Two questions for Salman Rushdie on this year’s short story crop

by admin | Sep-11-2008


Salman Rushdie, author of the recently minted “The Enchantress of Florence,” winner of the Best of the Booker for “Midnight’s Children,” founder of PEN’s World Voices Festival, and ally of book critics and the NBCC, is guest editor for “Best American Short Stories 2008,” due out this month. Rushdie will discuss his picks as Symphony Space launches the fall series of its Selected Shorts series October 1. Meanwhile, he answered a couple of questions.

Q. Short shorts or long shorts? Has the trend toward microstories, Twitter stories, shown up in your evaluations?  Do you have a preference yourself?
A. I’m not a big fan of microstories myself. There are a few great “very short stories”—like Kleist’s “The Earthquake in Chile”—but most are disappointing.

Q. What do the themes in this year’s best stories show about American culture today?
A. There’s clearly an interest in domestic subjects, religious subjects, and, most mysteriously, in the game of golf. But there were enough wilder, more imaginative fictions to satisfy my taste for that kind of thing.




Become a Friend of the NBCC

About the Critical Mass Blog

Commentary on literary criticism, publishing, writing, and all things NBCC related. It's written by independent members of the NBCC Board of Directors (see list of bloggers below).

Subscribe

SIGN UP FOR CRITICAL NOTES





Categories & Archives

2007 Awards | 2008 Awards | 2009 Awards | 2010 Awards | 2011 Awards | 2010 Finalists: 31 Books in 30 Days | 2011 Finalists: 30 Books in 30 Days | Conversations with Literary Websites | Critical Library | In Retrospect | NBCC News | NBCC Reads | Small Press Spotlight | What I'm Looking Forward to Reading
Become a Friend of the NBCC

NBCC Awards

See all award winners

Find out how to submit

Read how we select

Frequently Asked Questions

Awards news