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Clare Wigfall

Auteur de The Loudest Sound and Nothing

3+ oeuvres 70 utilisateurs 4 critiques 1 Favoris

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Comprend les noms: Claire Wigfall

Crédit image: Photo - Troy Giunipero

Œuvres de Clare Wigfall

Oeuvres associées

Sex and Death: Stories (2016) — Contributeur — 44 exemplaires
Road Stories: New Writing Inspired by Exhibition Road (2012) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

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Tihana posted me this two days ago: such is alwasy a treat. I am no great admirer of story collections but this one was affecting for the most part.
 
Signalé
jonfaith | 3 autres critiques | Feb 22, 2019 |
"Somebody looked at her, standing before the drowned body of her husband, her face unearthly, with its eyes so wide set, as if they’d drifted with time apart from the bridge of her nose. The cheeks and forehead were flat planes, sculpted from a pale stone it seemed, chill to the touch. It was a face distorted, made unnatural by the entanglement of her ties to the past, a fishing line caught and twisted beyond saving." - The Loudest Sound and Nothing, p. 134

Short stories are part tightrope act, part haiku. Within the span of a scant few pages, an author has to be able to leave a lasting impression upon the reader. No mistakes can be made, no words should be wasted, and the total must be more than the sum of its parts. The number of people who can pull this off is very small indeed. But Clare Wigfall does. And without a net.

In its 230 pages, The Loudest Sound and Nothing comprises 17 stories, each as unique as they come. From a 19th century Paris under siege in "The Ocularist's Wife", passing through the 1930's on the Outer Hebrides in "The Numbers" and up to present day Britain, each story never fails to offer something new and keep you on your toes.

Something which is part of Wigfall's writing style, and which is thankfully in ample use here, are ellipses, the omission of several key events, which leaves many conclusions about the nature of the story and its characters to be drawn by the reader. It's a tough balancing act, and it can sometimes backfire, but it's pulled off beautifully here. A husband's heinous crime is never revealed in "Night after Night", or an aunt's advice to her runaway pregnant niece in "Norway". Since you're left to fill in these blanks by yourself, the stories sometimes feel that much more personal because of it.

Some are so stark as to be only 4 pages long ("A Return Ticket to Epsom" and "Free") but have none of their impact diminished by being so. If anything, these tiny snapshots of people's lives are all the more potent for their brief nature.

Another point for Wigfall is the fact that she writes beautifully, and you're never short of wonderful prose that flows along like water, keeping you enthraled until you reach the end of the book. Which unfortunately comes surprisingly fast.

In closing, this is probably the finest collection of short stories I've ever read.
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½
1 voter
Signalé
Bogomips | 3 autres critiques | Jan 1, 2011 |
Wow. I've never read a book of short stories where every story is *so* different. A truly talented donning of very varied voices, from many times and many worlds. I devoured this book in less than a day; I actually wish I'd spent longer over it - I didn't want it to finish. This is definitely one I will read again.
1 voter
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sandpiper | 3 autres critiques | Nov 12, 2007 |
I have been fretting about writing this review. I am not a book reviewer and when something this beautiful and elegiac comes into your hands you really want to do it justice. I shall give it a go anyway.

I understand some people do not enjoy reading short story collections. I am not one of them. I find a well written short story to have much more impact than a novel. For an author to impress in a few short pages seems like the height of the craft. Clare Wigfall more than meets that criterion. She writes with such mastery that I would have expected to find she has been writing for decades. Not so - this is her debut. I don't feel I am exaggerating when I compare her to Flannery O'Connor at her best. Perhaps it is her peripatetic upbringing that allows her to evoke time and place and, particularly, local dialect with a pitch perfect ear. Wherever her talent springs from it is prodigious.

The stories in The Loudest Sound span time periods from 1870 to, possibly, the present. There is a sting inherent in each of these gems and they sneak up on you gradually, some in the very last line. Clare's characters are not sunny and they are all doomed in some way yet this is far from a depressing book. Rather it is extremely thought provoking, so much so that one can only thank the universe for providing us readers with such gifted storytellers. If you love reading real literature you should read this book. Patience is not one of my virtues and I will be eagerly awaiting Clare's next offering.
… (plus d'informations)
1 voter
Signalé
candyschultz | 3 autres critiques | Nov 3, 2007 |

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Œuvres
3
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2
Membres
70
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#248,179
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½ 3.6
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4
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