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The First Paper Girl in Red Oak, Iowa: Stories

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Welcome to the curious world of Elizabeth Stuckey-French.  Her exuberant collection is peopled with characters who walk a thin line between reality and delusion, trying to break out of their molds and live a little. With stylish, wry writing, Stuckey-French creates intelligent, poignant, funny fiction.

Her characters--mostly Midwesterners trying to make sense of a changing world--are bizarre but strangely lovable.  They may lie to make their situations better, but the stories have a resounding emotional truth.

In "Junior," we meet a dog psychic who enlists her troubled niece in a moneymaking scheme.  In "Electric Wizard," grieving parents beg a teacher to invent poetry and pretend their dead son wrote it.  And in the title story, the mother of two young children drives east on a disordered impulse through a blizzard and picks up a gas station attendant along the way.  Several of these stories have appeared in The Atlantic Monthly and literary reviews, where her work has received recognition and praise.

In Stuckey-French's striking fictional world, powerful emotional forces roil the outwardly placid surfaces of her characters' lives--our notions of "normal" are permanently altered, and yet these stories have a generosity of spirit that cannot fail to strike a chord with all of us.

224 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2000

6 people are currently reading
115 people want to read

About the author

Elizabeth Stuckey-French

13 books38 followers
Elizabeth Stuckey-French is the author of a novel, Mermaids on the Moon, a collection of short stories, The First Paper Girl in Red Oak Iowa, and, with Janet Burroway, Writing Fiction: A Guide to the Narrative Craft. Her new novel, The Revenge of the Radioactive Lady, is forthcoming from Doubleday in spring 2011. Her short stories have appeared in The Normal School, Narrative Magazine, The Atlantic Monthly, Gettysburg Review, Southern Review, Five Points, and The O’Henry Prize Stories 2005. She was awarded a James Michener Fellowship and has won grants from the Howard Foundation, the Indiana Arts Foundation, and the Florida Arts Foundation. She teaches fiction writing at Florida State University.

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5 stars
17 (11%)
4 stars
41 (28%)
3 stars
53 (37%)
2 stars
23 (16%)
1 star
8 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews
Profile Image for Dawn.
677 reviews24 followers
March 15, 2010
I have a love-hate relationship with short stories. Because they are short, I feel compelled to finish even the ones I'm not enjoying.
My idea of a good short story pretty much begins with Hemingway.

Stuckey-French's short stories were mostly uncomfortable with brief sparks of almost accidental insight into the human condition. The collection is uneven.

My favorites were "Search and Rescue" and "Leufredus." I had just about decided to stop trying to plow my way through the collection when I found these two gems nestled back-to-back about three-quarters of the way through the book. They are magnificent. Read them and don't bother with the rest.
Profile Image for Vicki Nikolaidis.
10 reviews2 followers
August 23, 2010
I saw a review of the book of short stories years ago in Newsweek. I knew I had to have a book that has such a great title, especially my home state Iowa.
The stories are slice of life stories. They seem to me to be the stories of real people in small towns. Ms Stuckey-French knows there is a lot more going on in small towns then meets the eye.
Mothers that hate daughters, young wives that hate their husbands daughters, and all like the truth not sugar-coated.
Profile Image for Audrey (Warped Shelves).
851 reviews53 followers
May 25, 2023
Color me underwhelmed. Of the stories I read, the general consensus was bored out of my mind. I struggled to connect to any of the characters, and the author's style is so blasé, that the stories are forgettable unless the reader makes an effort to search for the deeper meaning in them, which I couldn't be bothered to do.

Maybe it's just me, but this short story collection screams humble-brag. Stuckey-French is pretending to be more profound than she is.


ATY 2023 Reading Challenge: A book with a faceless person on the cover
POPSUGAR 2023 Reading Challenge: A book with "girl" in the title
Profile Image for Sharon Falduto.
1,375 reviews14 followers
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April 15, 2020
A collection of short stories about small moments in the lives of normal people (those folks so kindly referred to as living in "flyover country"). Mostly Midwesterners, and the tone rings true. A big dash of ennui salts the stories of the UI Writer's Workshop Grad. Does the writers workshop ever graduate comedy writers?
Profile Image for Jonathan Heaslet.
Author 3 books3 followers
July 21, 2020
A devious and delightful excursion assembled in a collection of 12 short stories (time frame: late 80s and early 90s) that put the fun back into dysfunctional. Midwest locales. Strong women. Women in denial. Women coping. Perceptive children. Complex children. You’ll find them all in this short book.
Profile Image for Elizabeth Butler.
54 reviews2 followers
December 1, 2023
Each chapter is a short story, which I didn't get until further in the book. Not bad stories, but they give you a snippet into the lives of the characters and then it just ends.
Author 1 book3 followers
March 3, 2015
Overall this collection was good. A few of the stories I didn't connect with, either because the characterization wasn't there or the plot was dragging - tension on little more than a simmer.

A few stood out, though, including: "Junior" and "Search and Rescue". By far my favorite of the collection was "Electric Wizard". I adore this short story, have shared it around with anyone I know who loves short stories, and still go back to read it time to time just for my own enjoyment.

It was "Electric Wizard" that saved this collection, and what makes this book worth a look.

Would have given "Electric Wizard" a full 5 stars (Yes, it's that great), but the collection as a whole is 4 (wish I could have given 4.5).
Profile Image for Nicole.
558 reviews1 follower
July 28, 2011
I liked a few of the short stories included in this collection, but I didn't really like the rest. This is my first time reading short stories since high school and I was really hoping they would as witty as Stuckey-French's novel. Most of the stories were quite underwhelming and I hated most of the characters discussed. If you like short stories, give the collection a whirl.
Profile Image for Rita.
1,692 reviews
August 26, 2012
2000. I bought the book [second hand] on a whim, somehow assuming it was about a distant past.
But actually the stories, apparently based loosely on the author's childhood, are of an era no more distant than my own childhood.

I read halfway thru and then quit, didn't seem interesting enough to continue...
Profile Image for Richard Jespers.
Author 2 books21 followers
January 10, 2015
I own a signed copy! ESF was the instructor of the short story class I took at the Iowa Summer Writing Festival. Subtle, well-crafted stories. Liked her newest stories the best: “Electric Wizard” and “The Visible Man.”
Profile Image for Tatiana.
565 reviews
November 13, 2007
bland. i think. don't remember much. i know i didn't finish it. and it was right in the middle of a really good streak of books. very disappointing.
Profile Image for joaquin.
2 reviews1 follower
Currently reading
November 25, 2008
I am more than half way done with the book. There are many different story's and different topics. There is one story that has to do with a mom trying to get custody of her child from her own mother.
445 reviews7 followers
February 3, 2009
If I could rate this 3.5, I would. Many of the short stories were interesting and the characters were well defined. The stories were so different from each other.
Profile Image for Phyllis.
148 reviews31 followers
January 25, 2011
Would love to love, just couldn't despite the ties. Not imaginative
Profile Image for Jaq.
116 reviews
February 14, 2015
This was one of the books that let me know that it's possible to get published even if it's not very good.
7 reviews
December 22, 2007
Excellent short stories, and especially fun if you're from the Midwest.
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews

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