Each of these spare and elegant tales rings like a bell in your head. memorable, original, and not much like anything you've read.--Karen Joy Fowler
A strange and enchanting book, written in crisp, winning sentences; each story begs to be read aloud and savored.--Aimee Bender
Horse, Flower, Bird rests uneasily between the intersection of fantasy and reality, dreaming and wakefulness, and the sacred and profane. Like a series of beautiful but troubling dreams, this book will linger long in the memory. Kate Bernheimer is reinventing the fairy tale.--Peter Buck, R.E.M.
In Kate Bernheimer's familiar and spare--yet wondrous--world, an exotic dancer builds her own cage, a wife tends a secret basement menagerie, a fishmonger's daughter befriends a tulip bulb, and sisters explore cycles of love and violence by reenacting scenes from Star Wars.
Enthralling, subtle, and poetic, this collection takes readers back to the age-old pleasures of classic fairy tales and makes them new. Their haunting lessons are an evocative reminder that cracking open the door to the imagination is no mere child's play, that delight and tragedy lurk in every corner, and that we all have the key to the library . . . only be careful what you read.
Elegant and brutal, the stories in Kate Bernheimer's latest collection occupy a heightened landscape, where the familiar cedes to the grotesque and nonsense just as often devolves into terror. These are fairy tales out of time, renewing classic stories we think we know, like one of Bernheimer's girls, whose hands of steel turn to flowers, leaving her beautiful but alone.
Kate Bernheimer is the author of the short story collection Horse, Flower, Bird and the editor of My Mother She Killed Me, My Father He Ate Me: Forty New Fairy Tales and the journal Fairy Tale Review.
This is our eighth volume! The anthology was published in December 2019. Stories and Essays from today's best emerging writers with an introduction from the queen of fairy tales herself, Kate Bernheimer. Electric Guests by Naïma Msechu, American Crusader by Lavanya Vasudevan, Chlorine by Kate Bucca, Lida by Belal Rafiq, Quiet Guest by Dawna Kemper, June by V. Efua Prince, Paper Boats by Lydia Martín, Face to Face by Jenna Geisinger, An English Woman and an Arab Man Walk into a Bar by H. de C, Fear by Divya Sood