Bedtime Stories – Edited by Diana Secker Tesdell

From the book jacket: “The tales collected here represent the essence of the storyteller’s art, with its ancient roots in fantastical legends and tales told around a fire.”

I bought this book thinking it would be just the perfect read for R.I.P., a reading event hosted by Carl on his website stainlesssteeldroppings. Besides that, I loved the fabric cover with the attached bookmark, and after looking at the authors who contributed to this short story collection, A.S. Byatt, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Neil Gaiman, Vladimir Nabokov, Guy de Maupassant, Ursula K. Leguin, Angela Carter, Haruki Murakami, and Washington Irving (to name just a few) I decided to read it. A few words on some of the stories (there are 18 of them altogether):

The Bottle Imp – Robert Louis Stevenson

A tale of a man who gets a magic bottle inhabited by an imp that can give him anything he desires. But there is one condition to be fulfilled, or his soul is forever doomed to burn in hell, and as the bottle changes hands, it becomes more and more difficult to fulfill that condition. Finally, the bottle is bought by a man named Keawe and the story follows his rise to good fortune and also his adventures in trying to get rid of the bottle. The story made me turn the pages anxiously to see if Keawe gets rid of the bottle in the end.

The Country of the Blind – H.G. Wells

A man falls into the country of the blind. Literally, because he was climbing a mountain and his fall separates him from his climbing partners. Lost and hungry, he finds himself in a valley populated by a strange group of people: they are all blind, but that doesn’t seem to hinder them in any way – in fact they seem to manage just fine, and the stranger that comes to them is amazed by their life-style. Things take a turn for the worst however, as the stranger is forced to make a life changing decision. This story actually made me cringe a little, as I cheered the man on: run, just run!

Night (A Nightmare) – Guy de Maupassant

“I love night passionately. I love it as one loves one’s country or one’s mistress. I love it with all my senses, with my eyes which see it, with my sense of smell which inhales it, with my ears which listen to its silence, with my whole body which is caressed by its shadows.”
A great start to the story, and it continues in the same vein, describing the unnamed character’s love of the night with its shadows and smells and the feeling of vigor it gives him. Beautiful passages give way to fright and in the end the night is not “one’s mistress” but one’s doom.
A little too short to be truly creepy. It left me wanting more.

Troll Bridge – Neil Gaiman

Had I not read this story (twice!) it would have been my favorite in the collection. “Troll Bridge” is a retelling of the classic children’s tale “Three Billy Goats Gruff”, and a very enjoyable one, too. I’ve reviewed it a few months ago when I read it in Smoke and Mirrors a collection of short stories by the same author.

The Legend of Sleepy Hollow – Washington Irving

What a surprise to see this story – my thoughts went instantly to the movie version, which goes by the shorter name of “Sleepy Hollow”, in which Johnny Depp plays the main character, Ichabod Crane, and Christina Ricci is his love interest, Katrina Van Tassel. Although I think that usually the book is better than the movie, in this case I’ll make a joyous exception and proclaim the movie much better and far, far creepier.
The story in fact did not feel scary at all – it was the tale of a rather clumsy country teacher who planned to get rich by marrying Katrina, a wealthy farmer’s daughter; the legend of the headless horseman is but a pinch of spice into this simple recipe and not the horrific story one might expect. Well, at least now I can say I’ve read the original version.

The Tiger’s Bride – Angela Carter

A re-telling of “The Beauty and the Beast”, this is my favorite story in the collection. Like Neil Gaiman, Angela Carter manages to combine the elements of a well-known children’s tale to create something fresh and also very different. Scary? Not really, but sad and lovely and with a good ending.

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button – F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Buttons get the surprise of their lives when their son is born. Wrinkled and old, Benjamin Buttons is strange to say the least. What’s stranger is his family’s (and especially his father’s) inability to treat him the way he should be treated as Benjamin has the customs of an old man (that includes smoking) instead of a young boy’s. Years go by and Benjamin gets younger. He marries, has children and his transformation affects his family. What a weird and sad tale! In this case I’ll say the story is as good as the movie.

The Dragon – Vladimir Nabokov

After finishing this story I closed the book and confusion took hold of me. It was a lovely story, and I really liked the dragon, poor thing, but I just didn’t get it. And then when I read the ending again, days later, it finally came to me and I thought, brilliant, that’s a great idea! A character of legend, the dragon, decides to get out of his cave for the first time. In his exploratory journey he arrives in a city at night and tired, he goes to sleep. What the townspeople do when they see him makes for the most interesting part of the story. It’s sad actually, and the end makes perfect sense: there is no place for mythical creatures in today’s world.

The Dancing Dwarf – Haruki Murakami

“A dwarf came into my dream and asked me to dance.” So begins Murakami’s tale, of an Orwellian-like world in which one of the elephant makers – yes it’s weird and it gets weirder – dreams about a dwarf who can dance like nobody else. He is so good in fact, that the man who dreams about him makes a pact with the dwarf in the hope of getting the girl of his dreams. But all’s not as easy as it sounds and the man finds himself on the verge of losing his end of the deal.
What a strange and wonderful story! Who would think of an elephant-making factory? But maybe this is just a nod to endangered animals and how the world will try to compensate for their disappearance. Also, for some reason, I keep thinking of Rumpelstiltskin and I wonder if this is one of the ideas the story is based on. This is my second-favorite story in the book. Makes me think I should take out “Norwegian Wood” and read it now.

Read in September & October, 2012

***
In other book-reading news, a few days ago I’ve started on a novel by Neil Gaiman called Neverwhere. So far, it’s going really slow, so slow in fact that another book caught my eye – The Historian, by Elizabeth Kostova, which I like better, so far. I hope to finish both by the end of this month.

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10 Responses to Bedtime Stories – Edited by Diana Secker Tesdell

  1. Jenners says:

    What a diverse collection of stories! And if you want more Murakami weirdness, I don’t think Norwegian Wood is the book to start with!

    • Delia says:

      “Norwegian Wood” is not weird then? I’ve read “After Dark” and that was pretty twisted, I was hoping this might be, too. Thanks for the tip, I might have to reconsider. 🙂

  2. Vishy says:

    You read a Everyman edition? I love Everyman editions! I also love that cover! So jealous of you! The collection seems to have a stellar cast of writers – it literally reads like a ‘Who’s who’. All the stories you have written about look quite interesting. I have read ‘The Country of the Blind’ and have seen the movie version of ‘The Legend of Sleepy Hollow’. Nabokov’s ‘The Dragon’ looks like a really interesting story. Thanks for this wonderful review.

    Looking forward to reading your thoughts on ‘The Historian’. Hope you are liking ‘Neverwhere’. Happy reading!

    • Delia says:

      I think it’s the only Everyman edition I have. It’s a nice looking book, made to last (hopefully). 🙂
      Nabokov’s story was a very good one. Sad but good.
      I’m working on the review of The Historian, it should be up in a few days.
      Neverwhere is slow paced and my patience is stretched out a bit. I will finish it though, I’m curious to see if Richard stays in the London Below. 😉

      • Vishy says:

        I hope it inspires you to collect more Everyman editions 🙂 Can’t wait to read your review of ‘The Historian’! Hope ‘Neverwhere’ gets better. Yes, it is an interesting thing to look forward to – to find out whether Richard stays or comes back. Happy reading!

  3. Caroline says:

    This looks like such a great collection. I’m reading too many in parallel at the moment and am bad at reviewing them.
    I like Angela Carter a lot. She had such an amazing way with words.

    • Delia says:

      Most of the stories are quite good.
      I haven’t read a full novel by Angela Carter, just some short stories here and there but I would love to try one. “The Bloody Chamber” sounds like my kind of book – although that’s a collection of short stories, too. Or maybe I should go with “Burning Your Boats” – that has all of her short fiction. How is it that I started saying I want to read one of her novels but the titles I find most interesting proved to be short stories? Weird…

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