Cover Image: Better Times

Better Times

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Member Reviews

Whew. What a collection of wonderful little weird stories about women. There is a reason that Sara Batkie is an award winning writer.

This collection is divided into three sections, the past, the present and the future. Every section and in fact, every story was outstanding. My personal favorites were "When Her Father Was An Island" and "Cleavage".

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read and review this book .

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Better Times by Sara Batkie is a highly recommended collection of nine short stories and the winner of the Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction.
The stories in the collection are divided into three parts, with four stories set in the past, four from the present, and one set in the future. All of the stories feature women or girls, and the experiences or an event they have already gone through in their lives. They are facing depression, uncertain futures, trials or illness and must find their way through the world with the baggage they have already collected.

The writing is quite extraordinary and it is clear why this is an award-winning collection. As with any compilation of short stories, there are hits and misses based on the tastes of individual readers, but it is safe to say that the majority of the stories in this short collection were winners for me.

Part One: The Recent Past
When Her Father Was an Island: A Japanese girl's father is declared MIA after WWII. While she learns to live without him, he continues to serve his country and fight the battle on an unnamed island.
Laika: It is 1957 and a girl in a home for trouble women contemplates the fate of Laika, the first dog in space.
Foreigners: Rebecca, a depressed, divorced mother with a recalcitrant, delinquent teenage son watches out her front window as her Russian neighbor, Anya Demidov, is being arrested. Anya and her husband are being charged with espionage.
No Man’s Land: It is the first summer of Desert Storm and Lucinda, 8, and her sister Addie, 6, are living in Fort Dix, N.J. where their father is a senior drill sergeant. It is also the summer her parent's separated.

Part Two: The Modern Age
Cleavage: Nan, 28, has a mastectomy and struggles with her sexuality along with feeling her phantom removed breast.
North Country, Early Morning: Grace narrates the story of the night two masked armed men planned to rob the emergency room. When the drug delivery is delayed, they force everyone who is working into a stockroom.
Departures: Betsey likes to snoop through the mail of her neighbor, Fabienne, which is how she comes into the possession of the funeral announcement.
Lookaftering: A young woman, Louisa, gives birth to three eggs in a pale lilac color, and undertakes taking care of them.

Part Three: The World to Come
Those Who Left and Those Who Stayed: The ground beneath Sherwood, Alaska split in two, breaking a piece off into the ocean. The nine townspeople who are now stuck on the ice floe struggle with their uncertain survival.

Disclosure: My review copy was courtesy of the University of Nebraska Press.
http://www.shetreadssoftly.com/2018/09/better-times.html
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2515318789
https://www.librarything.com/work/21883924/book/159995805
https://twitter.com/SheTreadsSoftly/status/1035962388569366528

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This book was difficult for me to get into. If a book of short stories does not grab me on the first few pages of the first story, I am very likely not going to continue.

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This book reminded me of how much I enjoy reading quality short stories. Each story was compelling and unique. They all hooked me from the beginning, and I felt like the stories got progressively better as I read. I cared about the characters and wanted to know more about them. I didn't want each story to end, so that's a good sign! The only complaint I had was that several of the stories had no discernable boundaries from the story before or after. Not even spacing. This was confusing on an ereader, but won't be a problem on a published version. I would certainly read more by this author.

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I had a really hard time getting into this book of stories and couldn’t really get emotionally involved with any of the characters. I read the first two stories a.m. s then gave up.

I thank NetGalley, the author and publisher for a preview copy in exchange for my honest review.

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