Burning Girls and Other Stories by Veronica Schanoes
Veronica Schanoes’ collection Burning Girls and Other Stories (2021) started strong, hit a rough patch for a lengthy time, then ended strong. It is, therefore, the epitome of the mixed bag. Of the thirteen tales, I found one to be a standout, two others good, a few solid ones and a number that didn’t do anything for me. I won’t go through each one, but here are my responses to several of the stories.
“Among the Thorns”: This is the opening piece and is also the one I thought stood out amongst the collection. Not only is it a strong opening story, but it’s also a killer opening line and paragraph:
They made my father dance in thorns before they killed him.
I used to think that this was a metaphor, that they beat him with thorny vines, perhaps. But I was wrong about that.
They made him dance.
The story is set in the 17th Century and narrated by a young Jewish girl whose family lives in a carefully calibrated home: “not too small and not too big … a nice home, but not too nice … ‘Too nice and they are jealous’ [my mother] told me, ‘But not nice enough, and they won’t come and do business.’” That same sort of calculation drives all her parents’ choices — “’Too many of too close together’ [my mother] said, ‘and they think we’re plotting against them. Of course, they don’t like it when we move too far into their places either. I do what I can to strike the right balance.’” It isn’t enough, though, as that opening paragraph warns us, and so when her father is murdered by the people of Dornburg where he was doing business, young Ittele swears to her Uncle Leyb she “will kill them all. Every one.” She will need the help of a goddess to do so, and even then many years will pass until she has the opportunity to fulfill her vow, and perhaps as well to choose mercy. It’s a powerful story with a strong voice at the center, a vividly recreated time period, and one that makes I think the best use of the reworked fairy/folktales that are incorporated into so many of these tales.
The two good stories are also historical pieces. “Phosphorus” follows a young Irish girl who is dying and ever more disfigured due to working with the title product in a match factory. The pace of her decline will seemingly preclude her from seeing the effects of the women’s strike, but magic and the love of a family member, along with a heart-rending sacrifice, lets her live long enough for first a triumphant and then a moving close. The title story that closes the collection, meanwhile, offers up echoes of the first story, as a Jewish girl who has learned to be a witch from her grandmother must flee the pogroms with her sister to New York City. It turns out they have not fled far enough to escape a demon from their homeland. Similar to “Among the Thorns”, the Old World part of the story is vivid and compelling. The middle section sags a little — the language more flat, the plot more trite, the characters more thin — and the final section maybe piggybacks a bit too much on a historical event for its power, though the metaphor presented conveying the idea that the New World has its own demons, worse than those of the Old World and born not of magic and fay creatures but of humans and their systems, is a strong and lingering concept.
A number of stories fell into what I’d call the “solid” category. “Emma Goldman Takes Tea with the Baba Yaga” is an interesting mix of non-fiction and fiction, though it doesn’t feel fully mined for its potential. “Lily Glass” ended the long run of stories I didn’t much care for, and had some nice images, but didn’t feel particularly original. “Alice: A Fantasia” is a nice stylistic and lyrical piece while “Serpents”, probably the most surreal piece in the collection, is expressionistically weird but has some of my favorite sentence-level writing, and I quite liked how it played with so many folk and fairy tales. It may have been my favorite of this group.
That left seven stories that either fell flat or that I out-and-out disliked for various reasons, including but not limited to pacing issues, flat language, or being too obvious and/or blunt. I’d also say that the overall collection suffers a bit from the stories being a bit too similar in tone, characters, and in their usage of/reference to fairy tales.
I never expect a story collection to nail every piece. I’m thrilled when three-quarters are good to very good, and mostly satisfied when that drops to half. That’s about where I am here with Burning Girls. I don’t think therefore I’d recommend it as a purchase, but I would definitely recommend it as a library book, with my advice being to read the opening and closing stories first (I know, I know, they order them for a reason … ), then read the rest in whatever order you want, but not allowing the weaker stories to cause you to put the book down without at least trying the others.
The geography is confusing me--how does one get to a village in Tibet by ship? And even the northernmost part…
Oh, this sounds interesting!
Locus reports that John Marsden died early today. Marsden authored the 7 book series that started off with the novel…
Mmmmm!
I *do* have pear trees... hmmm.