their journey. In either case, the character experiences the world from his limited perspective, makes mistakes and sacrifices, finds love and loses it.


By sharing a common theme and character, the stories in The Man Who Screams can be read one after another, though a few might require processing (CW for raw discussions of mental health and addiction). For the most part, though, each story makes you want to read the next, like the chapters in a novel. Where this collection lost marks for me has more to do with not meeting my expectations of short stories. I think Leaming leans too heavily on familiar short story tropes, making the stories less memorable. The ideas are great, and the characters are interesting, but I would have liked to see more intentional use of literary devices and stronger endings across the board. Here is my one-sentence summary and rating by story:


“The Man Who Screams at Nightfall” An American moves to a small village in Zaire to help set up a fish farm and finds Kachamba, a handyman, on the village’s streets battling his demons. I like this story, but I want it to be tighter. There are a few false endings that could use some better integration to give the actual ending the punch it deserves. (3 stars)


“Parade” Michael is in Zaire, sick with an infection, in the back of an SUV with a broken axle, 10 miles from the nearest village and further from a highway. The tension building in this story is excellent until just before the climax. Then, it's a bit deus ex machina, which causes the supporting characters to lose their purpose. (3 stars)


“Alphabet City” Convinced he's not "clean cut on the inside," a young man goes in search of a guide to the heart of the old New York underbelly. I like how the main character shifts from unlikeable to tolerable, not only to the reader but to himself. (4 stars)


“Happy Hour at the Pub Madrid” Mr. Lovenuts has gotten himself in a pickle, and it is hard to tell whether the other barflies are on his side. This story is more of a humourous anecdote than a short story. The ending just doesn't satisfy. (2.5 stars)


“Ella, La Loca” Everyone calls Elsa crazy, but one man sees her differently, not that that changes anything. A sweet story, though I would have liked to see his choice not to step in at the last party affect him a little more. (3 stars)


“Agora Dogs” An American with a warrant out for his arrest and nothing to show for his time on the planet settles into a summer job in Greece, meets a woman who makes him not hate himself, and kills a man. A fun read but a little loose. (3 stars)


“A Little Patch of Sunshine” A man's stream of consciousness from inside a mental health institution. A brief post-modern glimpse into institutionalized mental health. I like the pop culture references. (3 stars)


“Robo-Cop Rides Again” After graduating from the program at the Slate Thompson Rehab facility, Robo-cop stays on to share his methods with the new recruits and ends up leaving as a legend among men. The graphic descriptions don't feel meaningful enough to the story, so it feels gratuitous. (3.5 stars)


“Ashes” A man walks the streets from Manhattan to Brooklyn as the towers crumble on September 11, 2001. As a short story rehashing a terrible event, this piece could be a meaningful expression of futility, but as it is, it feels more like a dredging up of old memories without purpose, but maybe that was the purpose. (3 stars)


“Here” A single father grapples with his vices. A hopeful little flash piece that isn't out of reach. (3.5 stars)


“A Way to Go Home” Michael is benched and stuck in the dugout with a bully from school. I like the build of tension in this one, but the ending didn’t quite pull the story together for me. (3 stars)


Overall, I give this collection 3.5/5 stars because while each story pulled at my heart, they didn’t completely satisfy my short story needs.


For the curious, I too wanted to know what Mr Leaming believed the best- and second-best collections were, so I wrote and asked: Dubliners by James Joyce, The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer, and Night Shift by Stephen King. So that’s three, but I have a feeling that’s just the kind of guy Rush is.
… (lisätietoja)
 
Merkitty asiattomaksi
TheShortStoryEditor | 6 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Mar 5, 2023 |
The Man Who Screams at Nightfall is an anthology of stories that were 40 years in the making. Each story tells of a different character, or maybe it is the same person, all male that I noticed as main characters, located in countries around the world, Thailand, The Congo, Greece, Spain, Zaire and in America.
Topic of the stories vary from the man who actually screams at nightfall in Zaire where the main character kind of befriends the man. In The Parade the main character is delirious from malaria. In Spain the main character defends a woman who the locals call Ella, La Loca. In Athens the main character starts out the story by saying "I always wondered what it would be like to kill someone". Then we have a bar in Bangkok and a treatment center in South Carolina and the unsavory streets of New York.
Each story is different but the same in that the main character always seems to be a bit unstable. This book is short, at only 150 pages, I read it in one sitting, easy to read and understand. I admire the author in that he was able t get the book finished and published after such a long time.
I am generally not a fan of short stories but this one intrigued me. Go ahead and give it a chance, doubt you will be disappointed.
I give the book 5 stars
… (lisätietoja)
 
Merkitty asiattomaksi
celticlady53 | 6 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Jan 23, 2023 |
Immersive collection of gritty short stories that I know I will read again and again.

The Man Who Screams At Nightfall and other stories is a collection of fascinating short stories written by their author over several years’ time. Each mesmerizing piece is a gem, and with only a few paragraphs, I was deeply drawn into the time and place of each story. It was so easy to melt into the reading.

There are eleven works in total, some gritty, some terrifyingly tense, and many also heartbreaking. But each is told, seemingly, from the point of view of one young man at different stages of his life. I read all of them in one evening, and although very satisfied when I was done, I wished I’d spread them out to make that first-time reading last longer. I don’t go out of my way to read short story collections, but this book may have lit a desire to do so. I will also be looking into this author’s other, longer works as well.

Many of the stories are set in exotic locations. The title story is set in Zaire in the 1990s, before the country became known as The Congo. The sheer eeriness of the tale raised the hair on the back of my neck. But besides the dark tales, there were also moments when I couldn’t help but laugh, such as in “Happy Hour at the Pub Madrid?”

I highly recommend THE MAN WHO SCREAMS AT NIGHTFALL to readers of literary fiction and short stories.I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advanced Review Copy from the author through Partners in Crime Virtual Book Tours.
… (lisätietoja)
 
Merkitty asiattomaksi
KarenSiddall | 6 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Jan 16, 2023 |
Tämä arvostelu kirjoitettiin LibraryThingin Varhaisia arvostelijoita varten.
This series of short stories or vignettes recounts, not in chronological order, some episodes from the life of "Michael" that may or may not be autobiographical. In each case, whether told from the 1st person or the 3rd person omniscient pov, the author delivers his narrative in a powerful, immediate way. He possesses the rare gift of making the story come to life for you: The heat of the African savannah, the balmy Greek nights, the grit, smoke and dust at Ground Zero, and Michael's feelings, fears and hopes are rendered with absolute immediacy, vividly, concisely and to the point, placing the reader right on the scene.

In the vein of "Marlow's Inconclusive Experiences" (and is it a coincidence that two of them are set in Zaire?), these stories offer no easy answers, or no answers at all, but definitely food for thought and, for me, even now the urge to re-read after letting them sink in for a bit.

Highly, highly recommended
… (lisätietoja)
1 ääni
Merkitty asiattomaksi
Nooiniin | 6 muuta kirja-arvostelua | Jan 12, 2023 |

Tilastot

Teokset
4
Jäseniä
18
Suosituimmuussija
#630,789
Arvio (tähdet)
4.8
Kirja-arvosteluja
10
ISBN:t
6