Category Archives: Novellas

Sean Kilpatrick’s Top Ten Novellas

Miss Lonelyhearts, by Nathanael West
Perfection.

EVER, by Blake Butler
Exploder delicious.

Never Die, by Barry Hannah
Dancing testicles.

Eden Eden Eden,by Pierre Guyotat
Fuck :: yes.

Venus in Furs, by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch
Pandemic weltanschauung.

Notes from Underground, by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Made me whorehappy in the babydick.

i, by Franz Kafka
This is how I found out about police.

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

The Shawl, by Cynthia Ozick
Baby damage.

Terra Infirma, by Faruk Ulay
Ulay’s masterpiece.

The Dream Life of Balso Snell by Nathanael West
Horsie shitcaked vag

In Watermelon Sugar, by Richard Brautigan
How I found out about tigers.

Sean Kilpatrick has poems current or forthcoming in Action Yes!, MiPoesias, horse less press, Pindedlyboz, Melancholia’s Tremulous Dreadlocks, The Black Economy, alice blue, Juked, Kulture Vulture, Southern Gothic, and Exquisite Corpse. Visit him HERE.

Michael Joyce’s Top Ten Novellas

The Calmative, by Samuel Beckett

Walking, by Thomas Bernhard

Vivre l’orange, by Hélène Cixous

Briar Rose, by Robert Coover

The Man Sitting in the Corridor, by Marguerite Duras

Van Gogh’s Room at Arles, by Stanley Elkin

The Lime Twig, by John Hawkes

The Hour of the Star, by Clarice Lispector

Aureole, by Carole Maso

Melanchtha, by Gertrude Stein

Michael Joyce’s books include Liam’s Going, Going the Distance, War Outside Ireland: a novel, Of Two Minds: Hypertext Pedagogy and Poetics, Othermindedness: The Emergence of Network Culture, and Moral Tales and Meditations: Technological Parables and Refractions. He is currently Professor of English and Media Studies at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, NY.

Shane Jones’s Top Eight Novellas

Novellas are a strange thing because I’m not sure how to define them. I guess by length? The following are 8 novellas that have had an impact on me, that I love, that I would take on an island with me and read over and over again. I could have added two more, but I would only be forcing them on the list. It wouldn’t be out of love. Eight is also my lucky number.

In Watermelon Sugar, by Richard Brautigan
This is one of my favorite books of all time. When I think about this book I can taste candy in my mouth. It’s simple, sweet, playful, and strange.

Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street, by Herman Melville
I remember reading this as a teenager. I should go back to it more often. I was surprised that Melville could get away with a character like Bartleby.

Travel in the Mouth of the Wolf, by Paul Fattaruso
A newish kind of little book from Soft Skull that had an impact on me last year. A charming and fun book that I want to read again.

Log of the S.S. the Mrs. Unguentine, by Stanley Crawford
Another top five favorite of all time. There is nothing like this book and it should be taught in every high school. What Crawford does with images is nothing short of breathtaking. I’m not sure it’s a novella.

In the Penal Colony, by Franz Kafka
Dark, brutal, absurd, and funny.

EVER, by Blake Butler
An organic little monster of a book that changes forms from one page to the next. Scary good.

Miss Lonelyhearts, by Nathaniel West
I also read this as a teenager. It has a kind of angst to it, but it’s heartbreaking. West should have lived longer. I think I heard he died in a car accident. He was so upset that his friend Scott Fitzgerald had died that he drove through a stop sign.

The Early Deaths of Lubeck, Brennan, Harp, and Carr, by Jesse Ball
New, old, dreamy, this little book is like a burlap sack full of gold. Ball wrote this is one day, which is incredible. I read it on my lunch break in an hour. The full version is available HERE.

Shane Jones books include: I Will Unfold You with My Hairy Hands (Greying Ghost 2008), Light Boxes (Publishing Genius 2009) and two forthcoming books: The Nightmare Filled You with Scary (Cannibal Books, September 2009) and The Failure Six (Fugue State, January 2010). Visit him at HERE.

Jac Jemc’s Top 10 Novellas

In no particular order:

The Fifth Child, by Doris Lessing
Here, Lessing shows that she can weave a succinct horror story of a child born into the wrong time. The Fifth Child clocks in 500 pages short of The Golden Notebook, but is packed with as much complex domestic nausea and conflicting emotion.

The Former World Record Holder Settles Down, by Courtney Eldridge
The story quickly devolves from hilarious to tragic. What initially appears to be a routine bout of marital ennui turns out to be much more: just wait until you find out what the world record is for. What kills me in this story though, is the way the telling jumps around in time, skipping ahead to give a little hint, and then sneaking back to an event you forgot you were in the middle of. This feels more full than a regular short-story, but it’s not long enough to be a novel.

EVER, by Blake Butler
I don’t know if this is a novel, novella, or an epic prose poem. Does it matter? Is this what this whole top ten list is all about? Making arbitrary distinctions? Well, okay. I want a chance to sing the praises of this here novella. It reads like taking a big gulp of something, and then not having room enough in your mouth to swallow, so you have to let some dribble out. Read me? It’s good. You wanted a gulp that big.

The Subterraneans, by Jack Kerouac
Listen, I’m known among friends for the statement, “I love not camping,” so as much as I tried to enjoy The Dharma Bums and On the Road, The Subterraneans was really more my speed, complete with night clubs, snazzy clothes, a complicated break-up and dark alleys. This one reads at a city pace and length.

Dragons in Manhattan, by Francesca Lia Block
This is the first time I remember encountering something that was this odd 60 page length. I read the rest of the book, skipped this story, and then went back to the middle, where this monster was sandwiched, resigned to tackling it because I’d enjoyed the other tales so much. The language is lush, the story imaginative yet real. Looking back, it’s maybe a bit flowery, but boy if it wasn’t rewarding to my thirteen-year-old self. It was an epic in the midst of abstracts, traveling across the country with Tuck Budd to find her origins.

Pastoralia, by George Saunders
I read this novella twice right in a row. It took me about 20 pages before I figured out Saunders’ voice. This was my first exposure. Then all I wanted to do was read his work always. But first I wanted to go back and catch what I had missed. Thank goodness this story is as long as it was; slow learners like me need time to catch on.

The Burrow, by Franz Kafka
I wonder what would have happened if he finished this story. Could he have sustained it for much longer? Maybe it would have ended up being a novel. I happen to like it as it stands. The anxiety never relents. “But the most beautiful thing about my burrow is stillness. Of course, that is deceptive. At any moment it may be shattered and then all will be over.”

Melanctha, by Gertrude Stein
This section of Three Lives, shows Stein’s ability to tell a story pretty straight, but there are still hints of that repetition that makes her writing so downright soul-crushing. This is a reined in Stein, but it’s a good introduction for people who are suspicious.

Westward the Course of Empire Takes Its Way, by David Foster Wallace
This novella is overblown and impeccable, something I think only Wallace could pull off with panache. I’ll be honest, all I really remember from this are interruptions and intersections. That and the fact that by the end I could feel my stomach down in my feet: that’s usually the best sign.

Tumble Home, by Amy Hempel
I’m glad Amy Hempel has stuck with her tried and true story length, but I’m affirmed by her ability to stretch one out a little more. Pretty much every sentence that Hempel writes sends my stomach down into my feet the way WtCoETIW as a whole did. This novella proves it’s not necessarily an issue of only so many of those sentences being strung together.

Jac Jemc sells books, makes monsters, and writes fiction, poetry, and the occasional review. Her poetry has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize, finished 2nd place in the Marginalia College Contest and placed as a finalist for the Rose Metal Press Chapbook Contest. Find her HERE.