Category Archives: Novellas

Adam Robinson’s Top Ten Favorite Novellas

These are in no particular order.

The Earthquake in Chile, by Heinrich von Kleist is amazing. It’s so far ahead of its time (and our time, too, I think). It was written well before The Scarlet Letter, and manages to deal more humanely with similar concepts. And it’s more violent. And it’s probably no big deal but I’m impressed when writers in the early 19th century manage to write so well about countries so far away. Ah, you brainy Europeans.

Light Boxes, of course. I think Shane Jones has done something really new with that story. I’m not referring to the meta elements, though they are new at least in the way he pulls off the author/character thing so well. I’m thinking more of the overwhelming interaction between the animals and the humans. It’s amazing the things he has the animals doing in that book.

Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde blew me away. I think it was the first “classic” I read after I started reading more contemporary or unknown stuff and it reminded me of why classics are classics, how good they can be.

I probably think about Bartleby, the Scrivener more than any other book, because I so often prefer not to work. But that’s too obvious for this list so I’ll mention Naive, Super by the Norwegian author Erlend Loe. I breezed through this book and was slightly off put by the narrator’s reticence, but overall I thought it was very moving. It might be the first book I read that relied so heavily on lists, too.

The Gambler, by Dostoevsky, is as complete and fully realized as any of his massive novels. This is one of the books he wrote real quick to get a paycheck so he could keep writing Demons (I think it was). Amazing. It’s such a good story of addiction and messed up families. Also, I love hotels and there are a lot of them in this.

Goodbye, Columbus was an early influence, or at least motivation, for me to keep writing. I was probably 19 when I read it and I thought if that’s what Philip Roth can do at 28, I ought to be able to accomplish something like that. I remember specifically feeling moved by the description of the girl climbing out of the pool and sticking her finger inside her bathing suit to make an adjustment. So sexy!

The Pedersen Kid, by William H. Gass, is something I like recommending to people lately. I don’t know which aspect of his writing is my favorite—the localized epic struggle or his voice or the way he understates the big things that happen. I think I read the father’s death in that story more times than I’ve read anything else.

Agape Agape, by William Gaddis works for me the way other people read Notes from Underground. The narrator’s ramblings are at times hilarious, at times befuddling and esoteric, and occasionally they are brilliantly instructive. I wish Vonnegut had read this before writing Player Piano.

Gould, by Stephen Dixon, is “a novel in two novels,” but really I think it’s either one novel or two novellas. Along with Goodbye, Columbus, this book proves that writing about white kids losing their virginity is still valid. There’s a scene in the beginning when Gould is with a girl and he feels around her butthole and she says, “Not there, it might be dirty” and Gould says, “Ah, I don’t care about morality.”

The Sanza Affair, by Brian Evenson, is intense and precise. This is Evenson at his best, mesmerizing in his exactitude, and that fits because the detective in this story is so meticulous. He carries around peas in a baggie.

Adam Robinson is a playwright, guitarist, and the founder of Publishing Genius Press. His first book of poetry, Adam Robinson and Other Poems, will be released by Narrow House Press in July 2009. Find him HERE.

Cooper Renner’s Recommended Novellas

1-4. The Stone Book Quartet, by Alan Garner
“The Stone Book,” “Granny Reardun,” “The Aimer Gate,” “Tom Fobble’s Day”. These four novellas are among the most remarkable works of the 20th century. Ostensibly children’s books, they come closer to being Thomas Hardy filtered through a Modernist sensibility. Spanning roughly 80 years, each novella taking place on one pivotal day in the life of a young member of the same family, The Stone Book Quartet is that rarest of things, a virtually perfect work of verbal imagination.

5. The Bookshop, by Penelope Fitzgerald
Fitzgerald is as lean and perfect as Garner. Humorous (if often in a very dark way), suspicious of those who consider themselves arbiters, unwilling to sweeten life’s darknesses.

6. Land of the Snow Men, by George Belden (aka Norman Lock)
Polar exploration becomes intellectual and imaginative recreation in yet another of Lock’s amazing works.

Cooper Renner edits the online magazine elimae. Mosefolket, his new and selected poems (published under the name Cooper Esteban), was released last year by Alhambra/Ravenna Press. He writes the “In Dissent column” at Web del Sol. Find him HERE.

Kathryn Regina’s Favorite Novellas

Here are some short works I’ve liked:

The Metamorphosis, by Franz Kafka

The Old Man and the Sea, by Ernest Hemingway

The Revisionist, by Miranda Mellis

Light Boxes, by Shane Jones

Arthur, by Matthew Savoca

Summer Scientists, by Della Watson

Letters to Wendy’s, by Joe Wenderoth

Kathryn Regina lives in Chicago. Her chapbook i am in the air right now was released from Greying Ghost Press on April 1st. She blogs HERE.

Ben Pester’s Favorite Shorter Novels and Novellas

These are all “shorter novels” as well as strict novellas, I’ve used my own definition in places rather than what it says on the cover.

The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea, by Yukio Mishima
Salt water and the constant probe of the human eye spill through these stories of a widow trying to love in spite of her son’s aggressive puberty. It says somewhere that this book is all about violence and homicidal hysteria, too it’s about the distance and perspective of a solitude abandoned.

Chronicle of a Death Foretold, by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
He dies. You keep getting told he will. Gradually you feel more helpless. Then he is killed.

Candide, by Voltaire
Almost everybody in this book gets syphilis, gets raped, or has to eat a part of their own body. When my child is born, we’re moving to France so that Candide can be a part of its heritage.

The Prodigy, by Herman Hesse
He wrote this before The Glass Bead Game or Steppenwolf as though it’s almost nothing at all. A boy goes to an exclusive school, he overworks, he burns out, he falls in love, he fails school, he returns home, manages two days “real” work, a few kisses, a death in the river.

Cat & Mouse, by Gunter Grass
There’s a lot of birdshit in this and cyclical references to a cat hunting a Nazi hero’s Adam’s apple. First (and my favourite) of the Danzig Trilogy.

Good Morning, Midnight, by Jean Rhys
A lot more men should read Jean Rhys.

Coming Through the Slaughter, by Michael Ondaatje
There’s a fight in a barber that I still have dreams about. Also the main character “vanishes” from time to time, he vanishes from the book, from your life. You mourn and then he comes back.

One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, by Aleksandr Isaevich Solzhenitsyn
This is a classic isn’t it? How can I describe a classic? It gave me a strange hope that I would be able to still find success in an existence where Fat is my only commodity.

But Beautiful, by Geoff Dyer
Orson Wells said (roughly) of Paper Moon: “That title is so good, you shouldn’t even make the picture, you should just release the title!” But Beautiful is a better title.

Joy in the Morning, by P.G. Wodehouse
Cures all sadness.

Ben Pester writes storylines, game mechanics, dialogue and screenplays for video games, mostly on PS3. He also writes short films and longer plays for performance with mixed-media. He’s currently finishing his first novel. Find him online HERE.