Things to Make and Break

Author(s): May-Lan Tan

Short Stories | Fiction Reductions | Read our reviews!

"There's plenty of darkness and a sprinkling of magic, and these strange, flinty, cigarette-stained narratives speed by, offering lots of surface tension and compel- ling deeper passions." --James Smart, The Guardian "Tan is a cinematic w riter in the same way some directors are literary--think David Lynch at his most Guignol." --David Collard, The Times Literary Supplement "The thirteen stories found in these two books are a fantastic introduction to a writer in the process of teaching us new ways of reading." --Tobias Carroll, Vol. 1 Brooklyn "Things to Make and Break is omnisexual, and it's mind-blowingly good." --Christopher Allen, PANK Old relationships, past selves, hopes for the future-third parties are always in play in any love story. In ten short stories, May-Lan Tan unspools worlds within worlds, the possibilities we seek out again and again, and the seemingly endless churn through self-invention and self-annihilation that is our search for connection. Sleeping with your sister's husband's brother, betraying bandmates, contriving to strike up a friendship with your boyfriend's ex-Tan makes visible how all our dead ends are really mirrors, proxies for something else, and reflections that keep us from seeing our way forward. May-Lan Tan studied fine art at Goldsmiths and works as a ghostwriter. Her stories have appeared in Zoetrope: All-Story, the Atlas Review, the Reader, and Aret . She lives in Berlin.

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THOMAS'S REVIEW:
The eleven stories in this book seem (quite reasonably and refreshingly) preoccupied with what may (to the mind at least) be termed ‘the body problem’, which is (of course) not a problem but a number of interrelating problems (or potentials) clustered around the disjunction between the kinds of relationships had by bodies and the kinds of relationships had by their correlated minds. Minds and bodies are subject here to differing momentums, and one bears the other away before the two can coalesce. Tan is concerned also with the interchangeability of persons, and with the contortion of persons, physically or psychologically, that enables this interchangeability. Whether it is twins who both fall in love with the same amnesiac, or the narrator of ‘Legendary’ who discovers photographs of her boyfriend’s previous partners in his drawer and becomes obsessed with one, an ex-aerialist once badly injured in a fall, stalking her and attempting to enter her experience using a playground swing, the stories have a raw elegance and precision and are full of intense and sometimes surprising images which give them a very realistic texture, the best of them mostly keeping their engines off-screen and only occasionally falling to the temptation to wheel these engines into view at pivotal moments (such as endings).

{THOMAS}

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Product Information

General Fields

  • : 9781473683624
  • : Hodder & Stoughton
  • : Sceptre
  • : June 2018
  • : ---length:- '19.8'width:- '12.9'units:- Centimeters
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : May-Lan Tan
  • : Paperback
  • : 1
  • : 823.92
  • : 224