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| Fresh ApplesRachel Trezise
View more titles by 'Rachel Trezise' |
ISBN: 9781902638911 (1902638913)Publication Date November 2006
Publisher: Parthian Books, CardiganFormat: Paperback, 214x135 mm, 170 pages
Language: English
Available Our Price:
£6.99
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Eleven wry and defiant stories on the power and transience of youth. This is Rachel Trezise's first short fiction collection. Her novel In and Out of the Goldfish Bowl won the Orange Futures Award. Her stories and features on rock bands, writing and the arts have appeared widely in publication and anthologies, including the Big Issue, New Welsh Review and Urban Welsh.
Un ar ddeg o straeon heriol ar rymuster a bregusrwydd ieuenctid. Dyma gasgliad cyntaf yr awdures Rachel Trezise. Enillodd ei nofel In and Out of the Goldfish Bowl Wobr Orange Futures. Mae ei herthyglau ar fandiau roc, ar lên ac ar y celfyddydau wedi ymddangos mewn nifer o gyhoeddiadau a chasgliadau fel y Big Issue, New Welsh Review ac Urban Welsh.
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Winner of the ‘Orange Futures’ Award with In and Out of the Goldfish Bowl, Rachel Trezise has produced a stunning selection of short stories in Fresh Apples. All of her stories take us into real-life situations that are often gritty and dark, though they have humour as well. There is immense talent in her portrayal of these lives – ‘Coney island’ is exquisite in its description of two vulnerable young people who spark each other off into a complex and edgy situation which takes them from Treorchy in South Wales to the USA, very clever indeed.
Her humour resonates well after the end of the stories, and although some of imagery can shock, it can also jolt the reader into engaging and then staying with the story as she elaborates with sparkle. Trezise often mixes the homely with the sinister, as in ‘The Joneses’ – where a teenage boy falls for his neighbour who has a violent boyfriend. She gets the balance of atmosphere perfectly as the tension builds, and keeps the story alive.
There is often a touch of sadness that resonates, particularly regarding cultural and economic stresses. She captures these moments neatly and sensitively –in ‘Jigsaws’ ‘I spent the first year of my marriage with a Media Guardian in my hand, picking out graphic designer appointments and circling them in red ink. Sometimes, I got as far as folding an application letter into an envelope, I don’t think I ever posted one; the post office was so far away.’
Every story in this collection will have you reeling. It is an intense and wonderful book from a very talented writer.
Clare Maynard
It is possible to use this review for promotional purposes, but the following acknowledgement should be included: A review from www.gwales.com, with the permission of the Welsh Books Council.
Gellir defnyddio’r adolygiad hwn at bwrpas hybu, ond gofynnir i chi gynnwys y gydnabyddiaeth ganlynol: Adolygiad oddi ar www.gwales.com, trwy ganiatad Cyngor Llyfrau Cymru.
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Author Biography: This is Rachel Trezise's first short fiction collection. Her novel In and Out of the Goldfish Bowl won the Orange Futures Award. Her stories and features on rock bands, writing and the arts have appeared widely in publication and anthologies, including the Big Issue, New Welsh Review and Urban Welsh. Further Information: Sarah's not abnormal or ugly, just a little bit fat, and she's got cerebral palsy. "No way was it rape or even molestation… she's fourteen, not a child. I'm not a paedophile." Gemma's mother had shagged Tom Jones. Nobody really knew who her father was, least of all her mother. Spiderman doesn't want to inflict his petty thief persona on self-contained Caitlin, but he finds himself getting off at her stop. When her grand-dad's chickens start to peck each other, sounding like death warming up, 'Chelle rings one of their necks and ends up doing worse. Her gentle, exact punishment is met with even greater respect for the old man. |
This title is categorised and/or sub-categorised as follows:
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"I am not a lover of short stories, whatever type they are, but I must admit that I found this book quite distasteful and very depressing. Snatches of each story had good descriptions of the area and most characters were well-portrayed. I realise that the subject matter covered certain issues but the book was definitely not to my personal taste and I could not recommend it."
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