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Known Unknowns
Paperback

Known Unknowns

$9.99
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Set largely in Washington DC immediately after September 11, these are engrossing stories that tap into the zeitgeist of disconnection, isolation and the loss of meaningful identity after these world-changing events.

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

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Affirm Press
Country
Australia
Date
1 June 2010
Pages
224
ISBN
9780980637878

Set largely in Washington DC immediately after September 11, these are engrossing stories that tap into the zeitgeist of disconnection, isolation and the loss of meaningful identity after these world-changing events.

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

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Affirm Press
Country
Australia
Date
1 June 2010
Pages
224
ISBN
9780980637878
 
Book Review

Known Unknowns
by Emmett Stinson

by Laurie Steed, guest reviewer and blogger at the Gum Wall, May 2010

The Long Story Shorts series by Affirm Press just took a giant leap forward. I mean no disrespect to either Barry Divola or Bob Franklin, who preceded Emmett Stinson’s in the series. It’s just that on reading Known Unknowns, you are reawakened to the endless possibilities of the short form.

Stinson originally won the Age Short Story competition in 2005, and the stories featured here prove it was no fluke. Set primarily in post-September 11 Baltimore, the author showcases searing prose, characters struck dumb by their own desire, and friends that are equal parts desire and disaster, connected and yet only seconds from self-destruction. Through it all, we see a quiet desperation as people grasp for something to hold on to. It’s as if September 11 has ruptured Baltimore in its wake, with collaterally damaged characters trying desperately to step away from both history and themselves.

Contrary to popular belief, good stories do not necessarily give you what you want. At their best they are a slap in the face, ideas collapsing in on each other, and the last dying gasp of humanity as it struggles to the surface.