It might be a while before I enjoy a collection of stories as much as I liked this.
This collection of short stories by Stan Barstow, relatively famous for his "kitchen sink" "Brit-lit" tales about the grittiness of real life, was easy to read but poignant and full of depth.
Most of the stories, written between 1961 and 1984, are set in an imaginary but very real Yorkshire town. The characters are working-class or middle-class and the stories cover the realities of daily life whether they be work, imperfect relationships, sex, family struggles, money issues, hopes, dreams and failures or any/all of those things that, while specifically set in the post-austerity years through the 1970's of Northern England. They aren't morality tales, there are generally no real winners or losers, there are some twists but nothing outlandish. Just realistic tales about people in a certain time and place that should still ring true for many peoples' lives today.
At nearly 700 pages, I was a bit apprehensive to dive in, but now I've finished I wish there were another 700 still to go. A real joy of a book.