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Book cover of Tender by Sofia Samatar

Tender

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Number Of Reads:

47

Language:

English

Category:

literature

Pages:

297

Quality:

excellent

Views:

922

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Book Description

The first collection of short fiction from a rising star whose stories have been anthologized in the first two volumes of the Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy series and nominated for many awards. Some of Samatar’s weird and tender fabulations spring from her life and her literary studies; some spring from the world, some from the void.
"I hate selkie stories. They’re always about how you went up to the attic to look for a book, and you found a disgusting old coat and brought it downstairs between finger and thumb and said, “What’s this?”, and you never saw your mom again. I work at a restaurant called Le Pacha. I got the job after my mom left, to help with the bills. On my first night at work I got yelled at twice by the head server, burnt my fingers on a hot dish, spilled lentil-parsley soup all over my apron, and left my keys in the kitchen. I didn’t realize at first I’d forgotten my keys. I stood in the parking lot, breathing slowly and letting the oil-smell lift away from my hair, and when all the other cars had started up and driven away I put my hand in my jacket pocket. Then I knew.
I ran back to the restaurant and banged on the door. Of course no one came. I smelled cigarette smoke an instant before I heard the voice.
“Hey.” I turned, and Mona was standing there, smoke rising white from between her fingers. “I left my keys inside,” I said. Mona is the only other server at Le Pacha who’s a girl. She’s related to everybody at the restaurant except me."

Author portrait of Sofia Samatar

Sofia Samatar

Sofia Samatar (born October 24, 1971) is an American poet, novelist and educator from Indiana.Samatar was born in 1971 in northern Indiana, United States.Her father was the Somali scholar, historian and writer Said Sheikh Samatar. Her mother is a Swiss-German Mennonite from North Dakota.Sofia's parents met in 1970 in Mogadishu, Somalia, while her mother was teaching English.Samatar attended a Mennonite high school before studying at Goshen College in Goshen, Indiana, where she graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in English. In 1997, Samatar earned a Master's degree in African languages and literature from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in Madison, Wisconsin and a Ph.D. in 2013 in contemporary Arabic literature.She is an Assistant Professor of English at James Madison University. Samatar's first novel A Stranger in Olondria was published in 2013.Samatar has also published qasīdas in English and collaborated with her brother on a book of illustrated prose poems, entitled Monster Portraits, which was published in 2018 by Rose Metal Press. A sequel to A Stranger in Olondria, entitled The Winged Histories, was published by Small Beer Press in 2016.Samatar's main literary influences include: Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, William Faulkner, Rainer Maria Rilke, as well as Somali mythology. Samatar served as a nonfiction and poetry editor for Interfictions: A Journal of Interstitial Arts.In 2022, she published her first nonfiction book, The White Mosque, a memoir about a trip to Uzbekistan in search of the followers of fringe religious leader Claas Epp Jr.

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