A Personal Anthology, by Tice Cin
A list of short stories that spun my expectations, some that I revisit to tighten my writing eye and some that bring me right back to a certain shade of mood. Some of these stories (such as the Octavia E. Butler one) formed an early part of my reading life and research back when I was doing my MA in literature and posthumanism. Others I’ve discovered through questing for stories that reinvigorate architectural plains, from Jayant Kaikini’s explorations of spatial idenitities in Mumbai to YZ Chin’s KFC vistas. Seeing all of them together has given me some excitement, similar to gathering up personalities with a broom.
‘Opera House’ by Jayant Kaikini, translated by Tejaswini Niranjana (Collected in No Presents Please, Tilted Axis Press, 2020)
The way that Kaikini writes is beautiful to me because he always shows the ways that other lives touch the tips of others, like a leaf at the brow. In ‘Opera House’ we get to see how after midnight, there is no such thing as age. It is a story I return to.
‘At the Heart of Things’ by Vanessa Onwuemezi (First published in The White Review and collected in Dark Neighbourhood, Fitzcarraldo Editions, 2021)
One of Vanessa’s strengths are in the meticulous ways that she writes about the varying pressures upon us. There’s this great line, “The city demands a certain kind of contact only. It demands suspicions.” There are so many layers in her writing and she isn’t afraid to take risks. Her debut short story collection Dark Neighbourhood is about to be published in October 2021.
‘Kong’s Garden’ by Hwang Jungeun, translated by Jeon Seung-He (Part of a collection of pamphlets called YEOYU, Strangers Press, 2019)
From the author of one of my favourite novels, One Hundred Shadows (2010), Hwang takes us into a socially bleak alternate Korea where education no longer holds utmost value and the markers that society are measured by begin to take a U-Turn. There is something matter-of-fact and gripping about the way we read about bored clerks, girls getting refused cigarettes and men going missing.
‘I’d Love You To Want Me’ by Viet Thanh Nguyen (First published – as ‘The Other Woman’ – in Gulf Coast 20.1, Winter/Spring 2008, and collected in The Refugees, Little Brown, 2017)
This is a moving story. We meet a character who struggles with their memories ‘gradually stealing away’. Mr and Mrs. Khahn know a lot about each other, but there are huge gaps between them too.
‘Bloodchild’ by Octavia E. Butler (First published in Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction, June 1984. Collected in Bloodchild and Other Stories, Seven Stories Press 1995, and numerous anthologies)
I was always intrigued by Octavia E. Butler’s exploration of the posthuman. Something that makes ‘Bloodchild’ really great is the way that it doesn’t shy away from anatomical language and the intricacies of new species being made. I think Octavia’s writing is a master class in writing about the complications and potential of motherhood too.
‘The Running Man’ by Jorje Consiglio, translated by Cherilyn Elston (Collected in Southerly, Charco Press, 2016)
I think that there is an abrasive quality to the narrator in ‘The Running Man’ that makes me think twice. An intentional discomfort. There’s a fascinating line in the story about a man who dedicates his life to communication. Small details like that remain with me. A great way to start on your journey into ‘the Consiglian logic of story-telling’ – part of a collection of near imperceptibly linked stories.
‘A Bet Is Placed’ by YZ Chin (First published on LitHub in April 2018 and available to read here, and collected in Though I Get Home, Feminist Press, 2018)
I love the vantage point of this story. It opens with an old man looking at young people ordering munch in KFC. There’s such a cinematic quality to YZ Chin’s writing. This story lingers on the idea of growing into modernity.
‘Morning 1908’ by Claire-Louise Bennett (First published in the Winter 2012-2013 issue of The Stinging Fly, collected in Pond, Stinging Fly, 2015/Fitzcarraldo, 2016. Available to read here)
It’s the type of story that makes you think of the sound of rain’s aftermath, the droplets off a leaf and more.
‘Supermarket Blues’ by Hazel Campbell (First published in Woman’s Tongue, 1985. Collected in Jamaica On My Mind, Peepal Tree Press, 2019)
The late Hazel Campbell shares socio-political histories with us in a way that returns to the heart of the matters seamlessly. ‘Supermarket Blues’ looks towards another level of scarcity, to searching shelves for food – problems beyond the money stretch.
‘Dog in a Fisherman’s Net’ by Samuel R. Delaney (Collected in Aye and Gomorrah: And other short stories, Vintage, 2003)
There is something incredibly atmospheric about this story. You can feel sea salt on you while you read. You can often tell in Samuel R. Delaney’s SF writing that he is a well-travelled man but I’d say this collection brings us closest to some of his memories of places he has felt fond for. Especially when comparing the language in this to his journals.
‘No Place for Good People’ by Ottessa Moshfegh (First published in The Paris Review 209, Summer 2014, and available to subscribers to read here, with a free to view extract, and collected in Homesick for Another World, Vintage, 2017)
I feel like I’ve rolled into a point in my life where Moshfegh’s writing really really does it for me. I love the detail of her writing. In ‘No Place for Good People’ we are introduced to the care home Offerings and its habitants, those passing through and those living there. She manages the logistics of the environment while making us care for a large swathe of characters. Mostly, I enjoy her unlikeable narrators.
‘Too Close and Not Close Enough’ by Gemma Seltzer (Collected in Ways of Living, Influx Press, 2021. There is an extract available to read on The Londonist)
I love the way that Gemma’s writing seems to inhabit the persona of background noises. Women talk and move around London spaces, their choices wrangling back time for themselves.
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Tice Cin is an interdisciplinary artist from Tottenham. A recipient of a London Writers Award for Literary Fiction, Cin’s debut novel Keeping the House has just been published; a story set around the north London heroin trade. It explores glitched modernity and isolation, and heavily features cabbages. She has been published by places such as Skin Deep and Mixmag, and commissioned by venues including Battersea Arts Centre and St. Paul's Cathedral. She creates digital art as part of Design Yourself – a collective based at Barbican Centre – exploring what it means to be human when technology is changing everything. A producer and DJ, she also hosts a regular radio show Homing Tunes w/ Tice.
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* You can browse the full searchable archives of A Personal Anthology, with over 1,500 story recommendations, at www.apersonalanthology.com.
* A Personal Anthology is curated by Jonathan Gibbs, author of two novels, Randall, and The Large Door, and a book-length poem, Spring Journal. He is Programme Director of the MA/MFA Creative Writing at City, University of London.