Fiction Short Stories (single Author)
Hellgoing
Stories
- Publisher
- House of Anansi Press Inc
- Initial publish date
- Jul 2013
- Category
- Short Stories (single author), Literary, Contemporary Women
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781770893085
- Publish Date
- Jul 2013
- List Price
- $19.95
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781770893092
- Publish Date
- Jul 2013
- List Price
- $10.99
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Winner of the 2013 Scotiabank Giller Prize.
Shortlisted for the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize. Selected as an Amazon.ca Best Book and for The Globe's Top 10 Books of 2013.
With astonishing range and depth, Scotiabank Giller Prize winner Lynn Coady gives us nine unforgettable new stories, each one of them grabbing our attention from the first line and resonating long after the last.
A young nun charged with talking an anorexic out of her religious fanaticism toys with the thin distance between practicality and blasphemy. A strange bond between a teacher and a schoolgirl takes on ever deeper, and stranger, shapes as the years progress. A bride-to-be with a penchant for nocturnal bondage can’t seem to stop bashing herself up in the light of day.
Equally adept at capturing the foibles and obsessions of men and of women, compassionate in her humour yet never missing an opportunity to make her characters squirm, fascinated as much by faithlessness as by faith, Lynn Coady is quite possibly the writer who best captures what it is to be human at this particular moment in our history.
About the author
Lynn Coady is a novelist and essayist whose fiction has been garnering acclaim since her first novel, Strange Heaven, was published and subsequently nominated for the Governor General’s Award for Fiction when she was twenty-eight. Her short story collection Hellgoing won the 2013 Scotiabank Giller Prize, Canada’s most prestigious literary award, for which her novel The Antagonist was also nominated in 2011. Her books have been published in the UK, US, Holland, France, and Germany. Coady has been a journalist, magazine editor, and advice columnist, and is currently writing for television. She divides her time between Edmonton and Toronto. Follow her on Twitter @Lynn_Coady.
Awards
- Short-listed, Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize
- Winner, Scotiabank Giller Prize
- Commended, Amazon.ca Best Books: Editors' Picks
- Commended, Globe and Mail Top 10 Books
Editorial Reviews
Coady’s Giller-winning book of stories ranges wildly in style and content, but taken as a whole is an ideal introduction to one of Canada’s finest writers.
Globe and Mail
Toting their trauma, Coady’s characters repel these attacks from fathers, doctors, lovers and the legion of others that ‘know best’ by learning “to hurt and insult him as effortlessly as he did me.” This rebellion lets Coady’s wicked wit shine, and while compassion from the reader is complicated by this attitude, Coady always delivers a knockout punch at the end of each story,“ like picking at your cuticles and being surprised when they start to ache and bleed.
Telegraph-Journal's Salon Magazine
One of the hallmarks of Lynn Coady's work is her shrewd examination of the underexplored byways of human psychology.
Coady is a writer who increasingly commands attention and respect
The Globe and Mail
A damned good read.
Alberta Views
Powerful.
Atlantic Books Today
It is the author's demonstrable strength as an ironist that prevents these stories- and these characters from appearing completely hopeless.
[Coady's] sharp sense of humour serves to humanize even the most vicious or clueless figures in the book. There is searing honesty here about humankind's inability, or unwillingness, to make an effort at connection, but the author's own humanity rescues her vision from descending into despair or nihlism.
National Post
A sharp, insightful writer with a tight, jarring style that makes use of fast narrative cuts, Coady deliberately leaves the human scribble tangled. This isn’t out of a desire to play coy, but rather an admission that problems involving relationships don’t have easy resolutions that can be clearly expressed.
Quill & Quire
Coady’s collection is … a riddle that never arrives at an answer, offering pleasure in the discomfort of people at cross-purposes; a kind of messy realism that can be both rewarding and, at times, challenging in its hesitance to give a reader certainty.
Room Magazine
This is story on the verge of exceeding its narrative boundaries, and these moments are some of the most exciting in Coady’s work to date.
Winnipeg Review
Hellgoing is a superb collection, end to end, and easily one of the best books I’ve read so far in 2013.
Edmonton Journal
Brilliant collection of short stories.
Winnipeg Free Press
Since 1998’s Strange Heaven, her Governor General’s Award–nominated debut novel, Coady has harmonized humour and heart in prose that rings true. Hellgoing provides another reminder that her use of wit is consummate, and her regard for the reader is gracious.
Georgia Straight
Hellgoing is hell going…Coady is a muscular writer, who drives us right smack into the situation her characters are experiencing … Coady’s stories are not about commonalities as such. They are unique.
Toronto Star
User Reviews
A must-read.
These are one of those books that I know I'll read over and over. Each tale presented a fascinating insight into humanity, and left me satisfied yet also wanting to go back and analyze every detail of the story. An excellent choice for the 2013 Giller PrizeHellgoing Good!
I loved this book. I love her short spinets of human life and how real her characters are. I like to read a line and then go back to it and be like, hey that is so true,. And then I underline it and then I read it 5 more times.There is a lot of that in this book.
It connects you to the characters.