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How High? - That High: Stories

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Diane Williams, an American master of the short story who will "rewire your brain" (NPR), is back with a collection in which she once again expands the possibilities of fiction.

These stories depict ordinary moments - a visit to the doctor's office or a married couple's hundredth dance together - but within the quotidian, Williams delivers a lifetime of insecurities, lusts, rejections, and revelations, making her work equally discomfiting and amusing. With unmatched wit in every sentence, Williams captures whole universes in a story, delivering visionary insights into what it means to be human.

Williams' devotees will be newly enthralled by her elegantly strange, bewitching stories in How High?-That High. Those who have yet to meet "the godmother of flash fiction" (The Paris Review) will find an extraordinary introduction in this book.

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First published October 12, 2021

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About the author

Diane Williams

95 books151 followers
Diane Williams is an American author, primarily of short stories. She lives in New York City and is the founder and editor of the literary annual NOON (est. 2000). She has published 8 books and taught at Bard College, Syracuse University and The Center for Fiction in New York City.

Her books have been reviewed in many publications, including the New York Times Book Review ("An operation worthy of a master spy, a double agent in the house of fiction") and The Los Angeles Times ("One of America's most exciting violators of habit is [Diane] Williams…the extremity that Williams depicts and the extremity of the depiction evoke something akin to the pity and fear that the great writers of antiquity considered central to literature. Her stories, by removing you from ordinary literary experience, place you more deeply in ordinary life. 'Isn't ordinary life strange?' they ask, and in so asking, they revivify and console”).

Jonathan Franzen describes her as "one of the true living heroes of the American avant-garde. Her fiction makes very familiar things very, very weird." Ben Marcus suggested that her "outrageous and ferociously strange stories test the limits of behavior, of manners, of language, and mark Diane Williams as a startlingly original writer worthy of our closest attention."

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5 stars
24 (9%)
4 stars
35 (14%)
3 stars
77 (31%)
2 stars
68 (27%)
1 star
39 (16%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 63 reviews
Profile Image for Roxane.
Author 129 books168k followers
September 15, 2021
A bit too inscrutable for me.
Profile Image for Teresa.
Author 9 books1,026 followers
November 8, 2021
I’ve said this before and I’ll say it again: I so wish I liked understood this kind of flash fiction.

I chose this Advance Uncopyedited Edition via a giveaway. Before I started it, someone who’d put the author’s name out as a potential Nobel Prize winner (among many, many names) advised that if I was bewildered to just keep reading. He said he’s read and reread four of her collections and loves them all for the language. I kept his advice in mind, but none of the language reached that level for me.

I got along better with the last several stories. Were they different than the earlier ones or had I become used to her style? I can’t be bothered to reread them to figure that out and I think I’ll put Diane Williams in the same category I put Lydia Davis: Not for me.
Profile Image for Kaleigh Basso.
186 reviews86 followers
June 2, 2022
Imagine, for a moment, that a Sim character learned how to write in English. The Sim is still a Sim, with all its disjointed thoughts and feelings, but now the words are in a language we can understand rather than Simlish.

That was how I felt reading this book.

I don’t understand a single thing I just read and the reading experience was so wildly unpleasant that I had to reread quite a few passages just to be sure that I had as bad a time as I thought I did. This collection gaslit me.

Hated every second ❤️
Profile Image for R.C..
209 reviews
November 9, 2021
I was initially excited to secure a copy of this title off of my library’s ARC table, but after about 30 pages I closed it with no intention of continuing. All of the flash fictions I did read either concerned people experiencing relationship issues, or situations so obliquely described that I couldn’t grasp stories in them at all. None of the works moved me, and I found the tone of Williams’ writing to be at once chaotic and dispassionate. Which, I must say, is confusing, as a blurb from the London Review of Books praises one of her works with, “Readers who love the arresting phrase, the surprising word, will gravitate to her.” I do indeed love those things—but only when combined with sense. Here, sadly, the author’s words did not arrest, grasp, or even interest me. Clearly she has a base of readers, and I hope they enjoy this latest work where I was unable to.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
194 reviews21 followers
August 10, 2021
These flash fiction shorts are simultaneously engaging and disquieting. They are the briefest of glimpses into situations that are somehow familiar and uncomfortable. While I am not sure that I “enjoyed” this, I kept turning the pages and am glad that I did.
Profile Image for Jim Coughenour.
Author 4 books227 followers
November 5, 2021
After Fine, Fine, Fine, Fine, Fine and The Collected Stories of Diane Williams, it was time to stop. But who can resist another box of candy even when you know you’ve had enough? Even the box is irresistible.

These stories – well, they’re not quite stories, they’re flash fictions as in hot flash – all tumble together, indistinguishable in their antic observations. They have the explosive energy of improvisations. Start with a title or an opening phrase, a fragment or embattled impression, then let rip for two minutes. Some make almost no sense but the syntax never fails. Sentences snap and twist and pop and die tiny humiliating deaths. Impossible to feel anything for any of the characters – well, they’re not quite characters either, just scabrous names – but a kind of horrified hilarity in what’s happening, and then it’s over.
Profile Image for Christopher Robinson.
175 reviews128 followers
October 11, 2022
How High?—That High is a thoroughly beguiling collection. Not since Greg Mulcahy’s Out Of Work: Stories have I been so simultaneously baffled by and in love with a story collection. I know Diane Williams’ stories aren’t for everybody (what is, really?), but they are certainly for me. These strange, beautiful little pearls will be rattling around in my head for a very long time, and no doubt I’ll return to them often.

Best read aloud for maximum appreciation, as the prose is musical and poetic above all else.

If you’re looking for stories with a clear narrative arc, plots that resolve satisfyingly, deep characterization… look elsewhere.

But for the prose-obsessives who love to wonder, this gets my highest recommendation.

My favorites from this collection:

Upper Loop
Thanks, Dot
I Sure I Love And I Really
With This New Greasiness
Finished Being
Secretly Try
How High?—That High
Tale Of Human Adventure
It’s So Effortful
Making Splendid
Outcome
Popping
Stick
One Muggy Spring
Master Of The Blast
Profile Image for Miki.
845 reviews17 followers
May 7, 2023
I love short stories and flash/micro fiction, so I requested Diane Williams' flash fiction collection from NetGalley (many, many moons ago) but was declined. No worries though: I found it on Scribd. I have been anticipating this collection and FINALLY blocked some time to sit and enjoy this. Unfortunately, I didn't enjoy it. I was disappointed by it.

Williams is renown for her flash fiction, so I did approach it with some expectations. But this collection of 34 flash fiction entries was a fail for me. Many of these entries aren't even flash fiction stories but rather vignettes. What bothers me most about flash fiction and short stories is that many writers don't actually present readers with a complete story (with a beginning, middle, and end). While I can appreciate that some writers write outside/challenge the genre, these flash fiction "stories" weren't trying to challenge the genre, and I felt confused as to why Williams wrote what she did. This is essentially a (slightly disjointed) group of vignettes, and I'm sorry to say that I'm not impressed and not a fan.

What I can rave about is the writing. Williams' writing is fantastic! But I'd prefer to read something from her that is either actual flash fiction (with a beginning, middle, and end) or something that is a longer work of fiction that includes a complete story (with a beginning, middle, and end).

Lastly, I loved the narrator...But not enough to make this collection more than a 2-star read for me.

[Audiobook, Scribd]
Profile Image for Nate D.
1,648 reviews1,247 followers
July 1, 2025
Diane Williams is as capable as always of producing astonishing sentence pairings and shifting ordinary interactions into odd spaces of insight, but after returning to her a few times, I'm getting a bit of a diminishing returns feeling with this approach. It may be a flash fiction problem, as it's a form I'm never very drawn to, but conversely the equally short pieces in Joy Williams' latest are having much more impact. Perhaps its the sense of thematic cohesion across instances; my favorite Diane Williams remains her novella-in-fragments The Stupefaction. These however just blink into being, hover a moment refracting tiny moments, then disappear.
Profile Image for Loring Wirbel.
374 reviews99 followers
January 1, 2022
So I have this 750-page monster anthology of Diane Williams from 2018, which I swear I will review in Goodreads if I ever finish it. For the past three years, I've been dipping into the ultra-short stories and flash fiction as though they were koans or fables, expecting guides for life while receiving imponderable shockers. Now comes a shorter and easier to digest 117-page work of Williams' most recent stories. I can treat micro-miniature stories like "Finished Being" and "Upper Loop" as though they were small, fast-acting hallucinogens, perhaps meant to teach me something larger about life, or perhaps signifying nothing at all. My daughter picked this up and read a few stories in utter bewilderment and wonder. Williams wants to serve as a pointer to things often left unseen or unsaid, but what is she pointing to? There are times that she wants to manipulate the humans she describes as if they were pieces of furniture, but that may be less of a ruthless inconsideration, and more of an observation that understanding and empathy may not be all we think it is. This short book left me with a hearty "WTF?!," and a desire to one day finish that large and confusing Collected Stories.
Profile Image for Michelle.
2 reviews
August 9, 2024
This was my introduction to Diane Williams (aside from one or two stories read online), and I have to say, I didn't love this. I admire Williams' ability to inject energy and momentum into her syntax. And, like Lydia Davis, she has a talent for obscuring mundane situations. But I felt like I was on the outside of an exclusive club... I wanted so badly to "get" these stories, but most of them bewildered me. Though I'll admit the last few in this collection had more traction than the rest.

I celebrate Williams' wordplay and invention in her sentences, but I don't believe we need to sacrifice story and accessibility in order to be ambitious and experimental at the sentence and word levels.

I have her Collected Stories queued for later reading, so my opinions here are likely to evolve!
Profile Image for kalyx.
35 reviews69 followers
May 10, 2022
were i hackish i'd here jot something like 'lydia davis filtered through david markson' but i'm (i hope) no hack. williams halts herself before davis would, leaps between paragraphs thrice as far as markson; she sweeps her partners' feet from the dancefloor and keeps superhuman tempo. ha! she cries, swooping into her bow, the music not yet at its coda: i finished miles ahead of you lot.
Profile Image for Alia Davis.
115 reviews
August 3, 2022
In the words of another review - this book is like if a Sim gained consciousness and wrote a novel. I have no idea what was said in any of these stories. Like at all. I know nothing. What happened in any of these short stories? I could not tell you a single thing. Maybe I’m a little too stupid for flash fiction like this? The one blessing Diane gifted to readers is the book’s brevity. Thanks shawty. I had to reread every single sentence. I feel like this book gaslit me.
Profile Image for Bena.
46 reviews1 follower
February 22, 2023
I would more give this 2.5 stars, not really my thing maybe because I’m not ‘smart’ enough. When I’m reading for pleasure I like to read things I understand immediately and that’s why I often reject poetry and these short stories read a lot like poetry. That said there Is good stuff in here that I enjoyed!!
Profile Image for Stephen Mortland.
17 reviews24 followers
August 23, 2022

There is the temptation to say a Diane Williams story is a Diane Williams story is a Diane Williams story—that you could take a story from an early collection and set it next to one of these later stories and have two more or less analogous stories. This reputation is a direct result of Williams’ style being so singular and distinct right out of the gate. Still though, I think these late stories depart from early approaches in interesting ways.
They are even more pared down, even as they open wider. If the early stories were often linguistically claustrophobic, the stories in How High That High seem more at peace with their confinement, the loosening of a particular psychological fixation so that the world at large is more curiously engaged.
The route into the world is still through language. With Williams it is always more than mere syntactic control, her unique voice marries the rhythm of speech and of internal monologue, while also rejecting these rhythms in favor of something more concrete. She languages as if her character’s psychologies reside in their throats. The slightly off-kilter quality of the prose is not mere fetishizing of style, but tips of the psychological hand, gestures towards the intentions, desires, and shames the narrators keep hidden from themselves.
I could go on about new approaches this collection takes toward figurative language (moments that directly symbolic, even as they swerve away from the subject of the symbolism), or about the many turns of phrase which stopped me cold. All in all though, another stunner from Diane Williams.
Profile Image for Baz.
353 reviews391 followers
November 13, 2022
Roxane Gay read this collection and has one sentence on it on Goodreads: ‘A bit too inscrutable for me.’

Fair enough!

Williams is highly idiosyncratic, and these stories are enigmatic little puzzle boxes that take sharp turns from one sentence to the next. She won’t be for most readers.

Williams is tricky, the stories “thumb their nose at conventional sense, or even unconventional sense.” However I don’t feel that Williams is cold or that her work is closed-off. On the contrary, I feel like she’s inviting me to play. There is always clearly something specific going on, and we the readers are thrust into a character’s predicament or state of mind, and it’s up to us to interpret the possibilities.

She’s jaunty, sly, witty and charming. The prose is brisk and clean, her touch light. This makes the stories easy to gulp down, which is dangerous because you exit them with much having flown over your head. But I personally don’t mind that. I enjoy reading these stories mostly for their aesthetic properties, and I read them quickly – though some of them I did read several times.
Profile Image for Tan Clare.
737 reviews10 followers
March 1, 2022
Flash fiction is a specific sub-genre of the short story, taking the genre limitations to the extreme, in coming up with narrative and characters who leave a momentary yet deep imprint on the reader, much like an arresting photograph. Some of the pieces here do manage to pull it off brillantly (that "Usually birds appear to know what they are doing" in "Flowers, birds and garden", was able to pull narrative perfection in speaking volumes just within a final concluding line), other stories not so riveting, as with the usual problem with any short story collection. I suppose there are some limitation we cannot transcend no matter what.
Profile Image for Lucy Bruemmer.
231 reviews3 followers
February 27, 2023
This may be the worst book I have ever read. I didn’t understand the style at all, but even if I did, I think I would have to reread every chapter three or four times to even know what happened in it. It was as if every single sentence was a standalone sentence and nothing strung together. It felt like reading a puzzle that was not yet put together into a story. I was utterly confused the whole time and found myself completely distracted. The only time I was focused at all was when sex was mentioned and it was done in super weird ways. Even with not understanding this book, the vibes were off. All of the characters seems depressed and miserable with their lives. Who likes to read this?
Profile Image for Benjy.
91 reviews8 followers
October 20, 2021
Another banger from our gal, Diane. As usual, the stories are about a page or two and use some freaky version of English that makes knotty twists at the least likely moments. More often than not, the stories are funny. They always read like prose poetry, with that same kind of deliberate density associated with much of the genre but with a bigger payoff, I think. A little less light than her earlier work but a great place to start with Diane Williams if you don't have the daring to take on the Collected volume.
162 reviews1 follower
March 16, 2022
I am intrigued by the idea of very short fiction. This collection of stories Is a good representation with each story being just a few pages, with many under five pages. The challenge of it of course is how to make it matter. What is the significance of a three page story? The task of communicating directly with the reader and letting the reader in on the subjectivity of the author is a difficult one. I did not feel the day and Williams achieved that for this reader.
Profile Image for jonah.
103 reviews
August 30, 2023
“To enjoy the situation will be an effort of a lifetime.”

“The hands of the market vendors were much more expressive than our hands—the hands we have at home. For example, when taking up a piece of merchandise, those vendors’ hands could feel and hold at the same time.”

“She is a clerk—but why does she so easily give in when people prove her wrong? She pays bills, does filing and cannot recognize that she is capable of making beautiful mistakes.”
Profile Image for BookBrowse.
1,751 reviews59 followers
January 31, 2025
Reading Diane Williams' How High? -- That High is like when you're walking in the mall or down an aisle in the supermarket and you overhear an argument or a strange conversation. It's not polite to linger, yet you can't help but wonder what else was said and how it ended.
-Rory L. Aronsky

Read the full review at: https://www.bookbrowse.com/mag/review...
Profile Image for Robert Morgan Fisher.
725 reviews21 followers
December 17, 2021
The Godmother of Flash Fiction. Such a nice surprise to find this book following publication of her collected stories. But like all talented writers, Williams just keeps creating—and I'm grateful. These stories are so tight and concise. Williams is one of those writers I read and re-read, always discovering new levels. There's really no one like her.
Profile Image for David.
430 reviews11 followers
December 24, 2021
In the evenings, I'm also rereading Future Shock, Fox knows why. Williams's oracular short stories are a tasty, weird complement to Tofler's grand pronouncements.
Profile Image for Mike Ehlers.
557 reviews3 followers
February 11, 2023
Found this browsing my library's shelves. I enjoy flash fiction I've found online so thought I'd give this a try. I actually think I would have enjoyed it more if the stories were even shorter. Don't get me wrong, I really enjoyed several of the stories. But too many others felt incomplete or had too many shifting points of view.
Profile Image for David.
19 reviews1 follower
April 24, 2023
Some authors wear rollnecks, others wear leotards. Diane Williams has been called a master of the short short story, but she’s really an acrobat of the sudden surprising sentence. There are sentences here that swoop down on you, sentences you didn’t see coming, sentences that punch you in the face. You’ll need a drink and a place to lie down afterwards.
Profile Image for Gurldoggie.
507 reviews6 followers
March 12, 2024
A collection of very odd and very short stories, some only a paragraph and none longer than 3 pages. Most deal with love, sex and disappointment in terse, jarring, unexpected language. Some of the stories I read 5 times without quite wrapping my head around, others hit so hard they left me gasping. Worth reading more.
158 reviews1 follower
July 31, 2025
The reviews about the author were fabulous, promising a treasure trove, but all I found inside the book was artsy and dramatically enigmatic.it felt like it was written by a lit. professor who ‘wanted to work a blue collar job’ for the true experience, but quit after lunch and then wrote about it anyway. Not so deep.
Profile Image for Idalis.
60 reviews2 followers
October 4, 2025
I really wanted to like this collection and there were maybe a total of two of the stories that I really enjoyed but I felt like it just wasn’t clear enough for me. I understand flash fiction short stories, they don’t wanna just say the point straight up, but This might be a little too obscure for me to understand. I just wish I knew what she was talking about.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 63 reviews

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