Kristin Fouquet’s Twenty Stories

January 14, 2010
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At page one, “The Dead Redhead,” I was curious.

At page ten, “Traveling Lightheaded,” I was intrigued.

At page twenty-seven, “The Stranger’s Dilemma,” I fell in love.

Twenty Stories (Rank Stranger Press) beautifully enhances my admittedly limited perception of flapper-era New Orleans, from the speech (“Merci, Mr. Zacher”) to the eats (“Shrimp Remoulade”) to the drink (wine, wine, and more wine), carrying all upon prose as elegant as its author. The collection, the first (of many, fingers crossed) from New Orleans resident and enthusiast, Kristin Fouquet, mixes vignettes, fully arced flash fiction pieces, and a couple longer stories, each uniquely stirring and strong, yet collectively comprehensive in their representation of Fouquet’s impressive skill.

Fouquet thrives with the vignette “slice of life” form (perhaps because of the word’s French origin?), building her scenes in measured, dense sentences, often cutting these pieces mid-breath to leave the reader gasping. What, in lesser hands, might come across as a simple device to showcase cleverness, Fouquet respects her readers, offering instead endings of substance and lasting power.

her story, “Baptism,” I’ll be thinking of for months…and “Standard Pack,” damn, Fouquet can write.

With “Traveling Lightheaded,” a seemingly predatory stranger convinces an inebriated woman to travel away with him for the weekend. The woman agrees, then questions her decision, then regains her trust, this time sober, only to open herself to a final-line observation that reinforces the stranger’s original predatory disposition. From odd, to impulsive, to creepy, to romantically hopeful, and then right back to creepy, “Traveling Lightheaded” navigates an entire range of emotion in a short two pages.

And her story, “Baptism,” I’ll be thinking of for months.

And “Standard Pack,” damn, Fouquet can write.

(And for Kristin, who was kind enough to snap a photo of her reading my book, here’s also a picture of a much less attractive me, reading hers. In the bath.)

Review by Caleb J Ross

Visit:
Kristin Fouquet (the author)
Rank Stranger Press (the publisher)

Buy:
From the Author
From Amazon.com




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Caleb J. Ross


Caleb J. Ross has been published widely, both online and in print. He graduated with a degree in English Lit and a minor in creative writing from Emporia State University in 2005. He is the author of Charactered Pieces: stories (OW Press), Stranger Will: a novel (Otherworld Publications, 2011), As a Machine and Parts (Aqueous Books, 2011) and, I Didn’t Mean to Be Kevin: a novel (Black Coffee Press, 2011).

6 Responses to Kristin Fouquet’s Twenty Stories

  1. avatar
    Mel Bosworth on January 14, 2010 at 12:23 am

    fantastic review + gratuitous albeit tasteful nude shot = chocolate cake

  2. avatar
    Kristin Fouquet on January 14, 2010 at 6:21 am

    I’m speechless. Merci, Mr. Ross.

  3. avatar
    Tim Hall on January 14, 2010 at 7:42 am

    Glad somebody got around to pimping this. This is one of the best story collections I’ve read in years, from any press.

  4. avatar
    Jason Michel on January 22, 2010 at 2:45 am

    Tim,

    Agreed. The eloquence itself is breathtaking, never mind the plotlines of the damn stories.

    A masterful collection.

    Here’s to many more!

  5. avatar
    Art Jerk » Two Birds | KRISTIN FOUQUET on January 23, 2010 at 4:40 pm

    [...] has drawn me to this photo in particular. Her collection, “Twenty Stories,” which I review in more depth at Outsider Writers Collective, is filled with similar character sketches, wherein the implication of relationships is often more [...]

  6. avatar
    quin browne on January 23, 2010 at 9:02 pm

    kristen stuns me as a writer as a photographer as a person.