Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Words from a Glass Bubble - cover

Words from a Glass Bubble

Vanessa Gebbie

Publisher: Salt

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

This passionate new book gathers together for the first time many of Vanessa Gebbie's award-winning stories. Described by Maggie Gee as 'a prodigiously gifted new writer', this is a natural storyteller; her narratives unfold with a deceptively light touch, exploring with compassion what it is to be human and flawed. 'Words From a Glass Bubble' is about coming to terms with the cards we are dealt. The stories pivot around the recognition that those who seem powerless can prove to be the strongest catalysts for change, both in themselves and in others. Vanessa Gebbie never shies away from difficult subjects, creating an intensely emotional and at times distressing world, but it is never totally dark or despairing. Sparks of the unexpected and flashes of humour light the whole collection with an indefatigable optimism.

This is a writer with a boundless imagination, who breathes life into the most unlikely characters and events. Batty Annie fishes for her son's soul in a disused railway tunnel. Tom's grandmother flies on a circus trapeze. Spike relates to cacti better than people. Eva Duffy befriends a statuette of the Virgin Mary. Pepito pretends he is a priest and suffers the consequences. Shelly has a colonic irrigation to rid herself of the past. Billy hears stones when he shakes his head. Dodie from The General Stores falls for a man who teaches her 'to think', and Mikey mourns his wife through graffiti.

From Ireland to Czechoslovakia to Wales to Alaska to Ibiza, from contemporary New York to a clinic in the future, this collection will take you on a journey. And Harry? He just goes fishing.
Available since: 03/23/2016.
Print length: 160 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Come Join Us By the Fire - cover

    Come Join Us By the Fire

    Various Authors

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Nightfire Books, a new horror imprint from Tor Books, is proud to present 35 audio-only horror short stories showcasing the breadth of talent in today's field.  
    Theresa DeLucci, editor of Come Join Us By the Fire, says, “We wanted this long list of stories to showcase the scope of modern horror, from the cosmic and Lovecraftian, the beloved undead tropes of zombies, ghosts, and slashers, to the more uncanny and internal terrors of isolation, lost love, aging, and one of the briefest, most distressing alien abduction stories you’ll ever hear (‘No Matter Which Way We Turned’ by 2017 Guggenheim Fellowship recipient Brian Evenson.)”  
    The authors also reflect the diversity of horror as a field, with selections from horror grandmasters such as Joe R. Lansdale; New York Times bestsellers like Richard Kadrey and Victor LaValle; exciting new voices including recent Bram Stoker Award winner Gwendolyn Kiste (The Rust Maidens), Cassandra Khaw, and Michael Wehunt; and literary crossover stars such as Carmen Maria Machado (Her Body and Other Parties), National Book Award finalist and winner of the the Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Fiction. 
    There's something for every listener, so come join us by the fire and hear tales not to tell against the dark... but to embrace it. 
    Contents“No Matter Which Way We Turned” – Brian Evenson“Daddy” – Victor LaValle“This Guy” – Chuck Wendig“Flayed Ed” – Richard Kadrey“The Pond” – Paul Tremblay“Her Body, Herself” – Carmen Maria Machado“The Girls in the Horror Movie” – Gwendolyn Kiste“These Deathless Bones” – Cassandra Khaw“It Washed Up” – Joe R. Lansdale“Stemming the Tide” – Simon Strantzas“Midnight Caller” – Stephen Graham Jones“Black Bark” – Brian Evenson“The Anatomist’s Mnemonic” – Priya Sharma“Rabbit Heart” – Alyssa Wong“The Beasts of the Earth, The Madness of Men” – Brooke Bolander“Cold, Silent, and Dark” – Kary English“When the Zombies Win” – Karina Sumner-Smith“Harold the Spider Man” – Paul Tremblay“Ponies” – Kij Johnson“Black Neurology” – Richard Kadrey“Beware of Owner” – Chuck Wendig“The Vault of the Sky, The Face of the Deep” – Robert Levy“Don’t Turn on the Lights” – Cassandra Khaw“Wasp & Snake” – Livia Llewellyn“Greener Pastures” – Michael Wehunt“And When She Was Bad” – Nadia Bulkin“El Charro” – John Langan“Dream Home” – Kat Howard“Spawning Season” – Nicholas Kaufmann“In Sheep’s Clothing” – Molly Tanzer“57 Reasons for the Slate Quarry Suicides” – Sam J. Miller“Was She Wicked, Was She Good?” – M. Rickert“A Life That Is Not Mine” – Kristi DeMeester“That Which Does Not Kill You” – Lucy A. Snyder“The Design” – China Miéville
    Show book
  • The Inexperienced Ghost - cover

    The Inexperienced Ghost

    H. G. Wells

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Herbert George Wells (1866-1946) was a prolific English writer, now best remembered for his science fiction novels and often credited as being the father of science fiction. "The Inexperienced Ghost" is a ghost story with a twist. Clayton, overnighting alone at the club, encounters a pathetic ghost who is struggling to remember how to get back to the spirit world. With Clayton's help, he finally works out the precise method for crossing out of our world into the next. But now that Clayton knows the secret of moving between the two worlds, will he be able to resist the temptation to try it out?
    Show book
  • Flashing Lights - Short and Weird Volume 1 - cover

    Flashing Lights - Short and...

    John D. Parker

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Get your weird and fun fix with these super-short stories of the strange. From ghosts to galactic guests and everything in the gaps. Riddled with riddles, tons of twists and turns, plenty of pulp, and some truly tender moments. Read them all or pick and choose which ones to read by genre. 
    Flashing Lights: Short and Weird is a collection of sixteen flash fiction and short stories in several subgenres of speculative fiction. The collection includes aliens and ghosts, portals through time and space, plenty of humor, a bit of horror and suspense, and some serious classic sci-fi. 
    Embark on a mission to explore the breadth of speculative short fiction. Each story is preceded by a content rating (G, PG, PG-13) and its genre tags. And is followed by an About section, describing the story’s prompt, inspiration, homages, and the occasional Easter egg. 
    The collection also includes six “bonus” ten-word stories with a short commentary about each and a secret bonus short work.
    Show book
  • The Lost World - cover

    The Lost World

    Arthur Conan Doyle

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The Lost World is a novel released in 1912 by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle about an expedition to a plateau in the Amazon basin in Brazil that encountered prehistoric animals. It has been the inspiration for subsequent fiction, including Michael Crichton's Jurassic Park.
    Show book
  • Edith Nesbit: The Ghost Stories - cover

    Edith Nesbit: The Ghost Stories

    Edith Nesbit

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Edith Nesbit – The Ghost Stories.  Edith Nesbit is more famously known as a writer of children’s stories such as The Railway Children.  But in this volume we explore her short stories of the macabre and ghostly sort.  Born in 1858 in Kennington, then part of Surrey and now London.  Her early life was one of constant house changes before meeting, age 17, Hubert Bland who she was to marry three years later – whilst she was 7 months pregnant.  Additionally Bland kept his affair with another woman going throughout.  The two children of this relationship were raised by Edith as her own as well as their own three.  They founded the Fabian Society in 1884.   Thought of as the first modern writer for children she also wrote for adults producing over 50 books in total as well as a collections of poetry which we shall explore in a separate volume.  These stories are brought to your ears in eerie detail by Ghizela Rowe, George Irving and Richard Mitchley.
    Show book
  • The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard - cover

    The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard

    Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    With a horse between his thighs and a weapon in his grip, the dashing Brigadier Etienne Gerard, Colonel of the Hussars of Conflans, gallops through the Napoleonic campaigns on secret missions for his beloved Emperor and his country. He encounters danger and hair-breadth escapes but never loses his bravado, his eye for a pretty girl, his boastfulness or his enormous vanity. Gerard is Conan Doyle’s most lovable character. At times hilarious, at times touching, these stories are amongst Conan Doyle’s most popular.
    Show book