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Sleepovers: Stories Kindle Edition
This collection takes us to a forgotten corner of the rural South, full of cemeteries, soybean fields, fishing holes, and Duck Thru gas stations. We meet a runaway teen, a mattress salesman, feral kittens, an elderly bachelorette wearing a horsehair locket, and a little girl named after Shania Twain. Here, time and memory circle above Phillips’ characters like vultures and angels, as they navigate the only landscape they’ve ever known. Corn reaches for rain, deer run blindly, and no matter how hungry or hurt, some forgotten hymn is always remembered. “The literary love child of Carson McCullers and John the Baptist, Ashleigh Bryant Phillips’ imagination is profoundly original and private," writes Rebecca Lee. Sleepovers marks the debut of a fearless new voice in fiction.
Sleepovers is the winner of the 2019 C. Michael Curtis Short Story Book Prize, selected by Lauren Groff.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHub City Press
- Publication dateJune 16, 2020
- File size3947 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“” The lives of Phillips’s characters transform with startling quickness, and a kind of presumed violence is omnipresent―yet everyone here is still trying to do their best. The music of her literary predecessors (Larry Brown, Carson McCullers, Flannery O’Connor) is present in Phillips’s sentences, but what’s most remarkable about her writing is its generosity. Even when they’re f***ing up or making bad decisions or metabolizing deep grief, these characters are full and rich and gloriously recognizable.—The New Yorker
“This collection stands out in the field of current Southern fiction.” —Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
“A deeply human, unforgettable debut.”—Booklist
"Sleepovers is an unflinching collection through which the complexities, curiosities, and complications of rural Southern life come through."—Foreword Reviews
"Ashleigh Bryant Phillips’ excellent debut collection is bracing and vivid." —Keith Mosman, Powell's Books, Portland, Or.
"The most original short story collection I've read this year." Webster Groves, Mo.
"Ashleigh's prose often holds an incantatory crispness that lulled me into forgetting that I was reading, particularly in extraordinarily sad stories like 'The Virgin' and 'An Unspoken,' both of which derive their power from an almost unbearable dramatic irony and an equally deep hunger for human connection and compassion. I see in this collection a steely writer, one deeply moved by her place and her people, but also fully committed to the truth no matter how dark or difficult or complicated it may be." —Lauren Groff, author of Florida
"There’s some kind of crazy magic at work here—the way that Ashleigh Bryant Phillips takes all the little pieces of daily life that are there in plain sight just laying around and when she gathers them together they become holy, hilarious, transcendent, and unspeakably beautiful. Her style is utterly her own, with wonderful echoes of Carson McCullers, Flannery O’Connor and Larry Brown mixed in. Ashleigh Bryant Phillips is shockingly talented. I don’t think the voices of her characters will ever leave my head." —Mesha Maren, author of Sugar Run
"Very rarely a voice comes along that is astonishing in its originality and fresh wisdom. I don't think anybody sees the cruelty and the vitality of life as relentlessly and beautifully and brilliantly as Ashleigh Bryant Phillips. With Sleepovers, Phillips has intimately given us an entirely new way of seeing traditional life in small-town America. This book is so hard-core, so hard-won, so much a fabric of complicated gorgeous beauty. Part Sermon on the Mount, part Sylvia Plath's darkest images, part actual diary written from the heart of a sleepover, and part song of poverty and strife and genius, this is a book unlike any other written before it." —Rebecca Lee, author of Bobcat and Other Stories
“It’s hard not to be hyperbolic about Sleepovers. I can’t remember a time when I’ve read a story collection so funny and sad and lyrical, all at the same time. In Sleepovers, Ashleigh Bryant Phillips gives us a book that’s so much more than a story collection. It’s a wild place we haven’t been to before. And it isn’t the South, or rural North Carolina, but a brand new place we can call ‘Ashleigh Bryant Phillips.’ This book is haunted.” —Scott McClanahan, author of The Sarah Book
"Every once in awhile, a book comes along and slugs you upside the head, making you wonder why you’ve been wasting your time with those other comparably bland and polite books. Sleepovers is that book, that slugger. There is something in here that is so alive and beautiful and tragic that it feels violent. Ashleigh Bryant Phillips is a dazzling and mighty talent." —Juliet Escoria, author of Juliet the Maniac
"Sleepovers is everything for me, partly because Ashleigh Bryant Phillips allows voices to narrate who are usually confined to dialogue in “literary” works: the voices of children, the grammar of country folks, and the dead/not-so-dead. I keep returning to her image and ritual of burying afterbirth in a swamp, and that feels like what Phillips is doing with this book as whole—respecting and acknowledging, and writing from within the delicate space between life and death. Like me, I’m sure you will also feel like you’re sitting on a porch listening to these stories, knowing they’re being told to you out of necessity from an urgent and generous place." —Steven Dunn, author of Water & Power
“Ashleigh Bryant Phillips’ voice helps readers understand that being nurtured and wounded by the south can cause various times, and places, and norms to be mixed up together. Sleepovers sings not only to readers from rural America, but to any reader who appreciates precision, mystery, and love.” —Clyde Edgerton, author of Raney
“Ashleigh Bryant Phillips's destroyed and defiant characters have a certain power and they know it. Reading this book is like listening to a child or an angel tell the truth -- you can't turn away. The people in these stories are unflinching, and undeniably, uncomfortably real. We know these folks from the post office, the grocery store, from church. Their broken hearts are more alive than ours will ever be and they know this counts for nothing in our world. Nobody is innocent here, not even babies or dogs, yet heaven is so close it can be touched, floating casually through the back yards and ruins of America's forgotten and broken down towns. Phillips is working in Denis Johnson territory, or maybe Howard Finster territory, in these stories, bringing us the news we can sense but never quite see. This book is otherworldly beautiful.” —Wendy Brenner, author of Phone Calls from the Dead
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B07XC9535X
- Publisher : Hub City Press (June 16, 2020)
- Publication date : June 16, 2020
- Language : English
- File size : 3947 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 159 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,253,438 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #836 in Southern United States Fiction
- #1,627 in Literary Short Stories
- #1,790 in Southern Fiction
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I can't recommend this book enough. These are stories that ask you to come back again and again. Don't miss this one!
Weak stories are nothing unusual in any collection, with writers padding out their stellar work with less noteworthy filler, but many of the stories here feel undeveloped, as though the author had played briefly with an idea or a scenario and then lost interest. When her stories are fully realized, Phillps's writing has both heart and hard edges, the kinds of stories that burrow beneath the skin and kept me thinking about them long after I'd finished reading. But a lot of the work this collection feels unfinished, like <i>Lorene</i> and <i>Jacuzzi</i>, where a few snippets of character and idea sit juxtaposed on a page or two, without the development of her finished stories. When they are good, Phillips's stories remind me of Flannery O'Connor in her focus on the dark, squirming corners of Southern rural life. I'm not sorry to have picked up this book, despite its shortcomings and I'm eager to read what Phillips writes next.