Chose this book to read as part of Reading Around the World Challenge. It has been hard finding books from some of the countries in translation, and with Australia we finally had a plethora from which to choose. Malouf is touted as the next potential Nobel winner from Australia, so after much consideration we chose his Complete Stories, and it was a good choice. A lot of books clang along with bumps and swerves, telling a story being the only consideration; Malouf's work is a sports car sailing smoothly along the highway, taking stops to observe the scenery, sit in contemplation, see the landscape. His strength lies in his insights, his compassion, and his curiosity in inhabiting different people. For instance, a minor character in a story is said to have left behind her life to move to the country with her pastor husband; she is adrift without much to anchor her intelligence, which she had leaned on and moved toward so much, that she was left unsteady. The first story takes us on a fateful hunting trip, in which the boys become men in the Australian outback, and a little boy who is asked to join along despite his father's disinterest, and how he inserts himself into a large group with his friend's family and sheds his skin is both interesting and realistic. Another story follows an old woman whose son has taken her on a holiday to Red Rock, and the visitors that haunt her. Malouf moves frequently through the lives of soldiers on leave or back from a conflict, or in one memorable story readying himself to leave for one. His people are ordinary but graceful in their own way. This book has way too many stories to read at one go, unfortunately; I would read it again in short bursts, to take down every couple of weeks or so and read a few stories. A lot of the stories are very short, many have the same themes, and there are a lot of stories. I recommend this to anyone who enjoys insight and writing that rises about the ordinary and normal.