14 February 2025
When we watched the 2024 Hay Festival interview with the American author Amor Towles a few weeks ago (reviewed here in February 2025) he gave a fascinating analysis of the craft of writing short stories and the different approach this requires compared to writing a novel. Amor Towles is the author of two of my favourite novels of recent years - 'A Gentleman in Moscow' (reviewed here in September 2021) and 'The Lincoln Highway' (reviewed here in February 2022) but I realised I hadn’t got around to reading his 2024 collection of short stories ‘Table for Two’. So I immediately embarked on ‘Table for Two’ (as an unabridged audio book, narrated by Edoardo Ballerini and J. Smith Cameron). It’s a series of very entertaining short stories, mostly set in New York in the late 1990s, followed by a longer novella. The stories have the feel of old-fashioned fables and Towles writes with wit, precision and gentility. Having not read a collection of short stories for many years I found it interesting that, not only do they demand a different technique from the writer, short stories also require a different approach from the reader. In these carefully crafted miniature narratives every word counts and you need to pay close attention from the start. Each story closes with a revealing twist or a satisfying denouement but it’s sometimes hard to anticipate the length and scope of the tale and I found myself concentrating to avoid being taken by surprise by a sudden ending. The stories in ‘Table for Two’ are not connected but it was very enjoyable to rediscover a character from Amor Towles’ first novel ‘Rules of Civility’ whose story picks up directly from her departure from the novel.
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