Fabulous: Stories

Fabulous: Stories

by Lucy Hughes-Hallett

Narrated by Lucy Hughes-Hallett, John Hopkins

Unabridged — 5 hours, 40 minutes

Fabulous: Stories

Fabulous: Stories

by Lucy Hughes-Hallett

Narrated by Lucy Hughes-Hallett, John Hopkins

Unabridged — 5 hours, 40 minutes

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Overview

From the author of the “sophisticated and erudite” Peculiar Ground (Boston Globe), comes a collection of classic, witty fables, elegantly updated for our modern times.

It's in the nature of myth to be infinitely adaptable.

Each of these startlingly original stories is set in modern Britain. Their characters include a people-trafficking gang-master and a prostitute, a migrant worker and a cocksure estate agent, an elderly musician doubly befuddled by dementia and the death of his wife, a pest-controller suspected of paedophilia and a librarian so well-behaved that her parents wonder anxiously whether she'll ever find love.

They're ordinary people, preoccupied, as we all are now, by the deficiencies of the health service, by criminal gangs and homelessness, by the pitfalls of dating in the age of #metoo. All of their stories, though, are inspired by ones drawn from Graeco-Roman myth, from the Bible or from folk-lore.

The ancients invented myths to express what they didn't understand. These witty fables, elegantly written and full of sharp-eyed observation of modern life, are also visionary explorations of potent mysteries and strange passions, charged with the hallucinatory beauty and horror of their originals.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

11/25/2019

The characters in the eight clever stories collected for this offbeat volume include estate agents, window washers, and pest controllers, all of whom have the souls of gods and legendary beings from myths and folktales. In “Orpheus,” a music hall singer named Oz is devastated to discover that his wife Eurydice’s essence has been trapped in the underworld, leaving her comatose body aboveground. The title character of “Piper” is a bus-driving exterminator who abducts a town’s children to become his traveling commune of performing “folkies” after the parents refuse to pay him for remedying their rat infestation. In “Pasiphae,” Minos is a refugee-exploiting business manager and his consort gives birth to a bull-like son spawned from her liaison with a short-order cook nicknamed Toro. “Joseph” and “Mary Magdalene” both present characters from the Bible in inventive modern scenarios. Hallett (Peculiar Ground) forges novel situations for her quirky characters, and each retelling works well as a modern story in its own right. This collection shows how classic themes continue to inform the fiction of today. (Jan.)

Kirkus Reviews

2019-10-28
The author of Peculiar Ground (2018) reimagines familiar stories in the contemporary United Kingdom.

The Pied Piper of Hamelin, Orpheus, and Mary's husband, Joseph, are among the figures Hughes-Hallett lifts from mythology, fairy tales, and other traditional forms for this collection. In reimagining these characters, the author is participating in a tradition as old as storytelling itself. Much of the appeal of borrowing well-known characters and time-honored tropes lies in making the familiar fresh again. Writers from Ovid to William Shakespeare to Angela Carter show readers why particular narratives and narrative types endure by making them newly relevant. Hughes-Hallett's efforts to perform this same magic are mixed. Here, Mary Magdalen is a prostitute—not asserted in the New Testament but definitely an element of her legend—as well as an aesthetician who performs intimate waxes on clients. Psyche is a young woman so self-possessed and beautiful that she terrifies and enrages men. Actaeon is a wildly successful real estate agent and committed voyeur. Each of these stories has its charms, but none is particularly successful. Hughes-Hallett doesn't seem to grasp that her Mary Magdalen is so much more interesting than the Jesus figure who beguiles her; indeed, Mary Magdalen's attraction to this charismatic cypher is her least compelling feature. At the end of Psyche's tale, the author switches to a sort of postmodern voice that doesn't feel so much like an intriguing stylistic choice as like the author has lost interest in the story. And "Actaeon" suffers from two issues that are endemic in this collection. There is a heavy reliance on exposition, to the point that these tales read more like outlines for novels than short fictions. And these stories only come to life when knowledge of the source material isn't necessary to find the story compelling. "Orpheus" is a fantastic piece of short fiction even if you don't know anything about this musician as he appears in Greek poetry and multiple modern iterations. Hughes-Hallett's Oz is an old man among many old men hanging around a hospital ward. "Some of them had big trainers, shiny white shoes made for athletes, but here nobody sprang, nobody leapt." That's excellent anyway, and it's gorgeous if you know Oz's Greek antecedent.

A writer adept at long-form narrative delivers an uneven collection of short stories.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940172923609
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 01/14/2020
Edition description: Unabridged
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