What a treat it is to read stories that do not seek to reduce the complexity of our lives or the ambiguities of our relationships, intriguing stories that are profound without being heavy. There are eight stories here, some very short, others long, and all worth reading, pondering and then rereading.
Known since the early 1980s as an accomplished poet, Robyn Sarah turns her talents to prose with this collection of short stories, Promise of Shelter. Her first book of fiction, A Nice Gazebo, was published by Véhicule Press, and was an ‘Editor’s Choice’ in Books in Canada. One of the stories included in Promise of Shelter, ‘Accept My Story’, was a Journey Prize Anthology selection. Reviewer Frances Itani singled it out as the work that most engaged her: ‘This is a moving, beautifully crafted story, and the reader is drawn deep into its centre.’ This story also won a National Magazine Award, and was shortlisted in Best American Short Stories 1994.
Promise of Shelter is linked not by a common setting or characters, but by narrative intent. It is storytelling that steers a path between layers of a situation so as to tell two stories at once, setting up a counterpoint between the real and the imagined, the literal and the figurative, the mundane and the spiritual. The stories themselves, with their recurring motif of keys and doors, play variations on the theme of shelter: of security lost and found, refuge sought and denied. Details accumulate and interact like chords in music, ordinary events and objects have the resonance of signs and omens, and ordinary lives brush the margins of their own vulnerability even as they affirm their resilience.