Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Other Worlds
Other Worlds: Stories | Andre Alexis
2 posts | 2 read | 2 to read
Playful, stirring stories of the strange and the everyday, inspired by Swift, Kawabata, Stoker, and more. The sister of grief is gratitude. In nine stories, Other Worlds quickly takes us deep into the very heart of questions around connection, loneliness, loss, reconciliation, and whether we can ever really know those we love most (or even ourselves). As playful as they are meditative, as ingenious as they are emotionally arresting, as interested in genre as they are in character, each of these stories is a marvel of construction and imagination. They are, fundamentally, stories of immigration. They span time and place on the page and through their inspirations: Pu Songling, inspired by the seventeenth-century Chinese writer, tells about a twentieth-century professor of magic and medicine and his apprentice in Toronto; Houyhnhnm, inspired by Jonathan Swifts Gullivers Travels, sees a son through bereavement as he cares for his late fathers very literary horse; through the conventions of anime, Contrition follows a Carib man who dies in nineteenth-century Trinidad and awakens in the body of a child in twentieth-century Canada. A writer of sentences as well as heart, Andr Alexis crafts stories that beg to be read again and againfor their incantatory, mischievous prose, for their quiet insistence on searching out truth and investigating interpretation, for their moments of thrilling insight.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
Mattsbookaday
Other Worlds: Stories | Andre Alexis
post image
Pickpick

Other Worlds, by André Alexis (2025 ??)
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Premise: A collection of stories about medicine, family, life in Canada‘s Caribbean diaspora, and a small town in which, oddly enough, I spent three years as a kid.

Review: This is quite possibly the best story collection I‘ve read this year. Without exception, they were interesting,insightful, and just the right length. A worthy entry on this year‘s Giller Prize longlist! ⬇️

Mattsbookaday Bookish Pair: One of my favourite titles from last year‘s Giller list was another collection of diaspora stories, Peacocks of Instagram, by Deepa Rajagopalan 1mo
11 likes2 stack adds1 comment