inanaloglife's review

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fast-paced

3.0

snoakes7001's review

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5.0

Mainstream is an anthology of writing from underrepresented authors. The publisher Inkandescant has the tagline "by outsiders for outsiders" so maybe I am not quite their target audience. But one of the reasons I read is to experience the world as others see it, to challenge my thinking and to learn. And so I think there is something in this collection for everyone. All are well written and interesting and as with any anthology some resonate with you more than others, some leave you wanting more and the best send you scurrying to find more by that author. My personal favourites were:

The Beach by Hedy Hume
Going Up, Going Down by Nathan Evans
Twickenham by Neil Bartlett
Pixmalion by Polis Loizou
Sunday by Philip Ridley

stephbookshine's review

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5.0

*I received a free ARC of this anthology with thanks to Justin and Nathan at Inkandescent. The decision to review and my opinions are my own.*

Mainstream is a stunning anthology of own voice short stories, containing fifteen stories from established authors, and fifteen from lesser-known names.

The only theme of the collection is just that – that the authors all have life experiences of living in the margins and at the edges – which means that the collection is one of the most diverse I have ever read, in every sense of the word. Each writer produces their own, unique story, unrelated to those that come before or after. You will find elements of fantasy, sci fi, horror, romance – any aspect of the human experience you can name may be found within these pages.

What unites these stories, beyond their authors, is that each is exceptionally well-written and represents a small, perfectly-captured moment in time. These are not stories to be gobbled down greedily all in one sitting, or galloped through thoughtlessly on the run. These are stories to be savoured, to take time over, to absorb mindfully and feel under your skin. They are stories to be returned to again and again, each time finding a new detail, a new flavour, that you missed before.

My personal favourite was the surreal fever-dream of ‘Sunday’ by Philip Ridley, but actually there wasn’t a single entry that I didn’t enjoy and admire, and nearly every story lingered with me after reading, leaving me mulling over the depths and the details, the emotions and experiences.

I recommend this anthology to anyone who enjoys the short story format, or who would like to try an exemplary sample of such stories. Also to anyone who has ever read a story and felt unrepresented, misunderstood, left out. Anyone who wants to broaden their horizons and experience a different perspective from their own familiar, comfortable daily view. And anyone who just loves a well-crafted story – there really is something for every palate!



'I walk across the shingle to the scene of the crime—No, not across ‘shingle’. Gravel! I’m on a side street in East London, not a beach in Brighton. I wish I was on a beach in Brighton. The weather’s so hot, iguanas are falling from the trees. Not that East London has iguanas. Or has it? Everything changes so fast these days. You go to sleep in one world and wake up in—
‘You can’t go beyond this point, sir!’
I’ve been stopped by a policeman.'

– Philip Ridley, ‘Sunday’ in Mainstream


Review by Steph Warren of Bookshine and Readbows blog
https://bookshineandreadbows.wordpress.com/2021/07/09/blog-tour-mainstream-an-anthology-of-stories-from-the-edges-ed-justin-david-and-nathan-evans/
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