9 January 2012

While I'm Still Myself by Jeremy Mark Lane

It seems to be my month for short stories. Sometimes that's a good thing. It definitely is a good thing when the book is Jeremy Mark Lane's While I'm Still Myself.

Whenever I start a book of short stories, I wonder what I will find. Many authors can't do justice to a story in this format and the result is more of an outline for a longer novel than a complete story. Jeremy Lane impressed me with his ability to tell the story. In almost all of the offerings in this little book, I was immediately invested in the characters and their predicaments. I even teared up at one point.

There are a few common themes that tie the stories together. All of the stories include main characters wanting something to happen 'while they are still themselves'. This line shows up again and again and it got me to thinking about the changes in our lives that either evolve or devolve our perceptions of ourselves. Pretty heavy thinking for a book of short stories. Mr Lane reminded me that 'short' doesn't have to mean 'mindless'.

The stories also have a common setting: small town, anywhere. These were towns I recognised. Towns I lived in at one time or another. Anyone with any connection to rural life will feel right at home in these stories. Don't worry if you are an urbanite, though, the descriptions are rich enough that you won't get lost.

We all know there is no such thing as perfect, especially when it comes to man-made. The one downfall in While I am Still Myself comes at the end. The last story, Round Bale was OK but it didn't live up to the other stories in the book. I was sad that it was the last one because I would have loved to end on a high note. Not that it wasn't good - it just seemed truncated in a way the others didn't. It was the only one of the stories in the collection that felt like a short story.

Most bibliophiles carry a book in their purse or car to carry them through wait times. This collection would be perfect for that situation. It is small and light and decidedly worth reading. It is also being released tomorrow (January 10, 2012). So you can pick one up hot off the press!

A Taste from page 35:
Annabel turned to face him and after stomping her foot down with authority, gave a stern reply. "Johnny Wheeler, I didn't tell you about this so you could whine and cry and try to talk me out of it. I'm not gonna sit around and wait to go crazy like my poor mother. I gotta see things in this world. I wanna live. Go places. While I'm still myself and can make things happen."


/5      

Character Development      4

Editing                                 5

Sex                                       0

Violence                               1

Romance                              2

Readability/Flow                 5

3 comments:

  1. A good book for my purse is always good to have :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. I love short stories. I love to write them and I love to read them. Have you seen The First Time? It's an eBook collection of YA short stories. I'm sort of promoting that one since a lot of my friends are included as authors. Me too :-) I'd love your take on our effort.

    Thanks for the great post.

    ReplyDelete
  3. @cleemckenzie I actually don't have an e-reader so eBooks are still out of my range. The kids don't let me on the computer long enough to read on it.

    ReplyDelete

Here's your chance to voice your opinion. We all have them. I'd love to hear yours. I try to respond to all comments so please check back if you are interested in that.