Painting by Kathryn Geismar
Talking about Grace
Nina McLaughlin, Boston Globe Review
Review by Denise Provost, BASPPS
Interview: Bannatyne is "Accustomed" to Grace
Lynn Weiss blog
Bookstalker blog
Bookasauraus Bex blog
CherylMM Book blog
Over the Rainbow Book blog: 10 Things About the Author
Bookstagram of Mine blog
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Unaccustomed to Grace
Lesley Bannatyne's wise, warm, wily debut collection of short stories is unsparing in its darkness, and balanced, beautifully, with moments of - and the ever-present possibility of - light.—Nina MacLaughlin, Boston Globe
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The stories in Unaccustomed to Grace are often set in a slant version of reality where the extraordinary can exist side-by-side with the ordinary. In “Waiting for Ivy” a woman grieving the loss of her infant daughter discovers a listserv of parents whose dead children have been returned, as if the tragedy were a clerical error. In “Corpse Walks Into a Bar” an indigent loner agrees to bury a reanimated corpse, not realizing what it takes to find a resting place when the dead are as self-serving as the living. Characters throughout the collection act on impulses, quixotic to ferocious: a suburban dad leads a violent riot against his neighbor; an eleven-year-old boy puts himself at the nexus of a manhunt for the Boston Marathon bomber. Ultimately, the book plumbs the messiness we bring on ourselves with the best of intentions, and how we find connection and work to build a world we can survive.
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Praise for Grace |
THERE IS A CLEAR-HEARTED AND HUMANE WRITER at work here, whose work holds room for both suffering and grace.
—Shruti Swami, A House is a Body and The Archer |
I LOVE IT WHEN I FIND A GEM of a book and often think, some of the best writers sneak up on you! [full review HERE]
— bookstalkerblog |
BANNATYNE'S STORIES ARE FULL OF HEARTACHE AND LOSS, BUT THEY ARE NEVER BLEAK OR CYNICAL. Rendered in magnetic prose, her emotional landscapes, pockmarked by violence, are as majestic as the moon’s surface. Bannatyne is a superb writer of the mind, but an even greater reader of the heart. This book, filled with characters caught in between futility and redemption, was, for me, an exercise—a deliberation—in empathy."
—Sui Li, 5 Under 35 honoree, Transoceanic Lights |
The 14 luminous tales in Lesley Bannatyne’s poignant and perfectly titled new collection of short stories, “Unaccustomed to Grace,” all serve to map the winding routes traveled by the hurt and the heartbroken as they struggle toward hope and solace. SELDOM HAS THIS LONESOME TERRAIN BEEN DEPICTED MORE THOROUGHLY, MORE COMPASSIONATELY, OR MORE LYRICALLY THAN BANNATYNE HAS DONE IT IN THIS WONDERFUL, WISE, AND ULTIMATELY UPLIFTING BOOK.
—Paul Guernsey, American Ghost, Editor of the "21st Century Ghost Stories" anthology series |
FROM MACABRE FANTASY TO RAW REALITY, LESLEY BANNATYNE'S TERRIFIC STORIES introduce an authentic voice and unique vision. UNACCUSTOMED TO GRACE revels in danger, in warped heroes, in ebullient—sometimes devastating—fearlessness. A wise and thoroughly enjoyable book!”
—Daphne Kalotay, Russian Winter, The Blue Hours |
THESE CAREFULLY OBSERVED, SOMETIMES SURREAL STORIES CAPTURE CHARACTERS IN FREEFALL. Each one—wolf wrangler, tarot card reader, guru, anthropologist, Soviet farmer, or parents of children taken, gone, returned, or fragile—will find a place in your heart.
—Vanessa Diffenbaugh, The Language of Flowers |
THESE STORIES ARE BIZARRE, UNRESTRAINED, AND ULTIMATELY WISE. Dropping ordinary people into funny and uncanny situations, Bannatyne redefines grace. In the words of the collection’s final story, “We are imperfect. We try, mess up, change, mess up, try again. But we’re all still here. That’s it. That’s the miracle.”
—Dr. Elisabeth McKetta, She Never Told Me About the Ocean |
EACH STORY COULD BE REIMAGINED AS A NOVEL, OR A FILM MADE BY JANE CAMPION - an unexpected amalgam of The Twilight Zone with Hitchcock’s The Trouble With Harry.
—Rick Berlin, The Big Balloon |
LESLEY BANNATYNE'S STORIES IN UNACCUSTOMED TO GRACE ARE HARROWING, FUNNY, MAGICAL, AND HEARTBREAKINGLY, REASSURINGLY HUMAN. Here we are with our flaws and troubles, and also our insight and even our grace. There’s a shimmering mythic streak through them, too, that sets Bannatyne in the tradition of seanchaithe – storytellers – who wield the old enchantments with an unerring instinct for revealing the soul’s sickness and its perfect cure. She seems to have x-ray vision that peers straight into the human heart, and a flawless ear for the bumps and rhythms of talk. This is a marvelous book, full of wonder, courage, and truth, and it’s a great pleasure to read. I loved it!
—Dr. Kate Chadbourne, A November Visit |
THESE ARE STORIES TO READ AND PONDER, TO SHARE WITH OTHERS, to admire, and then to read again. Bannatyne’s themes are universal and her storytelling completely original. Pick up this book as you would a shining stone on the beach. Carry it with you and don’t let it go.
—Lynn C. Miller, The Day After Death and The Unmasking |
BANNATYNE IS A TRICKSTER INFUSING THESE TALES WITH A LOVING, LIGHT-FOOTED HUMOR, casting a fiction-magic spell that dissolves the ground as you read, to reveal a world at once wilder, more wounded, and more true.
- Sammy Greenspan, publisher, Kattywompus Press; author, Skin Hunger |
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Lesley is available for book clubs, bookstore readings, festivals, and school and library events.
Contact:
lesley.bannatyne@gmail.com
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