Category Archives: Novellas

Kimberly King Parsons’s Top Ten Novellas or The Top Ten Shortish Books She Takes to be Novellas When Such a List is Requested

Brotherhood of Mutilation, by Brian Evenson

Willie Masters’ Lonesome Wife, by William H. Gass

Waste, by Eugene Marten

Sleepless Nights, by Elizabeth Hardwick

Ray, by Barry Hannah

On Sexual Strength, by Diane Williams

Zimzum, by Gordon Lish

The Bailbondsman, by Stanley Elkin

Glass, by Greg Mulcahy

Speedboat, by Renata Adler

Kimberly King Parsons is a human female enrolled in Columbia University’s MFA fiction program. Her very short stories have appeared in elimae, Sojourn, and Suddenly: A Journal of Flash Fiction. Visit her HERE.

Ben Myers’s Top Ten Favorite Novellas

1. A Month in the Country, by JL Carr
A near-perfect story about a man who renovates a church in an idyllic rural English village, post-World War I. This book smells of summer.

2. Revenge of the Lawn, by Richard Brautigan
A short collection of ultra-short stories from the king of economical writing.

3. 1933 Was a Bad Year, by John Fante
Or indeed any book by John Fante.

4. The Bird Room, by Chris Killen
Love, sex and insecurity in modern day Manchester. “Comedy” doesn’t get much blacker. Novels don’t come much more pared down.

5. Everyday, by Lee Rourke
I’m not sure if these short stories, which chart a psychogeographical journey through a London that the tourists don’t see, constitute a novella or not, but you should buy it anyway.

6. The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with Sea, by Yukio Mishima
On a good day, no-one comes close to Mishima. The mad bastard.

7. The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar, by Roald Dahl
This magical novella made me want to keep reading books for the rest of my life.

8. The Witness, by Juan José Saer
This is very good, like a Spanish Heart of Darkness filtered through Borges. It was written in the 1980s but set in the 1600s. Again: is it a novella? Again: who cares?

9. Selections from the Journals, by Henry David Thoreau
I wanted to out Walden but that’s not a novella; these edited highlights however, are. Thoreau is less a writer and more a way of life.

10. Diary of a Mad Old Man, by Jun’ichiro Tanizaki
It’s hard to be both sad and funny and lascivious at the same time—here Tanizaki achieves all three.

Ben Myers is a writer of fiction. Poetry. Journalism. Novels. Music. He has books. Find him HERE.

Clayton Moore’s Top Mystery Novellas

These aren’t in any kind of order of importance, and I could have easily gone the 30s and 40s road with Chandler and Hammett, both of whom published several novellas during their lifetimes. But these are the ones that strike my fancy off the top of my head.

1. Strange Prey, by George C. Chesbro (1970)
The novella that introduced Chesbro’s fascinating dwarf detective Mongo, turned later into his first series novel Shadow of a Broken Man.

2. Death is Not the End, by Ian Rankin (1998)
The Edinburgh-scouring novelist at the height of his powers, crafting a story that was later cannibalized for Dead Souls.

3. Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption by Stephen King (1982)
Not strictly a mystery, although it has elements of crime, conflict and justice that make it close. The story that made me change my mind about Stephen King.

4. Tenkiller, by Elmore Leonard (2003)
A fine novella about a rodeo stuntman from the collection When The Women Come Out To Dance. If it were the right length, I’d select “Karen Makes Out,” from the same collection.

5. Heart of Darkness, by Joseph Conrad (1899)
I don’t care what anyone says, this is a noir story. And it gave crime novelists the frame narrative device. And gave us Apocalypse Now. So there.

6. The Stranger, by Albert Camus (1942)
A story in which a man kills a stranger, and realizes death really is the end. Sounds like a crime novel to me.

7. Dick Contino’s Blues, by James Ellroy (1994)
One of Ellroy’s best works, and one that utilizes his penchant for flamboyant story-telling combined with factual historical material. Contino, by the way, is a real guy, still alive, and still playing the accordion in Las Vegas.

8. The Mystery of Edwin Drood, by Charles Dickens (serialized 1870-1871)
The enduring mystery. Dickens’s last words, and the inspiration for recent novels like Drood by Dan Simmons and The Last Dickens by Matthew Pearl. Not to mention one very fine episode of Doctor Who, “The Unquiet Dead.”

9. Walking Around Money, by Donald E. Westlake (2005)
The great man playing hell with his second-finest character, the wildly inept thief Dortmunder. This story appears in the terrific novella-specific collection series Transgressions alongside other fine novelists like Walter Mosley and the late Ed McBain.

10. Nobody Move, by Denis Johnson (2009)
A terrific diversion from the National Book Award-winning author of Tree of Smoke and Jesus’ Son, who is a big influence on one of the best contemporary noir writers, Richard Lange (Dead Boys). Originally serialized in Playboy magazine, this Chandler-inspired thriller will be published in May.

Bonus round: Trouble is My Business, by Raymond Chandler, A Man Called Spade, by Dashiell Hammett, I, the Jury, by Mickey Spillane, Strangers on a Train, by Patricia Highsmith, Bubba Ho Tep, by Joe R. Lansdale, The Lemur, by Benjamin Black, Everybody Pays by Andrew Vachss, Coronado, by Dennis Lehane, Keller’s Adjustment, by Lawrence Block, and most everything Ian Fleming put on paper.

Clayton Moore is a freelance writer and book critic specializing in crime fiction, mysteries and thrillers. His work has appeared in Kirkus Reviews, Paste Magazine, Atomic Magazine, The Rocky Mountain News and Bookslut. Find him online HERE.

Carole Maso’s Favorite Novellas

Company, by Samuel Beckett
—for me the greatest, and one of the most perfect works of fiction ever written

Ill Seen Ill Said and Worstward Ho, by Samuel Beckett
—yes

Heart of Darkness, by Joseph Conrad
—sublime

Death in Venice, by Thomas Mann
—of course

The Hour of the Star, by Clarice Lispector
—haunting and unforgettable

Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street, by Herman Melville

The Left Handed Woman, by Peter Handke

The Lover, by Marguerite Duras

Ethan Frome, by Edith Wharton

Miss Lonelyhearts, by Nathanael West
—though I haven’t read it in years

Chronicle of a Death Foretold and No One Writes to the Colonel, by Gabriel Garcia Marquez

A Christmas Carol
—I love Dickens

On the Mountain, Amras, and Walking by Thomas Bernhard
—the maestro!

Heinrich von Ofterdingen by Novalis

Carole Maso is an English professor at Brown University. Her published work includes novels, short fiction, essays, journals, and biographies. She is the author of Ghost Dance, The Art Lover, AVA, The American Woman in the Chinese Hat, Aureole, Defiance, Break Every Rule, The Room Lit By Roses, and Beauty is Convulsive: The Passion of Frida Kahlo. She has been awarded many grants and fellowships, including grants from the New York Foundation for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts.