Selected Shorts: Homecoming

As everyone heads home for Thanksgiving, Selected Shorts is packing two great stories for you to listen to on your trip, either as a free podcast or on your local public radio station. The first is David Schickler’s “Jamaica,” performed by our very own Isaiah Sheffer, and features a domestic situation gone horribly and hilariously wrong, when a husband gets his head stuck in the bannisters overlooking the family living room. The second is Ron Carlson’s whimsical “On the U.S.S. Fortitude,” performed by Laura Esterman, which imagines home as an aircraft carrier, with the mother gamely flagging her children in for a landing. Hope everyone has a great time off with their families this week. And if you’re going to be in New York next February, be sure to get tickets for a very special stage performance of Selected Shorts to celebrate One Story’s 10th anniversary on February 22, 2012.

Selected Shorts: Junot Díaz

This week’s edition of Selected Shorts is dedicated to one author and one story: “Wildwood” by Junot Díaz. This story originally appeared in The New Yorker, and later became a part of Díaz’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, which tells of a fukú (curse) that follows Oscar and his family from the Dominican Republic to New Jersey and back again. I could go on and on about this book, which I read in practically one sitting–the heartache tempered with humor, the dexterous use of footnotes and literary touchstones, from Tolkien to Marquez, to the single best use of an m-dash I have ever seen (p.322) that, after my eyes fell upon it, made me well up and start crying (I still think about that m-dash). Or I could talk about Díaz’s previous book, a razor-sharp collection of stories called Drown, which includes “Fiesta, 1980” (a story on just about every undergraduate English major’s reading list) and “Ysrael” (which I first read when it appeared in  Story magazine in 1995–it was my introduction to Díaz’s work, and it both intimidated the hell out of me [in a good way] and knocked my socks off–sealing my fate as an extreme fan of his work–not quite stalker-y, but close). In any case folks, my point here is: if you are a fan like me, or if you are one of the few readers out there who haven’t experienced Junot Díaz yet, tune in to this week’s show. The amazing actress Sonia Manzano (Maria from Sesame Street!) brings “Wildwood” to life, and you will thank me when it’s over. Go here to find your time/station, go here for podcasts.

Selected Shorts: Meloy & McInerney

We’ve got two wonderful authors and two great stories this week on Selected Shorts, both about people in trouble. The first is “Red from Green,” by Maile Meloy, performed by Patricia Kalember. “Red from Green” follows a teenage girl on a dangerous camping trip, where trouble comes not from the great outdoors, but from the desires of men, as she negotiates the road from child to sexual object. The story appears is Meloy’s collection Both Ways Is the Only Way I Want It, which was named one of the 10 Best Books of the Year by the New York Times. The second story in this week’s episode is “It’s Six A.M., Do You Know Where You Are?” by Jay McInerney, performed by Jeremy Shamos. This story originally appeared in The Paris Review, and later became the first chapter in McInerney’s bestselling novel, Bright Lights, Big City. Famously written in the second person, it follows a smart, drug-addled young man, making his way through the city after leaving a lower east side club. He’s down and out, but there is magic in those pre-dawn hours of New York. A sense that anything can happen. Go here to listen for yourself on podcast, or here to find your local time/station.

Selected Shorts Goes Electric

One of the most exciting lit mags publishing today (besides One Story, of course) is Electric Literature. Their mission? “To use new media and innovative distribution to return the short story to a place of prominence in popular culture.” Last season Selected Shorts hosted an event at Symphony Space celebrating Electric Literature with some great actors reading work from the magazine, as well as animated shorts created for each piece, focusing on a single sentence. This week’s radio program features two stories from that special night, including Lydia Millet’s “Sir Henry,” read by the wonderful John Lithgow, and “Some Contemporary Characters” by Rick Moody, read by Mike Birbiglia and Aya Cash. One of my favorite aspects of Electric Literature is the way they bring fiction to life by pairing work with artists. Go here to see some of their single sentence animations, then head over to Selected Shorts to listen in.

Selected Shorts: Edna O’Brien

This week on Selected Shorts we feature two stories by the great Irish writer Edna O’Brien, celebrating the release of her latest collection of stories, Saints & Sinners (which won the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Prize last month). O’Brien began her career nearly 50 years ago with the publication of her first novel (part of a trilogy), The Country Girls, which spoke so frankly of women’s sexuality that it was banned and publicly burned. The writer Thomas McCarthy (one of the judges for the O’Connor prize this year) said of O’Brien: “She is the Solzhenitsyn of Irish life – the one who kept speaking when everyone else stopped talking about being an Irish woman. It was the magisterial honesty of her work that came across more than anything else – her ability to be both contemporary and, yes, to carry all of the wagons and trailers of Irish life over 50 years behind her.” To learn more about the fierce and fearless O’Brien and her work, go here. In the meantime, you can listen to this week’s show, which features O’Brien’s story “Sinners,” performed by Cynthia Nixon and “Black Flower,” performed by Colum McCann. As an added bonus, keeping with the Saints & Sinners theme, you’ll also hear our own Isaiah Sheffer performing one of my favorite Robert Coover stories, “Going for a Beer.” Go here to find your local time/station, here for podcasts!

Selected Shorts: Love & Fiction

In Greek mythology, Cassandra was the daughter of the King & Queen of Troy. One day the god Apollo fell in love with her and gave her the gift of predicting the future. But when she didn’t love him back, Apollo put a curse on Cassandra so no one would believe anything she said. Like most crushes gone wrong, Apollo’s love turned to hate and Cassandra, well, Cassandra went crazy. This week’s Selected Shorts focuses on the crossroads of love and storytelling. “A Life in Fictions” by Kat Howard (read by Marin Ireland), follows a woman who literally falls into the stories her boyfriend weaves, while “The Thing About Cassandra,” read by Josh Hamilton and written by the multi-talented Neil Gaiman invents a lover so perfectly she becomes real–or does she?  To listen on your local public radio station, go here. To download our podcast, go here. To watch a Selected Shorts interview with Neil Gaiman about sushi, future selves, and telling lies to tell the truth, go here. To find out what happened to Cassandra, go here.


Selected Shorts: Don Quixote faces the Minotaur

"King of the Minotaurs" by Picasso

There is a saying that every man’s life is a labyrinth, and sooner or later they will have to face their minotaur. I was reminded of this when I first heard Stephen O’Connor’s “Ziggurat,” featured on this week’s edition of Selected Shorts. But first I thought, what the heck is a Ziggurat? Well, a Ziggurat is a kind of terraced pyramid built in ancient Mesopotamia. It’s also a video game, and like a character trapped between levels, the minotaur in O’Connor’s story spends his life wandering his labyrinth and eating people. Tune in to hear film & TV actor Nathan Corddry follow the minotaur as he falls in love and confronts his own hidden conflicts. Our second story, “Customer Service at the Karaoke Don Quixote” by Juan Martinez, continues in the vein of the surreal, following in the footsteps of Borges and Barthelme. A great voice-driven piece, it features a restaurant where the customers sing excerpts from classic literature. Tune in to hear an interview with Martinez, and a wonderful performance of the story by the one and only Tim Curry. To find Selected Shorts on your local public radio station, go here. To download or stream our free podcast, go here.