Reviews

Only the Broken Remain by Dan Coxon

history_bot's review

Go to review page

4.0

Short stories are tough—for writers as well as readers. With only a little time to make an impact, many end up falling flat and forgettable. Thankfully for us readers, Dan Coxon knocks it out of the park with the short stories in Only The Broken Remain, his collection of dark and disturbing fiction featuring the downtrodden of the world.

There are several stand-outs amongst these fourteen stories, not least of which is the opener, "Stanislav in Foxtown." In it, an immigrant works day in and day out at a local chicken joint, until he befriends some foxes that live in the area. Stan and his foxes grab your attention immediately, and the descriptions in this story are indicative of the amazing prose that permeates the entire collection. Not every story landed for me, though. Particularly towards the middle of the collection, I found that some stories didn't commit to their premises, and the ending was a little too vague.

Without a doubt, I'd have to say that my favorite story was "No One's Child," a story about a young English girl who is sent to the country during the London air raids who finds a creature in her guardian's cellar. The descriptions in this story, the setting, and the absolute brutality were absolutely phenomenal and this is a story that will stick with me for awhile.

This is an all-the-good-bits abbreviated review. For my full review, check out my blog.

Disclaimer: the author provided me a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
More...