A review by pattydsf
Mrs. Darcy and the Blue-Eyed Stranger by Lee Smith

3.0

It is so hard to quote from a book of short stories. If the collection is good, as this one is, then how do you pick which story to quote? On top of that, I listened to these tales and so how do I actually write down anything that I enjoyed? For me part of the enjoyment of audiobooks is the narrator and I can’t capture that here.

Lee Smith is a writer I might not have ever discovered if I had stayed in New Jersey, Pennsylvania or any of the other states I lived in before Virginia. I am not saying that she is not known outside of the south. I just had more incentive to read her stories once I moved to Virginia.

First of all, I got to hear Smith speak several times. There is a real joy to meeting writers. With all the writers I have met, I have gotten to make good connections to them and their work. Smith spoke at a local college and at least one library association meeting where I was in attendance.

Secondly, Smith is from Grundy, Virginia. So in my quest to learn about my new home state, I kept encountering her work, her stories about this commonwealth. Then, because of those two factors, I learned that Smith really knows how to tell a story. She has taken me from a river boat trip to Appalachia to a mental hospital and to many humorous family events. I have enjoyed everything that I have read by Lee Smith.

That includes this book of stories. Some of them I was encountering for the second time since this is a collection of old and new stories. Some of them were better than others. I really was glad to hear both Toastmaster and House Tour. Although I would recommend Smith’s novels to someone who had never read Smith before, these stories were entertaining.

If you haven’t tried Smith before, I recommend Oral History and Fair and Tender Ladies. If you like short stories or want to encounter a different side of Ms Smith, then try a few of these.