Willful Creatures

 
4.0 based on 11 reviews.

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Paperback Book, 224 pages

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Product Description

Aimee Bender’s Willful Creatures conjures a fantastical world in which authentic love blooms. This is a place where a boy with keys for fingers is a hero, a woman’s children are potatoes, and a little boy with an iron for a head is born to a family of pumpkin heads. With her singular mix of surrealism, musical prose, and keenly felt emotion, Bender once again proves herself to be a masterful chronicler of the human condition.

Product Details

  • Media: Paperback Book, 224 pages
  • Publisher: Anchor (August 08, 2006)
  • ISBN-10: 0385720971
  • ISBN-13: 9780385720977
  • Dimensions: 5.2 x 7.8 x 0.63 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.57 lbs
  • Note: Some of this information came from Amazon.com

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Customer Reviews

  • Rating The Brothers Grimm Meet Contemporary Life: 4+ Stars  Aug 20, 2005 (19 of 21 found this helpful)

    Aimee Bender's stories are the contemporary descendents of those of the Brothers Grimm, with their surrealism laid on top of human desire and need. In both her previous collection, The Girl in the Flammable Skirt, and this newest one, Willful Creatures, her fiction adopts the tone of fairytales through the straightforward storytelling of the bizarre. Instead of a sausage growing on the end of a nose, Bender gives us potato children and a captive miniature man. Instead of a wicked stepmother, she conjures a collective group of predatory teenage girls. The "willful creatures" of the title take over and change the lives of the people who discover them. While some of these creatures have irons for heads or are made of glass or have keys for fingers, many appear, at least superficially, as ordinary people living routine lives.

    One of the most memorable stories is "End of the Line," where a big man buys a little man from a pet shop, keeps him in a cage with a television and sofa, and commits unspeakable cruelties. "The Meeting" starts out like a Talking Heads song of the late 1970s: "The woman he met. He met a woman. This woman was the woman he met." From this staccato, inane beginning, the story develops the theme of ruined expectations and how they can evolve, without warning, into powerful emotions. "Dearth" is the story of a childless woman who discovers a pot of persistent, magical potatoes that grow into children. In "The Case of the Salt and Pepper Shakers," the narrator, a crime investigator, is less concerned with how a husband and wife killed each other at the same moment than he is with the mysterious collection of fourteen salt and pepper shakers he finds in their house.

    Readers won't confuse Bender's work with anyone else's. Her inventive plots, coupled with no-nonsense language, result in swiftly told tales. To Bender, contemporary life is as mysterious as words made of xenon, and yet she manages to give us glimpses of raw emotional truth. Staunch realists and literalists might find themselves left cold by Bender's unconventional fiction, but those willing to accept a stark, matter-of-fact surrealism will be enchanted.

  • Rating the strange and amazing mind of...  Sep 6, 2005 (14 of 15 found this helpful)

    This collection is darker than Aimee Bender's first. It contains a few stories in her "signature" fairy tale/magical realist style, including one featuring a family with pumpkin and clothes-iron heads and one about a boy with a hand made of keys (whose destiny unfolds as he discovers which lock fits each). But my favorite here are less twisted with symbolism. "Debbieland" is layered with anger and desire, and she deftly uses the first person plural to reveal just how disconnected the narrator is from herself. "Off" is angry too: it may or may not star the heiress character we met in The Girl In The Flammable Skirt, an idle and beautiful woman partial to inappropriately dressy couture who finds herself in infuriating and embarrassing situations when she tries to elicit attention from men. In "Off" she decides to collect kisses from three men chosen by hair color, and finds herself confronted with the unfinished buisness of her last relationship; by the end of the story this haughty and self-confident woman is reduced to hiding in the coat closet with a pile of coats, hoping that the man she "doesn't love" will come and find her there.

    Aimee Bender is still growing and developing as a writer, and this book is a fascinating look into her maturing voice. She's always been adept, original, witty, and strange. Now she's finding her depth. I expect great things to come from her.

  • Rating This quirky, surreal short-story collection is perfect!  Oct 11, 2005 (8 of 10 found this helpful)

    This is one of the strangest short-story collections I have ever read. Then again, I had come to expect that from the author of the brilliant short-fiction book The Girl in the Flammable Skirt. Now Aimee Bender writes some rather dark, strange and disarming stories in Willful Creatures that will truly shock you and keep you thinking long after you finish reading each story. The characters are nameless, unflinching in their actions and quite unlikeable, doing things that will repel and compel you at the same time. From bad parents, shameless seducers and abusers who target upon the weak, this collection has it all. My favorite stories are "The Leading Man," "Debbieland," "Dearth," "The Meeting," and "End of the Line." All of the stories are amazing, but the aforementioned ones stood out the most for me. I marvel at Bender's writing style. She reminds me a great deal of Amanda Filipacchi in that she mixes the outlandish with the mundane in an astonishing, hilarious twist. Are you in the bargain for some literary and surreal short stories? I recommend you read Willful Creatures. And give The Girl in the Flammable Skirt a whirl while you're at it.

  • Rating Bender Bliss  Apr 27, 2006 (6 of 6 found this helpful)

    I love the works of Aimee Bender. Willful Creatures proves that Bender does not stale with age, but get better and better and better. I recommend all her works, of course, but I believe Willfucl Creatures to be her best. A MUST READ for all fans of magical realism, stories about relationships and/or heartache, or just good stories in general. An evening spent with Aimee Bender is an evening spent in bliss.

  • Rating 5 STARS???????!!!!!!!!  Mar 7, 2006 (5 of 34 found this helpful)

    I think this tops my list for the worst books I've ever read. I enjoy fantasy type books...and weird kind of stuff...but this was just plain stupid and sophmoric. I could have written a better book than this and I don't have ANY writing skills. GOD!!! This was worse than awful. 0 stars would be more like it, but they didn't have that as an option. STUPID, STUPID, STUPID...DUMB, DUMB, DUMB. If you want to read a really weird, but interesting book...read "Geek Love"...it is WAY OUT THERE, but at least there is a plot to the story. I mean it was REALLY WEIRD...but it was good, as long as you know what it's about before you start. Pass on "Willful Creatures". I put this book in the "used" book rack at the hotel where I was staying. It was gone by that afternoon, and back in the rack by the next morning...with a page corner turned down (to mark their place) about 1/4 of the way through the little, tiny book. At least I forced myself to finish it...this unsuspecting reader couldn't hold out any longer...I should have done the same thing.

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