![]() ![]() In my experiences, a lot of story collections are uneven with a mixture of good and not so good stories. This is an excellent collection of short stories. ![]() I’ve become committed to reading her back catalogue. I’ve become quite a fan of Ali Smith over the past few months after studying her work via an Open University Course. (Hamish Hamilton, 5 November 2015, 220 pages, hardback, borrowed from G ET A COPY With this brilliantly inventive collection, Ali Smith joins the campaign to save our public libraries and celebrate their true place in our culture and history. Public libraries are places of joy, freedom, community and discovery – and right now they are under threat from funding cuts and widespread closures across the UK and further afield. The stories in Ali Smith’s new collection are about what we do with books and what they do with us: how they travel with us how they shock us, change us, challenge us, banish time while making us older, wiser and ageless all at once how they remind us to pay attention to the world we make. What does the unravelling of our tradition of public libraries, so hard-won but now in jeopardy, say about us? What do the books we’ve read over our lives – our own personal libraries – make of us? A richly inventive new collection of stories from Ali Smith, author of How to be both, winner of the Baileys Women’s Prize and the Costa Novel Award and shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize ![]()
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