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Having Cried Wolf
Paperback

Having Cried Wolf

$9.99
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Small towns harbour secrets. Rising and returning like the tides lapping the coastal town of Kinsale, the stories in this collection revolve around Alice and Grace, friends since childhood, who grow to live vastly different lives.

This is the fourth collection in the Long Story Shorts series.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Affirm Press
Country
Australia
Date
1 September 2010
Pages
224
ISBN
9780980637892

Small towns harbour secrets. Rising and returning like the tides lapping the coastal town of Kinsale, the stories in this collection revolve around Alice and Grace, friends since childhood, who grow to live vastly different lives.

This is the fourth collection in the Long Story Shorts series.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Affirm Press
Country
Australia
Date
1 September 2010
Pages
224
ISBN
9780980637892
 
Book Review

Having Cried Wolf
by Gretchen Shirm

by Annie Condon, freelance reviewer, Aug 2010

In this collection of interlinked stories, Gretchen Shirm makes the fictional town of Kinsale and its residents come alive. The 15 stories dissect all the elements of small-town life – secrets, resentments, jealousies, tragedies. Friends since childhood, Alice and Grace seem to be drifting apart, but within months they are reunited by unexpected events. A mother protects her son from the consequences of a night out, without them ever speaking about it. Another woman is torn between her adult son who is travelling overseas, and the husband who increasingly distances himself from both of them. A man who cannot reconcile his past with the life he lives now takes a risk to discover who he really is.

Sydney author Shirm’s debut is impressive. She paints vivid portraits of characters that cross gender and life span. The characters are portrayed empathically, but realistically. They have their rough corners, fears, and they make plenty of mistakes. This collection is reminiscent of Patrick Cullen’s What Came Between and is as intricately woven as Elizabeth Strout’s Olive Kitteridge.