Book description
In The Girl in the Flammable Skirt Aimee Bender has created a world where nothing is quite as it seems. From a man suffering from reverse evolution to a lonely wife who waits for her husband to return from war; to a small town where one girl has a hand…
Why read it?
4 authors picked The Girl in the Flammable Skirt as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
Before I began to write my own cycle of flash fiction and microfiction, I decided to study virtuosos of the form. Bender’s book was my first encounter with fast fiction. Her surreal, emotionally raw flashes and short-shorts walk a tightrope between the absurd and the profound. Her characters often exist in dreamlike states—wearing prosthetic arms, dating monsters, or grieving through magical realism. These compact stories don’t just surprise; they haunt.
As a novelist who leans towards conventional storytelling, I found this book foundational for taking risks to be weird and brief.
From Gail's list on fast fiction that linger longer than novels.
Aimee Bender takes you on a wild and emotional ride with stories that are as resonant as they are magical. Whether you’re reading about a woman whose husband is undergoing reverse evolution or about the sisters with hands of fire and ice, no matter how exotic Bender’s premises might seem, there is always, at their core, something utterly human.
From Andrew's list on imagine how weird the universe can be.
This was one of the books (along with Anthony Doerr’s The Shell Collector) that inspired me to pursue fiction writing rather than poetry.
For the longest time, poetry was my preferred genre, and while I had dabbled in writing fiction, I struggled. It wasn’t until reading The Girl in the Flammable Skirt near the end of my undergrad that I realized fiction doesn’t have to be straight realism—it can be magical, strange, symbolic, weird, fabulist, dreamlike.
Two of Bender’s stories that had the most impact on me were “The Rememberer,” where the narrator’s lover experiences reverse evolution,” and “Drunken…
From Jacqueline's list on magical realism by women writers.
If you love The Girl in the Flammable Skirt...
My father’s neurologist described Alzheimer’s as “a real weird city.” It was as apt a description as I’ve found. This collection of magical, strange, and hilarious short stories kept me company as I navigated the shifting landscape of Dad’s illness. At that time, I could not have found a better reflection of my own stew of emotions than the “reverse evolution” chronicled in the first story in the book. “The Rememberer” saved me. Bender’s graceful tale of the acceptance of inevitable loss is suffused with love, and the way her writing lets imagination spring the bonds of reality encouraged me…
From Tanya's list on alzheimer’s caregivers.
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