LOVED--Being loved is sometimes a fairy tale, sometimes, a nightmare. It all depends on who falls in love with you.
CHRISTMAS IN STRIPES--An ex-con spends his first holiday back home with his family and realizes that you can never go home again.
Sugar is Sweet is a collection of short stories written by Carrie Green. I first met Carrie during a Gratitude Blog Hop through the World Literary Café, then known as the WoMen’s Literary Café. She guest posted on my Depression Cookies blog: Thank You, Stephen King. Carrie was lovely and helpful, but more than that, she encouraged me to try the horror genre and to read Stephen King specifically.
Thanks to
Carrie I read Stephen King’s On Writing,
find the post
here, and joined the Stephen King Project. Just recently, I read two of her
short story collections, starting with Sugar
is Sweet. There are three stories in the collection: Playing for Keeps, Loved,
and Christmas in Stripes.
The short story
collection starts with Playing for Keeps,
an eerie and unsettling story about Dawn, a little girl with an abusive mother.
I cringed most of the tale, realizing what a delicate relationships mothers and
daughters have and how easily a mother can use that bond to an unfair
advantage. My heart broke while I was internally screaming at the story, hoping
Dawn could hear me and have courage. (I’m praying for a cushion for her journey’s
end.)
Then, we move into Loved. “Had he died and gone to Hell?” I was wondering right along with Nick Goggin, completely absorbed with all the questions and fears he was facing. I was being pulled with him. This story explores more family issues, gives us more eerie feelings, and offers us another memorable character.
And finally, there’s Christmas in Stripes. The title alone hooked me. Douglas Kuznar, an ex-con who feels the weight of his stripes, is heading to his family’s house for Christmas dinner for the first time since his release. My favorite story in this collection, I was impressed with how much rich family history the author squeezed into so few pages.
What I love about this collection is that Ms. Green mines the depths of relationships. She plays with our sense of fear in the everyday instead of terrifying aliens or vampires, knowing sometimes the most troubling stories are the ones that can be true.
Each story leaves you wanting more, needing more. The suspense builds at a steady pace, and the author manages to successfully develop meaningful characters in a few words. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this collection, and the 4.5 star rating is a reflection of liking Roses are Red (5 stars) even more. My review for Roses are Red will be available Tuesday, February 21.
Many thanks to Ms. Green for encouraging me to give horror a chance. She was right, there’s so much more to it than meets the eye, as she so expertly demonstrated in her two short story collections.
Rating: 4.5 stars
For more about Carrie
Green and her books, please visit her Amazon
Author page.
When’s the last time you tried, and loved, something new in the
world of books?