SHORT STORIES

LIBERATION DAY by George Saunders (Bloomsbury £18.99, 256pp)

LIBERATION DAY by George Saunders (Bloomsbury £18.99, 256pp)

LIBERATION DAY 

by George Saunders (Bloomsbury £18.99, 256pp) 

The nine stories from the Booker prize winning author of Lincoln In The Bardo are a joy. Effortlessly stylish, funny and smart, they come spangled with sadness and a melancholic malaise as Saunders casts an eye over a country teetering towards wreckage. 

Wrong choices, compromised consciences, the vacillating mindsets that beset his cleverly realised characters — who range from an angry suburban parent, whose cheerful moral code is challenged (The Mom Of Bold Action) to Brian who’s trapped in a subterranean, hell-themed amusement park, fated to continually reprise a thankless role (Ghoul) — conjure the unruly state of the United States.

The speculative, titular tale sets the tone — dystopian, disruptive and simmering with violence — as an enslaved wall of human ‘speakers’ are confronted with historical home truths and harsh present-day realities in their rich owner’s living room, with tragic consequences.

THE CONSEQUENCES by Manuel Munoz (Indigo Press £10.99, 208pp) The characte

THE CONSEQUENCES by Manuel Munoz (Indigo Press £10.99, 208pp) The characte

THE CONSEQUENCES 

by Manuel Munoz (Indigo Press £10.99, 208pp) 

The characters in Munoz’s tough and tender stories play out lives of complicated familial obligations and hard-scrabble economics in the orchards, bus stations and small apartments of California’s Central Valley as summer sizzles and hearts break. 

The subject matter is often sombre — men deported by the immigration authorities, their partners taking long bus journeys to visit them (The Happiest Girl In The Whole USA), harsh betrayals in close-knit communities (Anyone Can Do It), the future of a pregnant teenager (The Reason Is Because) and a sister forever enacting the role of her reckless brother’s rescuer, as he dangerously hooks up with older, careless men (What Kind Of Fool Am I?). 

There’s a glow of warmth as Munoz’s compassionate gaze lends grace to these incandescent tales of striving and survival. 

A BALLET OF LEPERS: A NOVEL AND STORIES by Leonard Cohen (Canongate £20, 272pp)

A BALLET OF LEPERS: A NOVEL AND STORIES by Leonard Cohen (Canongate £20, 272pp)

A BALLET OF LEPERS: A NOVEL AND STORIES  

by Leonard Cohen (Canongate £20, 272pp) 

Veering between the grim and the grandiose, the melancholy and the melodramatic, these early fictions from charismatic Leonard Cohen — written between 1956 and 1961 when the singer, songsmith and poet was in his 20s — deal in ecstasy and existential agony with worldweary narrators yearning for an indefinable something. 

The books opens with the brutal A Ballet Of Lepers, a tale of toxic relationships, violence and released fury, and proceeds with 15 short stories and a radio play where the women are hastily drawn archetypes and the men are, for the most part, introspective, unhappy and brewing bitterness.