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Little Black Book of Stories Hardcover – April 20, 2004
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Little Black Book of Stories offers shivers along with magical thrills. Leaves rustle underfoot in a dark wood: two middle-aged women walk into a forest, as they did when they were girls, confronting their childhood fears and memories and the strange thing they saw–or thought they saw–so long ago. A distinguished male obstetrician and a young woman artist meet in a hospital, but they have very different ideas about body parts, birth, and death. A man meets the ghost of his living wife; a woman turns to stone. And an innocent member of an evening creative writing class turns out to have her own decided views on the best way to use “raw material.”
These unforgettable stories are by turns haunting, funny, sparkling, and scary. Byatt’s Little Black Book adds a deliciously dark note to her skill in mixing folk and fairy tales with everyday life.
- Print length240 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAlfred A. Knopf
- Publication dateApril 20, 2004
- Dimensions5.23 x 0.99 x 7.79 inches
- ISBN-101400041775
- ISBN-13978-1400041770
From #1 New York Times bestselling author Colleen Hoover comes a novel that explores life after tragedy and the enduring spirit of love. | Learn more
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Editorial Reviews
From Bookmarks Magazine
Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.
From Booklist
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
“Bewitching . . . immensely readable, fiercely intelligent, and studded with astonishing, refracting images. . . . A virtuoso performance by a master storyteller.” –Los Angeles Times Book Review
“Supremely elegant. . . . Byatt peels back the surface of everyday life–and what she reveals may disturb your sleep.” –Entertainment Weekly
“Striking . . . marvelous . . . impressive. . . . Byatt’s Gothic touch transforms commonplace English settings and characters into unsettling zones of loss and fear.” –The Boston Globe
“A storyteller who could keep a sultan on the edge of his throne for a thousand and one nights.” –The New York Times Book Review
“Scrumptious . . . these are raw, tough, disruptive stories about memory, duty, madness, guilt, cruelty and loss, stories that grope and reel, that throb with secret longings, secret histories, artistic yearnings and the thrashes and groans of a stinking damnation in the underbrush.”–Miami Herald
“Her finest collection yet. . . . Bleak then surprisingly funny, very dark indeed then full of inconceivable sources of light.” –The Guardian
“Beautifully crafted. . . [Little Black Book of Stories] prods at the tender points where art, pain, and desire intersect.” –The Financial Times
“A potent alchemy of magic, horror and sensual delight.” –Elle
“Captivating . . . disturbing yet funny . . . an utterly compelling read.” –Harper’s Bazaar
“A delightful surprise. . . . A heady infusion of mythology and everyday life, with a strong undercurrent of horror. . . . Moving, thought-provoking, witty, and shocking all at once.” –The Sunday Telegraph
“Haunting . . . Astonishing . . . Vivid . . . Moving . . . [Byatt] is an athlete of the imagination, breaking barriers without apparent effort.” –The Nation
“A sophisticated and powerfully realized work. . . . A bravura performance of imaginative artistry.” –The Times Literary Supplement
From the Trade Paperback edition.
From the Inside Flap
Little Black Book of Stories offers shivers along with magical thrills. Leaves rustle underfoot in a dark wood: two middle-aged women walk into a forest, as they did when they were girls, confronting their childhood fears and memories and the strange thing they saw or thought they saw so long ago. A distinguished male obstetrician and a young woman artist meet in a hospital, but they have very different ideas about body parts, birth, and death. A man meets the ghost of his living wife; a woman turns to stone. And an innocent member of an evening creative writing class turns out to have her own decided views on the best way to use raw material.
These unforgettable stories are by turns haunting, funny, sparkling, and scary. Byatt s Little Black Book adds a deliciously dark note to her skill in mixing folk and fairy tales with everyday life.
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The two little girls had not met before, and made friends on the train. They shared a square of chocolate, and took alternate bites at an apple. One gave the other the inside page of her Beano. Their names were Penny and Primrose. Penny was thin and dark and taller, possibly older, than Primrose, who was plump and blonde and curly. Primrose had bitten nails, and a velvet collar to her dressy green coat. Penny had a bloodless transparent paleness, a touch of blue in her fine lips. Neither of them knew where they were going, nor how long the journey might take. They did not even know why they were going, since neither of their mothers had quite known how to explain the danger to them. How do you say to your child, I am sending you away, because enemy bombs may fall out of the sky, because the streets of the city may burn like forest fires of brick and timber, but I myself am staying here, in what I believe may be daily danger of burning, burying alive, gas, and ultimately perhaps a grey army rolling in on tanks over the suburbs, or sailing its submarines up our river, all guns blazing? So the mothers (who did not resemble each other at all) behaved alike, and explained nothing, it was easier. Their daughters they knew were little girls, who would not be able to understand or imagine.
The girls discussed on the train whether it was a sort of holiday or a sort of punishment, or a bit of both. Penny had read a book about Boy Scouts, but the children on the train did not appear to be Brownies or Wolf Cubs, only a mongrel battalion of the lost. Both little girls had the idea that these were all perhaps not very good children, possibly being sent away for that reason. They were pleased to be able to define each other as “nice.” They would stick together, they agreed. Try to sit together, and things.
The train crawled sluggishly further and further away from the city and their homes. It was not a clean train—the upholstery of their carriage had the dank smell of unwashed trousers, and the gusts of hot steam rolling backwards past their windows were full of specks of flimsy ash, and sharp grit, and occasional fiery sparks that pricked face and fingers like hot needles if you opened the window. It was very noisy too, whenever it picked up a little speed. The engine gave great bellowing sighs, and the invisible wheels underneath clicked rhythmically and monotonously, tap-tap-tap-CRASH, tap-tap-tap-CRASH. The window-panes were both grimy and misted up. The train stopped frequently, and when it stopped, they used their gloves to wipe rounds, through which they peered out at flooded fields, furrowed hillsides and tiny stations whose names were carefully blacked out, whose platforms were empty of life.
The children did not know that the namelessness was meant to baffle or delude an invading army. They felt—they did not think it out, but somewhere inside them the idea sprouted—that the erasure was because of them, because they were not meant to know where they were going or, like Hansel and Gretel, to find the way back. They did not speak to each other of this anxiety, but began the kind of conversation children have about things they really disliked, things that upset, or disgusted, or frightened them. Semolina pudding with its grainy texture, mushy peas, fat on roast meat. Listening to the stairs and the window-sashes creaking in the dark or the wind. Having your head held roughly back over the basin to have your hair washed, with cold water running down inside your liberty bodice. Gangs in playgrounds. They felt the pressure of all the other alien children in all the other carriages as a potential gang. They shared another square of chocolate, and licked their fingers, and looked out at a great white goose flapping its wings beside an inky pond.
The sky grew dark grey and in the end the train halted. The children got out, and lined up in a crocodile, and were led to a mud-coloured bus. Penny and Primrose managed to get a seat together, although it was over the wheel, and both of them began to feel sick as the bus bumped along snaking country lanes, under whipping branches, dark leaves on dark wooden arms on a dark sky, with torn strips of thin cloud streaming across a full moon, visible occasionally between them.
They were billeted temporarily in a man- sion commandeered from its owner, which was to be arranged to hold a hospital for the long-term disabled, and a secret store of artworks and other valuables. The children were told they were there temporarily, until families were found to take them all into their homes. Penny and Primrose held hands, and said to each other that it would be wizard if they could go to the same family, because at least they would have each other. They didn’t say anything to the rather tired-looking ladies who were ordering them about, because with the cunning of little children, they knew that requests were most often counter-productive, adults liked saying no. They imagined possible families into which they might be thrust. They did not discuss what they imagined, as these pictures, like the black station signs, were too frightening, and words might make some horror solid, in some magical way. Penny, who was a reading child, imagined Victorian dark pillars of severity, like Jane Eyre’s Mr. Brocklehurst, or David Copperfield’s Mr. Murdstone. Primrose imagined—she didn’t know why—a fat woman with a white cap and round red arms who smiled nicely but made the children wear sacking aprons and scrub the steps and the stove. “It’s like we were orphans,” she said to Penny. “But we’re not,” Penny said. “If we manage to stick together . . .”
The great house had a double flight of imposing stairs to its front door, and carved griffins and unicorns on its balustrade. There was no lighting, because of the black-out. All the windows were shuttered. No welcoming brightness leaked across door or windowsill. The children trudged up the staircase in their crocodile, hung their coats on numbered makeshift hooks, and were given supper (Irish stew and rice pudding with a dollop of blood-red jam) before going to bed in long makeshift dormitories, where once servants had slept. They had camp-beds (military issue) and grey shoddy blankets. Penny and Primrose got beds together but couldn’t get a corner. They queued to brush their teeth in a tiny washroom, and both suffered (again without speaking) suffocating anxiety about what would happen if they wanted to pee in the middle of the night, because the lavatory was one floor down, the lights were all extinguished, and they were a long way from the door. They also suffered from a fear that in the dark the other children would start laughing and rushing and teasing, and turn themselves into a gang. But that did not happen. Every- one was tired and anxious and orphaned. An uneasy silence, a drift of perturbed sleep, came over them all. The only sounds—from all parts of the great dormitory it seemed—were suppressed snuffles and sobs, from faces pressed into thin pillows.
When daylight came, things seemed, as they mostly do, brighter and better. The children were given breakfast in a large vaulted room. They sat at trestle tables, eating porridge made with water and a dab of the red jam, heavy cups of strong tea. Then they were told they could go out and play until lunch-time. Children in those days—wherever they came from—were not closely watched, were allowed to come and go freely, and those evacuated children were not herded into any kind of holding-pen, or transit camp. They were told they should be back for lunch at 12:30, by which time those in charge hoped to have sorted out their provisional future lives. It was not known how they would know when it was 12:30, but it was expected that—despite the fact that few of them had wrist-watches—they would know how to keep an eye on the time. It was what they were used to.
Penny and Primrose went out together, in their respectable coats and laced shoes, on to the terrace. The terrace appeared to them to be vast, and was indeed extensive. It was covered with a fine layer of damp gravel, stained here and there bright green, or invaded by mosses. Beyond it was a stone balustrade, with a staircase leading down to a lawn, which that morning had a quicksilver sheen on the lengthening grass. It was flanked by long flower-beds, full of overblown annuals and damp clumps of stalks. A gardener would have noticed the beginnings of neglect, but these were urban little girls, and they noticed the jungly mass of wet stems, and the wet, vegetable smell. Across the lawn, which seemed considerably vaster than the vast terrace, was a sculpted yew hedge, with many twigs and shoots out of place and ruffled. In the middle of the hedge was a wicket-gate, and beyond the gate were trees, woodland, a forest, the little girls said to themselves.
“Let’s go into the f...
Product details
- Publisher : Alfred A. Knopf
- Publication date : April 20, 2004
- Edition : First Edition
- Language : English
- Print length : 240 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1400041775
- ISBN-13 : 978-1400041770
- Item Weight : 11.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.23 x 0.99 x 7.79 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,205,288 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #4,953 in Short Stories (Books)
- #10,777 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book's stories excellent, with one mentioning they work perfectly for reading. Moreover, the book receives positive feedback for its creativity, with customers praising the author's writing. Additionally, customers appreciate the book's readability, with one noting it bears repeated readings.
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Customers enjoy the variety of stories in the book, with one mentioning they work perfectly for reading.
"Byatt is an artist; her stories are excellent, as are her novels. Highly recommended." Read more
"There are many crazy and interesting stories in this book, and especially, "the stone women" is very interesting to read!" Read more
"...The stories are dark, somber and brilliant...." Read more
"This was a great little book of stories. I wanted something I could read that was short and entertaining...." Read more
Customers appreciate the author's creativity, with one describing her as an artist.
"...a great collection of spellbinding stories by one of the greatest living authors." Read more
"...Great writer and thought provoking tales...." Read more
"Great writer" Read more
"...special people when I want to see if we are on the same wavelength, creatively...." Read more
Customers find the book readable, with one mentioning it is entertaining and bears repeated readings.
"...I did not sell it back to the bookstore because it was such an enjoyable read." Read more
"...in this book, and especially, "the stone women" is very interesting to read!" Read more
"A.S Byatt is always a good read!..." Read more
"...stay there forever, with a unique and beautiful voice that bears repeated readings, look no further than this trove of gems." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 3, 2008Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseAlthough billed as "fairy tales for grown-ups" like the author's earlier collection, THE DJINN IN THE NIGHTINGALE'S EYE, fantasy plays a major part in only one of the five longish stories in this book, and two are entirely realistic. But they are connected nonetheless by a strong sense of the fabulous, for all five are about the making of stories themselves, or the ways in which art is hewn out of life.
Sometimes literally so. The central story, "A Stone Woman," features a middle-aged woman who feels herself turning slowly into stone, and her friendship with an Icelandic sculptor engaged in the reverse process, of finding the life hidden in rocks and boulders. The woman's observation of her own transformation shows Byatt's writing at its most iridescent: "She saw dikes of dolerites, in graduated sills, now invading her inner arms. But it took weeks of patient watching before, by dint of glancing in rapid saccades, she surprised a bubble of rosy barite crystals, breaking through a vein of fluorspar, and opening into the form known as desert rose, bunched with the ore flowers of blue john."
Compare the simplicity with which the book opens: "There were once two little girls who saw, or believed they saw, a thing in a forest. The two little girls were evacuees, who had been sent away from the city by train, with a large number of other children. They all had their names attached to their coats with safety-pins, and they carried little bags or satchels, and the regulation gas-mask." As the simple details pile up, Byatt takes us back, not just into childhood, but the specific childhood of Londoners of our generation at the start of the Blitz. Rather at C. S. Lewis does at the start of THE LION, THE WITCH, AND THE WARDROBE, she creates a context of dislocated reality, in which fabulous things can happen. Lewis's children grew up and had to leave Narnia behind, but Byatt's two schoolgirls are affected for the rest of their lives, though in different ways. One seeks refuge in objectivity and becomes a scientist, the other becomes a storyteller, but both feel a strong need to revisit this first magic at least once in later life.
In "Raw Material," a teacher of creative writing praises the work of an older student of extraordinary talent, but is ignorant of the real-life circumstances that give rise to it. In "The Pink Ribbon," the husband of a woman suffering from senile dementia (itself a form of story-making), receives a surprise visitor who persuades him to rewrite the narrative of his marriage from another perspective -- a situation not unlike the ending of Ian McEwan's ATONEMENT. And in "Body Art," a male gynecologist strikes up a friendship with a homeless art student who is creating Christmas decorations for his hospital. But what begins as an artistic debate gradually begins to invade real life, eventually taking a physical form that leaves both of them changed.
These are five varied stories that will amuse, challenge, move, and chill their readers by turns, leaving them above all with a sense of wonder at the mysterious human power of telling stories -- especially when the voice is that of such a master as A. S. Byatt.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 13, 2004Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseThere is an axiom that states "Don't judge a book by its cover." In this case, the black fading into charcoal gray dust jacket (with a flowering golden sprig) is a precursor of things to come. The stories are dark, somber and brilliant. Who else could construct a series of stories where grief, anger and abuse are manifested in such creative, innovative and bizarre ways?
A woman loses her mother. The relationship, while lightly touched upon, was probably an inseparable one (the daughter states, "She was the flesh of my flesh. I was the flesh of her flesh.") Post the mother's death, her daughter begins to turn to stone but not just any stone; she begins layer by layer to manifest the various exotic stones found in Iceland. They are veined, with complex glints of underlying colors and multiple hues.
Then there is an Icelandic sculptor who goes to enormous difficulty to bring her rigid, statue-like self back to the land of his ancestors. Was this all a metaphor for a woman who was experiencing grief? An unmarried woman, the reader might conjecture, who was faced with an enormous personal transformation without her mother? One who needed a sculptor to introduce her to the real and essential self whom she had not previously recognized?
The bizarre journey proceeds as the reader meets the members of a writing class, experiences the rich memories of its oldest class member, as she describes everyday life when running a household was much more labor intensive. There was the cast iron stove to be kept highly polished on a daily basis, the laundry that was to be boiled, stirred and immersed into multiple rinses. Then came the laborious ironing! The woman's writings depicted a gentle, hardworking woman, and an anachronism to other class members who tore her writings apart because of their being perceived as commonplace. Who is she really? The writing class teacher later discovers part of her mystery...much to his horror!
A pink ribbon is the only adornment of a woman whose very self is being lost to dementia. Through a "tarted up" ghost, the reader discovers her in retrospect. To say more is to spoil!
Byatt is a genius! The stories might seem just that ... short stories. It's the pondering and opportunities for analysis that the stories invite. There exist many possibilities for each of the characters, their lives, their challenges, their joys and obstacles. Byatt layers her challenges to the reader. On the surface, what were the stories about? But beneath the layers, what were the stories really about?
- Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2005Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThis was a great little book of stories. I wanted something I could read that was short and entertaining. The only story I did not "get" was the "Stone Woman." I think because it was totally fantasy and I am more a mystery, thriller, horror type of reader. It was interesting though and I kept coming back for more and trying to figure it out. On the flip side, my favorite story was "Raw Material." We are all left with questions on that one, but we share those questions and don't feel we are the only ones left out of the loop.
I recommend this book as I enjoyed it very much.
Kate
- Reviewed in the United States on July 19, 2019Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseA.S Byatt is always a good read! Her mind works a bit different than the rest of us and her short stories work perfectly for reading and re-reading and you kind find different meanings and stories every time you read them. It’s almost as if she’s telling a choose your own adventure and she leaves you and your imagination to perceive her characters and stories as you like.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 25, 2023Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseShipped right away for a fair shipping price and the book itself is in better condition for a book listed as "good" and I'm thrilled with it. Thank you so much for the bargain price as I'm a senior on a tight budget so I'm very grateful.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2013Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseThe use of "the fairy-tale" and it's history doesn't resonate with me.
Great writer and thought provoking tales. I wonder how much hallucination occurred in the characters implied by the hardships cited such as relocation of pre-adolescent girls with strangers away from family and school during the fire-bombing of London. Overuses the coming of age theory to include any plot possibility rather than reflect on actual wrong or correct perceptions of characters.
Top reviews from other countries
M. de Koning GansReviewed in Germany on January 11, 20175.0 out of 5 stars The Little Black Book of Stories
I did not read the book myself, because it was a Christmas present to my daughter. She was delighted, but I don't think she has been reading it yet.
J R LIMReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 9, 20185.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Perfect in Every way
bernaamaroReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 9, 20155.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Gorgeous!
Eileen ShawReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 26, 20154.0 out of 5 stars "No one ever found any explanation for the torture..."
These stories begin with the gothic and, to my mind, mythic strangeness and it seemed to me to go on too long. With the second short story (though they are all rather long) I was caught up in the plight of a girl with nowhere to live who managed to hide herself most of the time within the confines of an old and rather rambling hospital. An artist recognises her gift for design and rescues her from her poverty, taking her to live with him in his flat. A later story is about a woman whose body calcifies as she turns to stone.
Perhaps the best story is about a man who runs a creative writing class. One of the aspiring writers is better than all of them, an elderly lady. The other attendees are very cross when her work is preferred by the teacher, and we are given two of her very short stories to epitomise her very good work. But the other members of the class are cross that he prefers her work and become jealous, giving her bad reviews: this is actually a story riven with amusement.
“He gave up – ever – taking women from his classes on to his unfolded settee. He gave up ever, talking to his students one at a time or differentiating between them.” As a result they stop writing sex-in-a-caravan stories about him, and one who showed proclivities of turning into a stalker went to a pottery class instead. “As the folklore of his sex life diminished he became mysterious and authoritative and found he enjoyed it. The barmaid of the Wig and Quill came round on Sundays. He couldn’t find the right words to describe her orgasms – prolonged events with staccato and shivering rhythms alternating oddly – and this pleased him.”
“The classes tended to end with general discussions of the nature of writing. They all took pleasure in describing themselves at work – what it was like to be blocked, what it was like to become unblocked.” Meanwhile the other students became less and less enamoured of their work in his class.
This story is more than just funny or lifelike and I loved it. But the ending of this story is terrible to read, but it’s more than worth the struggle to understand.
printgeekReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 25, 20174.0 out of 5 stars but all are written with an excellent use of language and form
The stories may be macabre, but they keep you turning the pages. The themes of each story are varied, but all are written with an excellent use of language and form.
