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Book Review : Light Box by K J Orr

Book Review : Light Box by K J Orr

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Light Box by K J Orr

An astronaut struggles to adapt to life back on earth. A man who knew he would go blind one day realises that the day has finally come. A girl recollects the day she had her first periods and the other happenings around her which she has not be able to forget. A man journeys away from a wife in hospital. A couple meet a dying dog on the way.

 

Review

The Light Box is a collection of eleven short stories that are well grounded in real life. Orr explores her stories through different geographical locations- Siberia, Papua New Guinea, London and New York, all set in a contemporary world. She captures fleeting moments that are important at a personal level in some stories. Sometimes the prose falls into descriptions of  surroundings which inevitably weave the atmosphere of unsaid thoughts looming in the mind of characters.

 

Theme

There is no unifying theme throughout the book. Light Box explores the way people respond to change. When unpredictability or sometimes a forced change in the routine invades a person’s life, he/she has to find means to surpass that wave. It is at this pivotal juncture that Orr builds her stories. Her stories explore the immediate areas around the crucial point and often end with an air of inconclusivity. I found the endings of her novels similar to Amos Oz’s short stories – Scenes from Village Life. If endings that end on an indecisive note do not bother you, this will definitely be a good read for you.

 

Light Box by K J Orr
Light Box by K J Orr

 

Writing

The writing is spare in nature with no flamboyant descriptions. Each sentence is well crafted and the stories are more of an introspective nature. As you delve deeper into the collection the fine line between the reader and character disappears and the reader wonders what he/she would have done under similar circumstances.

 

Light Box by K J Orr
Light Box by K J Orr

 

My picks from the Collection

My favourite story in the collection is Disappearances , which won the BBC National Short story Award 2016.  A retired, rich plastic surgeon starts a new habit of spending mornings in a café. He grows to enjoy the company of a local waitress. He enjoys her painting another past for him and plays along because he wants a new story about his life. However, when some ex-clients see him at the café, he fears they might spoil his plan for a new identity.
Blackout  is the story of a boy (two boys actually, one who kills himself) who knows that he would become blind some day. The story begins in a New York eye clinic when he is forty and soon to be blind. He recalls the Manhattan power-cuts and wonders how his life will change afterward. He remembers his mother blindfolding him as a child so that he is ready when he loses his sight.

 

The title is derived from the story The Human Circadian Pacemaker where a wife buys a light box to help her earth- returned astronaut husband to adjust to regular life. She worries “he’d come back with another man’s face”. The story shows the gaps that exist in their relationship amplified because of the new situation.

 

A newly met couple find a dying dog in By the Canal. The man kills it to ease its suffering. And this act affects their relationship.

 

Still Life is a beautifully written story. A father tries to help his teenage daughter come out of depression. She has started spending all day in bed after giving up college. He reads her fairy tales in bed, perhaps because he feels he can reawaken her child-like enthusiasm. Later he starts reading her engineering manuals, perhaps to gear her up for life.

Light Box by K J Orr
Light Box by K J Orr

 

Final Verdict

You might enjoy the stories if you like atmospheric reads and have no qualms about non-definitive endings. In some of them the reader will get to experience the setting of the story with little progress in plot, making him/her feel like an observer. In others, the reader becomes one with the character in the story and lives the tale. Overall, a good book.

 

Title : Light Box
Author : K J Orr
Publisher : Daunt Books
Published : 2016
Language : English
Pages : 182
Rating : 3/5
Much thanks to Daunt Books for a copy of the book. All opinions are my own.

View Comments (9)
  • Great review! I haven’t read any short stories, to be honest, but one of my next reads is precisely that. Loved your honest review ^^

    • Thanks Annie. I hope you will enjoy your next book. Since you like mystery and crime you can try out Hercule Poirot’s short stories by Agatha Christie:)

    • I know you do Laila. You are one of the few like me who are not insistent on a definite ending. This was a new author for me and a nice surprise as well.

  • You’ve been reading quite a few short story collections this year! It’s great to see support for short fiction in blogs. 🙂
    I lik that the stories take the reader all across countries and continents. This is a book the worldly reader would appreciate.

    • I agree Naz. I was very happy to see that the stories are set in different places. Adds a charm to the collection.

  • I think it’s really fascinating how you state there is no unifying theme to these short stories, and yet you also identify that these characters are all connected by how people respond and adapt to change. This is an important aspect of humanity! It’s definitely worth being a unifying theme.
    Personally, I adore short stories with ambiguous endings. I struggle to cope with these endings when it comes to full length novels, or even novellas, but I love ambiguous short stories. There’s something about ambiguity when I barely know a character which draws me in and make me want more.
    Great review! Thanks for sharing your feelings.

    • I agree. I enjoy short stories that leave you with an unsatisfied feeling because you have to think for yourself what happens later on if the story had progressed further.

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