Short Fiction - R. A. Lafferty

(14 User reviews)   2031
R. A. Lafferty R. A. Lafferty
English
Imagine if Mark Twain and Philip K. Dick got into a whiskey-fueled debate about human nature, and someone wrote down all the strangest bits. That's the feeling you get reading R. A. Lafferty's short fiction. This isn't your typical sci-fi or fantasy. It's something else entirely—a collection of tall tales, twisted myths, and sideways history lessons where the logic feels just slightly off, like a familiar room viewed in a funhouse mirror. The main 'conflict' in most of these stories isn't a hero versus a villain. It's the reader's own sense of reality versus Lafferty's gleeful insistence that the world is weirder, funnier, and more profound than we ever admit. He throws you into worlds where the last Neanderthal might outsmart a corporation, where a man can be haunted by his own future, or where ancient gods show up in modern suburbs. The mystery isn't about 'whodunit,' but about how his bizarre, deceptively simple prose manages to sneak up on you and deliver a philosophical gut-punch when you least expect it. If you're tired of predictable plots and want stories that feel like discovering a secret, slightly insane corner of the library, this collection is your next read.
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Let's be clear: trying to explain the 'plot' of a Lafferty collection is a fool's errand. There is no single story. Instead, you get a carnival of ideas. One minute you're following a man who decides to live his entire life in reverse, starting with his funeral. The next, you're in a world where a new, perfect language is invented, and it changes everything about how people think and act. Or you might meet the 'Ginny Wrapped in the Sun,' a seemingly ordinary woman who might just be a cosmic entity. The stories jump from prehistory to the far future, from Irish pubs to alien landscapes, all told in a voice that feels like a wise, mischievous uncle spinning a yarn.

Why You Should Read It

You should read Lafferty because he makes you see the world differently. His characters aren't heroes in the traditional sense; they're oddballs, cranks, saints, and monsters who operate on their own peculiar logic. Through them, Lafferty pokes at big questions—about progress, faith, greed, and what it means to be human—but he does it with a wink and a sly grin. He's never boring. His sentences are short and punchy, but they build into these incredible, layered pictures. The joy is in the surprise, in the moment where a silly premise suddenly reveals a deep truth, or a profound idea is delivered with a perfect joke. Reading him feels like intellectual play.

Final Verdict

This book is perfect for anyone who feels that most fiction has become too safe and predictable. It's for fans of Kurt Vonnegut or Neil Gaiman who enjoy a darkly comic twist, for science fiction readers tired of sterile futures, and for literary fiction fans open to something genuinely experimental and fun. It's not for readers who want everything neatly explained by the last page. But if you're willing to be confused, charmed, and utterly delighted by a true original, R. A. Lafferty's short stories are a treasure waiting to be found.



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This masterpiece is free from copyright limitations. You can copy, modify, and distribute it freely.

Kevin King
5 months ago

I was skeptical at first, but the depth of research presented here is truly commendable. A true masterpiece.

Daniel Martinez
1 year ago

Read this on my tablet, looks great.

Michelle Torres
1 year ago

A bit long but worth it.

Donna Lewis
5 months ago

The layout is very easy on the eyes.

Donna Williams
1 year ago

Perfect.

5
5 out of 5 (14 User reviews )

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