Iza Brekilien's Reviews > The Doll: Short Stories
The Doll: Short Stories
by
by

Iza Brekilien's review
bookshelves: classics-and-modern-classics, great-britain, favourite-authors, novella-short-stories
May 04, 2020
bookshelves: classics-and-modern-classics, great-britain, favourite-authors, novella-short-stories
Reviewed for
Usually, when you pick a book of short stories, there are a few stories you really love, others that are good, others that you don't care about. What struck me about these short stories is that I loved them all ! Well, maybe not adored Mazie's first appearance - not that I didn't like it, just that this kind of story had been told before, though I loved the narrative. Until I got to the second Mazie story, that was so poignant I still feel bad for her. A third story and what would she have become ?...
Anyway, back to the point : I was surprised at how much I was captivated by those stories. They were written by Daphne du Maurier when she was very young (except the last one in my edition, The limpet, that was awesome), but let me tell you she already had an amazing talent back then ! I loved her sense of humour, I really laughed several times. I found her creepiness disturbing (yes, some stories were creepy, especially when you think about her and her father/mother). I loved how she could make us dive so very quickly into a situation with well drawn characters. The one about the hidden house in the woods was... eerie ? Prophetic ? Like she knew she would find Menabilly one day ?
There has never been a book of short stories that I annotated so much before. As I said, I didn't expect to be absorbed by it as much as I was and can only recommend it, very strongly, to you !
Usually, when you pick a book of short stories, there are a few stories you really love, others that are good, others that you don't care about. What struck me about these short stories is that I loved them all ! Well, maybe not adored Mazie's first appearance - not that I didn't like it, just that this kind of story had been told before, though I loved the narrative. Until I got to the second Mazie story, that was so poignant I still feel bad for her. A third story and what would she have become ?...
Anyway, back to the point : I was surprised at how much I was captivated by those stories. They were written by Daphne du Maurier when she was very young (except the last one in my edition, The limpet, that was awesome), but let me tell you she already had an amazing talent back then ! I loved her sense of humour, I really laughed several times. I found her creepiness disturbing (yes, some stories were creepy, especially when you think about her and her father/mother). I loved how she could make us dive so very quickly into a situation with well drawn characters. The one about the hidden house in the woods was... eerie ? Prophetic ? Like she knew she would find Menabilly one day ?
There has never been a book of short stories that I annotated so much before. As I said, I didn't expect to be absorbed by it as much as I was and can only recommend it, very strongly, to you !
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Reading Progress
August 24, 2019
– Shelved
August 24, 2019
– Shelved as:
to-read
August 24, 2019
– Shelved as:
classics-and-modern-classics
April 4, 2020
– Shelved as:
great-britain
May 2, 2020
–
Started Reading
May 3, 2020
–
16.91%
"After the madness and passion of the first two stories, here comes a most unusual vicar ^^"
page
35
May 4, 2020
–
54.59%
"She's amazing, having written those stories when she was so young 😮"
page
113
May 4, 2020
–
Finished Reading
May 7, 2020
– Shelved as:
favourite-authors
May 7, 2020
– Shelved as:
novella-short-stories