Cover Image: Barcelona

Barcelona

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Member Reviews

Brilliant! Barcelona is a strong collection of stories about the fears, cruelties and indignities of ordinary life.

I particularly enjoyed the pacing of these stories, Costello slowly reveals information to the reader and when the situation shows itself, it is so powerful (thinking of my fave, The Choc-Ice Woman, in particular).

Quiet, uneasy and brutal, I will be thinking about this collection for a long time.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publishers for the eARC.

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Barcelona is the most powerful book I've read in quite some time. A collection of short stories anatomising relationships, the nature of the self, the cruelty so casually inflicted on all others, and so on, it builds up to a cumulative torrent of thought and topics to think about.

Most importantly, maybe, the writing is pitch -perfect, embroidered to enhance interest but never straying into purple prose.

Barcelona the story has a little surprise for Joyce and in the form of a subtle rewrite of The Dead. The Choc-Ice Lady is likely to be included in every future anthology of Irish short stories. The Killing Line becomes so intense and explicit that I doubt I could read it in full again.

In a crowded and very talented field, Barcelona shows that Mary Costello is front rank.

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The first book I read by this author. Short stories featuring the inner turnoil of common people in different places and cities.
Loved the storytelling and the style of writing.
Highly recommended.
Many thanks to the publisher for this ARC, all opinions are mine

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The allure of Mary Costello's short story collection was undeniable from the moment I laid eyes on its captivating cover—a true work of art. Costello's storytelling prowess shines brightly in this collection, offering poignant glimpses into the tapestry of ordinary life. Within these pages, I encountered devastation in its various guises, ranging from gentle whispers to visceral punches to the gut. With an uncanny ability to capture the essence of emotion.

This is a first for me by the author and one I enjoyed and I would read more of their work. The book cover is eye-catching and appealing and would spark my interest if in a bookshop. Thank you to the author, publisher and Netgalley for this ARC.

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I think my favourite of the stories was the first, so I did struggle slightly trying to get through the rest of them.

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Not my usual style of fiction but the writing is absolutely gorgeous!! This collection of short stories is pretty jarring honestly, and I think quite hard to give a star rating too - it’s beautiful and thought provoking but maybe a little unsettling? Which is not at all meant to be an insult! Thanks to NetGalley & Canongate Books for this ARC.

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Barcelona is a short story collection on humanity in the modern world. The themes of this book really intrigues me. Didn't love all of the stories, which I think it is not necessary because you might feel more connected to some of them. I find some of the stories ended a bit abruptly, however, each of them carries a deep message that makes you reflect. Overall I did enjoy reading it!

Thank you Netgalley for the advanced e-copy!

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A collection of interesting short stories by an acclaimed Irish author. With the exception of the last story which I found brutal and distressing, I enjoyed the rich storytelling. Thanks to netgalley and the publisher for the arc.

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Barcelona is an excellent collections of stories from Mary Costello. Most of the stories here feature people on holiday or making journeys and the writing throughout is excellent. The title story sees a couple argue on holiday about the woman's dead teenage boyfriend, while The Hitchhiker sees a holidaying couple rehash his previous engagement. Not all the stories here are convincing but the writing throughout is superior and well worth reading.

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Costello has a great eye for circling the nub of her story/characters and drilling down into the interior. I love the grasping of small parts of a life which, through choice words, captures a much bigger life and personality. As ever, with short stories it is the author's gift to offer oblique ways into the dynamics of the ordinary.

I am very drawn to Irish short stories. They seem to have an inherent quality marker. I wonder if it is rural upbringings that encourages many authors to look deeply inwards, assess characters who have grown up in isolated, wild landscapes.

I did not love all the stories in the collection but they all made me pause, reflect. Surely that it a sign of a well crafted book?

Thank you to NetGalley and Canongate for allowing me to read and review this book

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Beautifully written, poignant tales of human love and loss. Perfectly captures the human experience. Some stories are stronger than others, but that’s to be expected in any collection.

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I've read Mary Costello's previous work and loved it, so I did not hesitate to request this book. Unfortunately, it was quite different. The writing was of the same high quality, but I found the continued references to brutality and violence towards non-human animals to be difficult and distressing to read. This is not gratuitous by any means--indeed, it is central to the stories--but it was a lot and it was devastating. I get it--that's the point. In more than one story, the narrator feels empathy and even identifies with the suffering and pain of the animals and also with the lack of awareness of that pain and suffering by those around them. They lack the ability to communicate their distress. The stories are well crafted and well written. The torture and violence towards the animals is not described in gruesome detail. Costello's skill as a writer and the short story format means that in a devastating sentence or two, the images are seared into readers' minds. This may not be something that bothers you and if that's the case and you enjoy short stories, then Costello is a good writer to pick up. If you find such things disturbing, as I do, then by all means check out her other work, but you might want to skip this one. As for the rating, it's tricky. I'd give it four stars for the quality of the writing, but as a reading experience, I'd give it one. Splitting the difference gives me two and a half, but really, it depends on what your tolerance is for scenes of mistreatment of animals.

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I was drawn to this collection by the arresting cover, it’s stunning! My plan for this short story collection by Mary Costello was to read one story between my current reads but when I began reading I couldn't put this down and read it in its entirety in a couple of hours.
I loved these stories. Quiet powerful slices of ordinary life. Marriages flickering and dying. Fathers and Sons. Hope, grief, regret, memory all written with great poignancy and power. Some of the devastation in these stories is gentle, in another its visceral; the author captures emotion with such skill and depth, I was right there with these people on buses and in bedrooms.
Each story in this collection is strong but one in particular , The Choc- Ice Woman" will stay with me for a long time.

A wonderful collection, I am looking forward to buying a copy when its published, it's one I will return to and recommend widely.

4.5- 5 stars.

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Barcelona is a collection of nine short stories by award-winning Irish author, Mary Costello.
Barcelona: To celebrate their fourth anniversary, David drives Catherine down the motorway to Barcelona. David’s almost reckless driving, his choice of porn as entertainment, the way he always manages to outwit her with words, with logic, and his suggestion to attend a bull fight, when he’s well aware of the strong feelings about animal cruelty that began when an activist boyfriend perished, these all cement for her the disconnect that afflicts their marriage.

Deus Absconditus: Martin takes the Eurostar to Paris to meet up with the son who works in biochemistry research for the US Government’s Chemical Defence. Recalling an incident when John was still a child, he finds himself hoping that he has instilled the right values into his firstborn.

At The Gate: on a last-minute trip to a writer’s festival, mathematically-minded Peter asks his literary wife about the author to whom they will be listening. As she describes him, she is aware of the many little things about herself that are irritations for Peter. She finds herself strongly identifying with one of his characters and her aversion to animal cruelty.

My Little Pyromaniac: a freelance copy editor finds that her new home is next door to that of a former lover and his family. Over the months, what she observes makes her grateful for the fire mishap that ended their relationship, and causes her to take a bold step.

The Choc-Ice Woman: as sixty-four-year-old retired assistant librarian, Frances accompanies the hearse driver taking the last of her older twin brothers to his final resting place, she muses on his life, and her own. Unlike his twin, Patrick, Denis Linnane withdrew early from life, a recluse, cared for by his mother, then his sister, to his final days. Meanwhile, Frances married her former lodger, Frank, believing it to be a satisfactory union until she spotted him sharing a choc-ice with a woman in his van. What a person tolerates, how and why…

Assignation: Mary, now Marion, is three years in America, in service to the once-wealthy Cooke family, performing general duties and looking after seven-year-old Elizabeth. Along comes Michael Lalor, a cousin of her friend Lizzie back in Mayo, and Marion is considering taking a chance on him: he might bring happiness. But then she recalls an awful incident just before she came, and decides that Elizabeth is all the happiness she needs.

Hitchhiker: the last day of an island prompts her to ask about his former lovers, in particular, the woman to whom he gave a lift to Sligo and ended up engaged to. The intensity he describes shows her that something between them has been lost.

Groovejet: a young man-s short-lived affair with an older woman haunts him.

The Killing Line: on his father’s death, Oliver reflects on the uneducated brother whose promising future was sacrificed for his siblings. Patrick takes over the farm, specialising in beef. When he is ten, Oliver is taken to see their animals killed at the abattoir, an experience that turns him into a vegetarian, renders him unable to succeed his father in the farm, and somehow fosters an obsession with instruments of torture.

These are nine small but potent doses of Mary Costello’s dark and meaningful prose. Readers should not expect sweet tales with happy endings; rather, many, especially those that focus on animal cruelty, are quite confronting.

Her descriptive prose is often marvellous, as shown by: “Sometimes she thought she could live on cigarettes alone, silently, deeply inhaling, letting thoughts gather, coalesce, then purge themselves in the exhalation” and “people do this– she did this, she kept secrets– so that they can re-imagine their lives when lived life is not enough” and “Travel heightens the senses, makes small, easily forgotten details more acute, significant, imperishable. Travel makes of home a wound that accompanies him everywhere”. Unsettling and thought-provoking.

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I dont very often read short stories, but I was really tempted by the synopsis. And I really enjoyed it.
'Barcelona' is a memorable book. The stories are bold and powerful, aiming to shock the reader, exposing ugly aspects of human nature. I liked the blunt writing style. My absolute favourite was 'The Choc-Ice Woman"

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Mary Costello is a writer I have enjoyed reading previously so I was excited to be given the opportunity to read her new collection of short stories. They are varied in terms of settings and characters etc. but all incredibly poignant. Recommended.

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