This section contains 309 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |
J.I.M. Stewart is well known as an academic, a prolific novelist, short-story writer and author of thrillers under the penname of Michael Innes. This time he has his short-fiction hat on, and has produced five stories and a novella (of some sixty pages) for [The Bridge at Arta and Other Stories]…. [All of the stories] exhibit that expertise in construction which is a Stewart hallmark. The first story, 'The Bridge at Arta', is an ironic sketch of a widow meeting her first husband, whom she had divorced fifty years before. It affords Stewart the opportunity for wry reflections and juxtapositions, and although the characters are slight there is enough background interest to retain our attention. The same cannot be said of the long 'The Time Bomb', which takes ages to explode and does so only then like a damp squib…. The next story, 'The Little Duffer'...
This section contains 309 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) |