Issue 104 features original work by many of the writers who have helped to make Granta the most widely read literary magazine in the world. Granta has always succeeded when at its boldest and most unpredictable, when it has sought to challenge and confront as well as entertain and inform. In this spirit, the design has been refined and a new front section is being introduced, which includes a letters page that will serve as a forum for readers’ views and opinions. The result is a magazine that carries a timely sense of renewal and possibility as Granta sails on into its second century.
The picture sold me. The stories moved me. These dads aren't the vapid kind on greatest dad mugs and tacky t-shirts. They err and ache and mess up sometimes. All real. Whether fiction or memoir, these selections have that ring of truth. I like when writers make that effort. All do, here.
i loved this. almost every story. it reminded me of what i heard amos oz say in an interview once... that the most personal is the most universal... these are very very personal stories ... not so much about being a father, but about being a child of one
Lots of stories about Fathers...just what I wanted to read over the holiday season... Granta is always a great collection. The one outstanding story was by Justin Torres.
Most of the 24 stories and essays in this issue were about fathers—some kind, some arrogant, some downright scoundrels. I fell in love with Ali Smith’s father Donald Smith, who told her, “When people are dead, graves aren’t where to find them. They’re in the wind, the grass.” I am putting her prize-winning novel “The Accidental” on my ‘to-read’ list. One of the advantages of reading literary journals is being introduced to new authors. Among others, I enjoyed reading “Man and Boy” by Emma Donoghue, a short story about Jumbo, the famous African bull elephant that toured with P. T. Barnum’s circus.
I'm browsing in this remarkable collection. I ordered it from the library because I wanted to read Siri Hustvedt's contribution, "My Father Myself." I have also read "In My Father's Footsteps," by Francesca Segal, "Portrait of My Father," by Jon McGregor, and "Portrait of My Father," by Jonathan Lethem. I've also read and perused a remarkable photo essay on British wrestling, entitled "Wrestlers," by Kevin Cummings and John Naughton. I'll continue to dip into this issue from time to time.
I read most of the selections in this issue of Granta, and found all but the ones I skipped reasonably enjoyable.
A great selection and this time I found myself particular drawn to the non-fiction pieces. Francesca Segal's piece was wonderful - the journey to understand place, to their understand her father, to therefore understand herself. Sometimes Granta hits on a theme that brings the best out of the contributors and this is one.
Another good issue of Granta on the theme of fathers. Especially enjoyed reading the short essays based on particular photos of the specific authors' fathers.
Bought this with the intent of getting some wider reading as part of my English A-Level course. I read a couple of short pieces but otherwise didn't get very far and don't plan to pick it up again.