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Byron and Shelley

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The characters in Glenn Haybittle's first collection of short stories are all caught in moments of life that bring about a revelation of identity. A young woman who, after the war, catches sight of the guard who knocked to the ground her blind grandfather on the platform at Auschwitz. The backstory of the man accused of murdering Martin Luther King. The experience of a young girl on Kristallnacht and the subsequent tragic upheavals in her life. A dance teacher accused of sexually abusing one of his young students. A man constrained to return to his mother and look after her while she goes through dementia. A CIA operative grooming a patsy to take the blame for an assassination.

Beautiful, moving and humorous, the stories are set all around the globe - spinning from Kansas City, Jerusalem, London, Venice, Prague and Hamburg to Florence, Memphis, Rome, Paris and Provence.

285 pages, Kindle Edition

Published October 16, 2023

16 people want to read

About the author

Glenn Haybittle

10 books76 followers
London - Lerici - Florence.

Represented by Annabel Merullo at PFD.

The Way Back to Florence is my first novel.

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Katie.
298 reviews504 followers
September 20, 2023
Twenty three stories, all close to the heart, all thematically linked. My favourite was Mother Love, a moving story about a son looking after his mother who has dementia. Also loved Archaeology: a grieving husband who digs an archaeological trench in his garden to keep his two young daughters occupied and then forms the suspicion his wife was having an affair before she died. Fabio and Eva: a man believes he has retrieved a past life memory of himself as a young Jewish German girl in Hamburg when the Nazis came to power. The Girls of my Youth: an elderly man's determination to escape a nursing home and rediscover the story of his life. Guilty Party: the story of an abortion from both the male and female perspective. A couple of the stories were less successful but I'll rate it according to the best.
Thanks to NetGalley.
Profile Image for Gemma.
71 reviews27 followers
July 15, 2023
Worth requesting from NetGalley for the story Mother Love. A brilliantly moving tale of a son looking after his mother who has dementia. Most of the stories deal with a moment of heartbreak. The title story let it down a bit, too long and out of synch with the rest.
Profile Image for Cathy.
1,457 reviews349 followers
October 9, 2023
The stories in this collection vary in subject matter and location, and, in particular, in length. Initially I found it hard to detect in all of them the underlying theme of identity described in the blurb. However, gradually I did start to see the connections, some of them obvious (but not necessarily apparent at the time of reading an individual story), some more subtle and others just the odd mention of a name or place. An example of the first is the stories entitled ‘The Patsy’ and ‘Raoul’ whose sinister mood only increases when you read the second story.

There were two standout stories for me. The first was the very moving ‘Mother Love’ in which a son who is caring for his mother suffering with dementia, who has become ‘like a puzzling anagram of herself’, struggles to come to terms with the change in his role, the intimacy of the tasks he has to carry out and the difficult decisions he faces.

The second was ‘The Girls of his Youth’ in which the reader witnesses the chaotic thoughts of a man, possibly also suffering from dementia. Written in a style akin to stream of consciousness, he continually harks back to his past punctuated by a refrain that occurs over and over again. ‘The girls of his youth. The girls of youth break his heart. The girls of his youth make his heart whole again.’

I also enjoyed the first story in the collection, ‘Archaeology’, in which a recently widowed man has to deal with feelings of guilt about his wife’s death and his acute sense of loss. ‘Bereavement is sometimes like wading across a succession of snowfields with no landmark in sight. You are a lone small figure in a vast barren landscape. Other times it’s like a Ferris wheel ride. Like being strapped into a swinging spinning bucket. The dizzying dislocation from familiar grounded reality. The brain regrouping, re-coding, re-evaluating, adjusting itself to a bewildering change in the engrained mental landscape.’ He is also coming to terms with the change in his role, that ‘he’s no longer a husband, just a father’, and gradually realising his limitations as a sole parent to his two young daughters.

The story that gives the collection its title is the longest in the book. Subtitled ‘Brits abroad’ it might just as well have be entitled ‘Brits behaving badly’. Jake arrives in Italy and meets Felix, an actor who has recently played Byron in a film and Ivan, who is writing a biography of Shelley. Alongside their drink and drug fuelled escapades they attempt to discover the whereabouts of a young woman who has mysteriously disappeared. The story’s conclusion is a clever echo of events in the lives of the poets of its title.

The book contains some wonderful descriptive writing and imaginative metaphors. ‘The waves embroider the shingled beach with a ragged silvered stitching; the percussive assent they make as they break and the lamentation as they withdraw over the pebbles seems to come from a distance in time as well as space.’

Byron and Shelley is an interesting and varied collection of stories, with a few misses but also with several that would repay rereading.
Profile Image for Pj.
57 reviews34 followers
June 16, 2023
Twenty three stories, thematically linked. My favourite was Mother Love, an incredibly moving story about a son looking after his mother who has dementia. Also loved Archaeology: a grieving husband who digs an archaeological trench in his garden to keep his two young daughters occupied and then forms the suspicion his wife was having an affair before she died. Fabio and Eva: a man believes he has retrieved a past life memory of himself as a young Jewish German girl in Hamburg when the Nazis came to power. The Girls of my Youth: an elderly man’s determination to escape a nursing home and rediscover the story of his life. Guilty Party: the story of an abortion from both the male and female perspective.

Thanks to NetGalley.
Profile Image for Rob Twinem.
985 reviews54 followers
June 9, 2023
A very enjoyable book with an eclectic mix of stories set in different locations, with a predominance for Italy. All unique and all a very different, a nice collection to return to again and again. Recommended :)
Profile Image for Rita Egan.
667 reviews78 followers
May 11, 2023

Byron and Shelley
by Glenn Haybittle

Although this book doesn't publish until October, and I usually strictly read my advanced copies in order of publication, something drew me into this short story collection the moment I received it. The cover. How could I put that away for 5 months? I only intended to whet my appetite, but I found myself picking it back up again and again.

There are 23 stories, and although the protagonist is different in each, although the settings vary, predominantly London and Florence, with some in Venice, Jerusalem, Kansas City, and references to Rome, Hamburg, Memphis, Prague, they contain very similar themes throughout. None are a complete story, rather a slice of time where an aha moment occurs regarding the human trait to curate elements of one's identity.

There is something startling about this author's writing. He puts words together beautifully with elegant phrasing and razor sharp metaphors. He describes human nature so accurately, but dwells so long in the shame and embarrassment of self awareness that it often feels like overshare, or perhaps eavesdropping on a private and highly sensitive conversation. Because there is such cross pollination between these stories (the David Bowie obsession, the cold mother, the record shop/ PYE/ recording industry, the Jewish heritage. betrayal of or by girlfriends, effemininity, a tendency towards navel-gazing) and because of the astonishingly authentic insights revealed within the internal narrative, perhaps it's autofiction? It is uncomfortable, thought provoking and moving.

My favourite one is Mother Love, a raw and highly relatable story about a son returning from Italy to England to care for his mother who is suffering from dementia. My least favourite is Byron and Shelley which was jarring in it's incompatibility with the other 22 stories. These stories might not work alone, but together they are addictive.

This book is billed as historical fiction, which to me isn't strictly accurate. If you require plot, this is not for you, but if you like to take a sneaky peek into what makes some people tick, this might be just the ticket.

Publication date: 9th October 2023
Thanks to #netgalley and #cheynewalk for the eGalley
194 reviews
October 14, 2023
This is the first book I have read by Glenn Haybittle, so I wasn't sure what to expect. The book consists of 23 stories that all deal with a pivotal moment in someones life. The stories are not constrained by either time or location but take place in various time periods and various places around the world. As with any book of short stories, you will resonate more with some and less so with others. However, there is not "bad" or "poor" story in the book. The stories are short but deliver quite a punch.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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