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One Sun Only: Stories

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A stunning collection of stories exploring love and art, luck and loss, from the “invaluable” (George Saunders) author of How to Behave in a Crowd and The Material

A young woman takes stock after the burglary of her apartment. A teenager becomes obsessed with the obituaries in a weekly magazine. Grandchildren mourn the grandparents who loved them and the grandparents who didn’t. Painters and almost-painters try to distinguish Good Art from Bad Art. People grapple with life-altering illness, unrequited love, and promises they have every intention of keeping. Some win the lottery. Others don’t.

In these sinewy, thoughtful stories, celebrated New Yorker contributor Camille Bordas delves into the mysteries of life, death, and all that happens in between. At once darkly funny and poignantly self-aware, Bordas’s writing offers a window into our shared, flawed humanity without insisting on a perfect understanding of our experiences.

With her first collection, which gathers previously unpublished stories alongside work originally featured in The New Yorker and The Paris Review, Bordas cements her reputation as a master of the form.

304 pages, Hardcover

Published January 27, 2026

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About the author

Camille Bordas

12 books237 followers
Camille Bordas est née à Lyon, en 1987. Elle a passé son enfance au Mexique et vit maintenant à Paris. Elle est étudiante en anthropologie.
En 2009, elle a été remarquée par la critique avec la parution de son premier roman, Les treize desserts, pour lequel elle a reçu la Bourse Thyde Monnier de la SGDL et le Prix du Livre du département du Rhône.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 71 reviews
Profile Image for Ten Cats Reading.
1,398 reviews313 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 5, 2026
Pre-Read Notes: I love short fiction collections and this title appealed.

Final Review

"There are posters of famous, good-looking women over some beds, to give the girls who pinned them courage, Eugene assumes. They go to sleep telling themselves they’ll look like this one day, maybe at the end of camp. In Eugene’s dorm, some boys have taped pictures of the same famous, good-looking women over their beds, and they fall asleep thinking maybe one day they’ll look good enough that a similar girl will like them. It strikes Eugene that no one dreams of boys." p120, "Beyond"

A word about the essays:

1. "One Sun Only" - A story about how family systems absorb grief. ⭐⭐⭐⭐

2. "Most Die Young" - "A foreign language having a single word to define something that they would need a whole sentence to express in their mother tongue would also be, conversely, a pleasure -giving piece of information. Highly quotable. That’s why everyone knows about Schadenfreude and how the Inuit have forty-something words for snow. That’s why, even though I don’t know much about Japan, I do know that the Japanese have a word for one of my habits, which is to buy books, pile them up, and never read them (tsundoku)." p31 I love a really good story about words. ⭐⭐⭐

3. "The Lottery in Almeria" - Really interesting character development in this one. "Andrés ...wasn’t even mad that the money had gone to ... a guy who’d seemed to have been happy even before winning. He almost felt relieved that it hadn’t been him, that he hadn’t had to explain to anyone that he had no one to spend the money on, really, that he’d never had a wife, children, that his parents had died before he could buy them anything nice, let alone a house, that he was in fact letting his own father’s house crumble over his head." p58 ⭐⭐⭐⭐

4. "The State of Nature" - "Catapult" is the best name for a cat. ⭐⭐⭐.5

5. "The Presentation on Egypt" - A pieces about grief, but a little flat. ⭐⭐.5

6. "Only Orange" - "I knew that she’d been adopted, of course, which made me envious. To be able to look at the people who love you the most and not have to worry that you’ll turn out exactly like them must be amazing, I thought. An endlessly renewable source of relief." p94 ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

7. "Beyond" - Mmm...there are issues here. For (one, tiny) example, there would be no raisins in a sugar-free cookie. More generally, the story makes its point on the bones of some awful fat phobic ideas. "Maybe Eugene himself is already dead, Eugene thinks, a ghost. Maybe everyone here is dead and that’s why it’s called Beyond." p108 ⭐.5

8. "Chicago on the Seine" - "The lady at the Chanel counter had made the girl look much older and her mother years younger, enhancing a feeling I’d had before, after staying too long in department stores, that these places were like busted time portals, that time moved differently there. Only the father had come out unchanged." p141 ⭐⭐

9. "Offside Contantly" - It comes at normalizing disability from a weird angle, but I'm there for it. "...[T]his was how Thomas had interpreted his words: being blue eyed in ancient Rome was kind of like having a mullet today, he’d said." p152 ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

10. "Understanding the Science" - "She couldn’t understand why such a documentary would exist in the first place, why someone would bother filming idiots displaying their idiocy. There was something aesthetically repulsive about it, wasn’t there? About ridiculing people, amplifying their dumb beliefs, so that upper-middle-class Chicagoans like herself and her friends could feel alarmed and superior." p159 ⭐⭐⭐⭐

11. "Graceless" - "In the changing room, so close to the graceful girls, I feel double ugly. I try not to stare, but I study them, the way they move. I don’t realize yet that a person can’t fake grace. I still think I can learn it." p174 ⭐⭐⭐

12. "Colorin Colorado" - "“Novels always want to simplify,” J. went on. “Here’s another example : because of novels, we pretend to agree people think in whole sentences. She thought, I thought … and then a perfectly shaped observation. But, like, if I’m on a date and I say something stupid, I just want to disappear, right? I don’t actually think the words I want to disappear.”" p185 ⭐⭐⭐⭐.5

Content Notes: grief, loss of loved ones, death, terrorism, bombing, animal neglect, abandonment, euthenasia, animal death, seizure, bullying, fatphobia, dieting, calorie restrictions, group punishment, public shaming,

Thank you to Camille Bordas, Random House, and NetGalley for an accessible digital arc of ONE SUN ONLY. All views are mine.
Profile Image for ari.
691 reviews85 followers
December 10, 2025
Every story was very well-written and developed. I appreciated the direct writing style. My favorite story was Beyond. I was laughing out loud while I read it, and honestly would have read another 300 pages of it! I like how every story is relatively simple in terms of plot, but has depth and mild twists that make the story unique. These short stories feel much longer than they are (in a good way) because of the depth to them. You feel like you get to know the characters, their motivations, their perspectives. This was a very good collection and I really enjoyed it.

Thank you to Random House and NetGalley for the ARC.
Profile Image for Sue.
1,456 reviews664 followers
Did Not Finish
January 29, 2026
I have decided not to finish this book (and will not rate it). I completed almost a third of the book and the stories I read all had the same issue for me: the characters seemed to exist primarily to think about their lives, and a bit about others while obsessing on certain events. But they don’t seem to change or act or even worsen. I needed something to happen. It didn’t. I realize that this collection has garnered some very positive reviews but somehow these stories just don’t seem to be for me. Therefore I decided not to continue. Thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for the opportunity to try a writer new to me.
Profile Image for Yaya.
163 reviews29 followers
April 18, 2026
Short stories set mostly in Almería? Say less.

One Sun Only offers a range of stories that explore the complexity of the human experience through deeply personal and often heavy themes. Grief, adoption, death, and shame are woven throughout the collection, creating moments that feel both intimate and quietly impactful.

Some stories stood out more than others. “Only Orange” was a clear favorite for me, while “Colorín Colorado” brought a sense of familiarity and reflection that lingered after I finished reading.

What I appreciated most is how these stories don’t necessarily aim for neat resolutions. Instead, they focus on the journey, on capturing moments, emotions, and the in between spaces of life that don’t always have clear answers.

If this collection is a reflection of Camille Bordas’s writing, I’m definitely interested in exploring more of her work.

I would recommend this to readers who enjoy character driven short stories and are open to sitting with heavier themes without needing everything tied up perfectly.
Profile Image for BookOfCinz.
1,634 reviews3,879 followers
February 8, 2026
Camille Bordas really does have a way with words.

I love a collection of short stories and this one I enjoyed reading. I will say, some of the stories were really good and the other fell flat but overall enjoyable.
Profile Image for Remi.
880 reviews32 followers
November 18, 2025
this is a collection of introspective, emotionally perceptive short stories that felt refreshingly different from most collections i’ve read recently. camille bordas writes with a calm, observant tone that lingers on the small shifts, disappointments, realisations, and quiet absurdities that shape a life. there’s no dramatic twist or shock factor here; but rather, the power comes from human thought, memory, and self-awareness.

the stories explore different ways people try to make meaning out of ordinary experiences. almost every story offered something to take away, which is rare for me when it comes to short story collections. my personal standouts were One Sun Only, Most Die Young, The Lottery in Almería, Chicago on the Seine, Offside Constantly, and Understanding the Science.

if you enjoy character-driven, reflective storytelling that feels truthful, this is a gorgeous, quietly powerful read. it's the kind that sits with you afterwards, even if nothing shocking happens.

-------
to-read:

how to distinguish good art from bad art? this amateur who works in an art museum is dying to know.

*thank you to Random House for the ARC*
Profile Image for Sacha.
2,089 reviews
November 29, 2025
4 stars

I read short stories frequently and teach them constantly. I have a strong appreciation for the genre and for convincing reluctant readers that they should give a short story a chance here and there. Since I find increasingly that modern readers are not really digging into this genre as much, I'll start by noting that folks who enjoy the genre will find a lot to like here. The same is true for novice short story readers, but they should approach the collection with expectations that meet the genre, not with the idea that this will be just like reading a novel but faster.

Bordas has a direct style that I find approachable and connected to conditions and circumstances that many readers will relate to. These stories are not particularly esoteric, drenched in ultra 'literary' symbolism, or confined to individuals with very niche experiences. The focus is on elements of the human condition, and the overarching style, for me, tends toward understated. Since the very first entry begins with a reference to one of my all-time favorite short stories, I bought in almost instantly. This is a solid collection, and it's one I'd consider pulling examples from for teaching purposes (really a high compliment in my world). Minimally, I'll recommend the collection to students who are looking for approachable, modern examples of the genre.

*Special thanks to NetGalley and Will Lyman at Random House, Hogarth, and Dial for this widget, which I received in exchange for an honest review. The opinions expressed here are my own.
Profile Image for Juliana Niño.
198 reviews
January 22, 2026
Thank you so much to NetGalley and Random House for an advanced reader copy in exchange for my honest review.

🌞 preface
I am a lover of short fiction. I recently read three short story collections and an anthology, but One Sun Only blew those other books out of the water. I was actually really scared to get to this collection, thinking I was just going to be burnt out from my previous short fiction reads, but nope—this book gave me hope!

🌞 feeling seen
The way I have reviewed short story collections in the past has been to rate each individual story and then take the average rating for the whole book. I did do that, and I was giving every story a 4 or 4.5, with the exception of one story, Chicago on the Seine, which was my least favorite—that one got a 3 star from me. But the last story...I gave the last story, Colorín Colorado, 5 stars. The last story made me reevaluate the entire book. Things got a little meta, and it's as if Bordas could read my mind, because she addressed the reason I was hesitant to give 10/12 stories 5 stars. I won't mention this detail, because I wouldn't want to put anyone off to reading this with fresh eyes, but let's just say this was a common thread throughout Borda's stories—it really felt like she was catering these stories for me. Like she was speaking directly to me, as if she knew me. That sounds dramatic, but it's the biggest reason as to why I really enjoyed being inside each of these 12 stories. Each story felt so insanely human that I began to ask myself if any of the books I have read recently had managed to capture our essence so effortlessly. Obviously, I don't actually think Bordas and I are the same person that she therefore managed to speak to me in such an intimate way. No, I think most (if not all) will resonate with the meek, but no less glorious, humanness Bordas has sewn into the text.

🌞 mirror, mirror...
“Every man carries with him through life a mirror, as unique and impossible to get rid of as his shadow.” - W.H. Auden
As I mentioned, this book got meta, even before the last story. There was something so aware about all of Borda's characters—like they knew someone was reading their story. All the characters felt in control of the narrative, holding up a mirror, unabashed. Pointing at their reflections, showing us what made them unique, and at the same time, showing us why they are, indeed, me and you, and him, and her—us.

I could not recommend this book enough! I am thinking of purchasing a physical copy for myself just to own and read again someday. Camille Bordas is a talent I want to read more from.
Profile Image for Kasa Cotugno.
2,810 reviews600 followers
January 27, 2026
Each story is a gem, and once again I'll repeat -- a collection of well written short stories is more challenging than a novel of equal length, especially one as richly developed as this. My only reservation is that the stories just end Like that. Abruptly with no warning, each and every one of them. At first I thought there were pages missing, that the story I was reading surely had more to give me. But, no. That is Bordas's style, her quirk. It emphasizes the fact that you are peering into these lives for a specific time and then you are gone.
Profile Image for andrea.
1,068 reviews171 followers
April 3, 2026
thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the advanced digital copy!

--

i picked up camille bordas's one sun only because i love a good short story collection that feels human and observant, without trying too hard to shock you. this delivered exactly that. these are quiet, introspective stories about love, art, luck, and loss, told with a calm, precise voice that gets under your skin in the best way.

the stories are deceptively simple. there's a woman takes stock after a burglary, a man reflects on not winning the lottery, grandchildren grieve grandparents. but bordas has this knack for finding the subtle twist or the small, resonant detail that makes each one feel complete and lived-in. my favorites were "one sun only," a beautiful look at how families absorb grief; "the lottery in almería," which had a really tender, lonely character study; and "offside constantly," which approaches disability and normalcy from such a fresh, funny angle. i also loved the meta commentary in "colorin colorado" about how novels pretend people think in perfect sentences.

the writing is direct and unadorned, which i appreciated. it never feels pretentious or overly "literary." it just feels true. that said, not every story landed for me. "beyond," set in a weight-loss camp, had some fatphobic ideas that rubbed me the wrong way, and a couple others felt a little flat. but in a collection of twelve, that's bound to happen.

overall, this is a really solid, thoughtful collection. it doesn't rely on big plot twists or dramatic reveals; its power comes from its emotional perceptiveness and its willingness to sit with ordinary human disappointment and small epiphanies. if you like character-driven stories that linger after you finish them, this is well worth your time. a quiet, four-star read.
Profile Image for peyton!!.
226 reviews2 followers
April 14, 2026
*3.5 stars; I liked some of these stories and some of them I just didn’t understand. I’ve always struggled quite a bit with short stories because I find them very hard to “get into” in a way that I find really impactful, and unfortunately I feel like a lot of these were relatively simple in terms of plot and fell a bit flat for me
Profile Image for Dina.
269 reviews
December 24, 2025
I enjoyed this story collection. A lot of slice of life moments that had me wishing there was more resolution to each tale. Just as I was getting settled in with the characters the story ended. It’s amazing that such a short piece can leave such a lasting impact and it had me thinking about the characters long after I finished.

Thank you for the advanced reader copy Netgalley and Random House.
Profile Image for Alicia Guzman.
519 reviews53 followers
Read
January 16, 2026
A quiet exploration of the everyday.

One Sun Only is collection of 12 character-driven, reflective short stories that find beauty in the most unexpected places.

Camille Bordas writes with a direct and relatable, capturing the magic within the quotidian minutiae of life. Each story lingers on the quiet absurdities we often dismiss or forget in the daily struggle to keep moving forward.

If you enjoy contemporary fiction for its subtle portrayals of human existence, you will find alot to love here. These stories are largely plotless and meandering, choosing instead to focus on the deeply internal lives of the characters. It is the kind of writing that doesn't shout to get your attention, it simply observes.

While the entire collection is cohesive, a few stories stayed with me long after I finished:

One Sun Only
Only Orange
Colorin Colorado

This is a gorgeous read for anyone who appreciates a "slice of life" style that feels grounded and slightly hypnotic.

Expected publication date: Jan 27, 2026

Thank you to Random House for providing an advanced reader's copy of One Sun Only
Profile Image for Roxane.
182 reviews8 followers
April 17, 2026
!!!!!!!!!!!!
this is the best short story collection I have read in a very long time, they’re basically ALL bangers except maybe 2 and even then those were still very good. I was actually sad every single time one ended because in just a dozen pages the author is capable of building up characters that are funny & human or interesting and you just wanna read more and more and more about them, like I could have actually read an entire NOVEL based on each shot story and enjoyed it BUT the short stories were also fantastic because they said so much in so little, they don’t NEED a novel I just want one because I’m greedy and I absolutely loved the characters, also I’m kinda obsessed with the author, how she writes about France and the US, I can’t tell if she’s written then in French originally or English, I think English but anyways goals, and also her writing is just fantastic? Like she’s objectively just a really fucking good writer with an amazing voice okay I’m fan girling at this point but how could I not?
Profile Image for sophia woods.
105 reviews1 follower
March 9, 2026
It’s rare for a short story collection to engage me like this one did, but (almost) every story felt filled with real people with stories that mattered to them. I wasn’t a huge fan of Graceless, but every other story had a clear message and some strong sentence writing.
Profile Image for Madison.
1,036 reviews480 followers
March 25, 2026
This was a real pleasure to read. I never really wanted to put it down. Once you hit A Presentation on Egypt, though, it becomes apparent that that story is the sun around which all of the others orbit. It's the emotional and technical apex of the book and none of the others really come close.
Profile Image for Hank.
18 reviews
April 23, 2026
Read the whole back half of this while I was waiting at the body shop! Woohoo!

Really quite bleak, but lots of refreshingly honest looks at all the different parts of being human—lots of it is messy and doesn’t make sense, which I appreciate that Bordas doesn’t shy away from. Good stuff.
Profile Image for Kara.
565 reviews9 followers
December 17, 2025
Camille Bordas has been a regular contributor to the New Yorker (and several other similarly regarded publications) for quite a few years. If you're already a fan of hers, you'll be pleased with this collection of her short stories. You may have read a few of them before, as most have appeared in previous issues of The New Yorker or The Paris Review.

Mostly similar in length, the short stories in Bordas' One Sun Only: Stories are very singularly her own voice. I wasn't familiar with her writing before this collection, but as soon as I started the second story, it was clear Bordas has a distinct style. The risk you run with a distinct voice is that it isn't always for everyone. In this case, I fall into that category.

At first, there was something captivating about the normalcy of Bordas' stories. Each is a small slice of a someone's day, entrenched in a specific situation and blooming outward to encompass a few additional characters. As soon as I'd find myself investing in the characters, Bordas seemed to have moved on. Rather than being a result of the short story format, this seemed to be a stylistic choice. Bordas even addresses this in Colorín Colorado, where a student criticizes a professor's writing for its lack of plot.

I love experimental writing, but rather than diving into an experiment, Bordas' collection just dips in a toe and backs off before finding out what might happen.


Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for the ARC.
670 reviews26 followers
October 6, 2025
Thanks to Netgalley and Random House for the ebook. These stories, which were mostly published in the New Yorker, are from a mature writer who is able to see life from all angles. There’s a real fire in these stories, but not a blind anger, because these characters understand life. Towards the end of book, a long time professor who writes novels, is asked to be interviewed about a former student who gained fame with short films on YouTube and then became a proper filmmaker, but has died young. The professor remembers the student as provocative, but without depth or discipline, but the professor, years later, stole a part of one of the many stories that the student dashed off for the class, and stuck it in one of her novels. And that’s what so many of these stories try to show: I see who you are, but am I really any better than you when I’m really being honest with myself?
Profile Image for Terri (BooklyMatters).
778 reviews1 follower
December 10, 2025
A collection of twelve short stories, each a perfect encapsulation of literary characters stood up living and breathing, with seemingly effortless grace, and the space of a mere few pages. In each case, young and old, and brimming with dry humor, the reader is invited in to share lives populated by ordinary people, in situations ordinary and otherwise, who leave us as quickly as they are revealed.

Between these pages we will meet a woman somewhat unsuccessfully released from colorblindness; an overweight thirteen-year-old fan of the Sopranos, banished to summer “fat camp”; a grief-stricken fourteen year old whose “sleeping attacks” may not be narcolepsy; an unusually helpful American embassy worker in Paris, stationed overnight at a morgue.

Flawed and vulnerable, survivors and sufferers, our narrators are humans just trying to figure life out, or just the opposite — alone, hiding behind weird beliefs, avoidant or anxious, shamed or superior, going about their days.

A treat for any reader of short stories, I loved meeting every one of these fascinating characters, — absorbing, experiencing, and then, reluctantly, setting them free.

A great big thank you to Netgalley, the author and the publisher for an ARC of this book. All thoughts presented are my own.
Profile Image for A..
24 reviews3 followers
December 8, 2025
Thanks to NetGalley and Random House (Will Lyman) for the ARC of One Sun Only by Camille Bordas.

I know there are readers that do not enjoy short stories. As readers, they don't get to spend enough time with the characters, or just as the situation in the story gets interesting, it ends. The experience is just so...short. Or worse yet, nothing happens in the story at all. It's all observations and reflections that start and go nowhere. What was the point? For those readers, the thought of reading a collection of these narrative forms must almost feel like literary torture, whippings with plotless pages, pointless dialogue like fingernails on a chalkboard.

I understand somewhat. I have read short stories that I just did not "get," stories where I just could not make an intellectual or emotional connection. I've read stories where I was not satisfied with the ending, that left me wanting one more page, one more paragraph. We want stories we like to continue forever. But I have also read short stories that in their length just floored me with their impact, stories that I couldn't imagine being one word longer because they were perfect. In their brevity, they contain all that is essential.

One Sun Only is an impressive collection of stories that I really enjoyed. As I read the ebook, I would highlight different sentences and passages that I found either beautifully descriptive or insightful or emotionally true. I had not read any of the stories by Camille Bordas before, so with every story I read my admiration just increased. Bordas creates these specific, unique, quirky characters that are confronted by or embroiled in situations that test them, and in doing so reveal much more of themselves than perhaps they would like. Her characters aren't necessarily nice or mean, well-intentioned or conniving, spirited or timid; they are both at the same time. They are flawed, questioning, unsure, yet somehow manage to make it through the situation, not necessarily to their satisfaction. Her characters are incredibly relatable because they are like us, kind of muddling through life, trying to understand our own motivations and questioning those of others. It is at this point of friction--understanding/misunderstanding--that Bordas excels at: The tiny moments of antagonism between characters, the passive-aggressive replies, the unsaid but thought remarks of reprobation. The uncivility that exists beneath most relationships is apparently where the action happens.

If there's one thing that Bordas's characters share, it is a wicked sense of humor. Throughout One Sun Only I found myself laughing out loud at some of the observations a character would make about another character in a story. Most of the stories in One Sun Only crackle with the subtly dark, near black humor that the characters employ almost as a defense against the absurdity of their situation.

One Sun Only is a fantastic collection of stories by a writer who has something to say about life, about relationships, about how we live. Individually, the stories are great, but the collection as a whole illuminates a definite perspective or view of human relationships. And this is the value of short story collections like One Sun Only, because they are perfect examples of the saying "the whole is greater than the sum of its parts." Think of one of George Saunders's collections. There's a kind of magic that happens when stories are brought together in one book, and this is what you get in One Sun Only.
Profile Image for Gulshan B..
374 reviews14 followers
February 17, 2026
There’s something about smart writing, about short, pithy and yet clearly well thought out lines, that necessitates their appearance in a short story for one to consider the said short story to be well written. I can only claim to have had sporadic success when it comes to finding - and getting to read - good short stories.

Luckily for me, this one is a clear winner. The stories in this collection are not just well written with endearing characters, they also convey that most human of traits for fiction - that of coming across as real and believable.

Reading these stories feels about as rough as swirling a spoon through melted butter. The author introduces characters and their ideas into the narrative and you feel like you’re watching a vista from a slow-moving car, as it is crossing Main Street. The stories encapsulate not just how the characters are living but what they are thinking, what they are doing, and - most importantly - why.

The title story starts off as a somewhat morbid yet beautifully written piece, that soon allows you to become familiar with the few characters it has, even as you get a quick walkthrough of their lives, a vignette that seems more real than some full length novels I sadly still remember having read. All stories have a well defined humorous undercurrent that bobs up every now and then, and makes for some fun reading.

“She was in a bar right now, in fact, not having a great time. But it so happened that someone had just walked over and told her that she looked like Lionel Messi, and it wasn’t exactly a great line, she said, but at least it was one she’d never heard before.”


There’s a smorgasbord of characters too. There’s the “apartment therapist” (!), who apparently helps the “newly burglarized” navigate a flea market notorious as being where burglarized goods are likely to surface. Then there’s a smattering of Spanish speaking ethnicities listed as a “who’s who” but for “who hates who” and “who is hated by who”.
There’s the ophthalmologist whose “go bag”, in case of a catastrophe, would include underwear, pens (?) and eye drops. “A very sad bag”, in the ophthalmologist’s own words.

BTW, an apartment therapist is just an interior designer, but for people who’ve been living in their apartment and have begun to feel trapped and hate the things filling it; it is the therapist’s job to make them like it again.

Lest one might consider levity as the defining characteristic of this collection, it bears mentioning that there’s a definite, not quite invisible, undercurrent of death or dying in most of these tales. There is no morbid curiosity or macabre humor, rather a gentle inclusivity of that most primal of human life events - the end of a life. It shows up in a wide variety of forms, from an elder family member’s passing, to that of the school janitor’s sudden demise, and from a suicide at home (in the laundry, if you must know!) to an unexpected death while visiting Paris. And while most of these tales are not even halfway tragic or sorrowful, there’s a true melancholy in many.

As one character knowingly points out, according to Victor Hugo, melancholy was the happiness of being sad.

Don’t go looking for some grand, deeper meaning in these stories; instead, look for glimpses of humanity, in all its blatant naivety, expressed with breathtaking brevity and glimmers of hope.

Thanks to NetGalley and the author for providing an eARC in exchange for an honest and original review.
Profile Image for Lolly K Dandeneau.
1,936 reviews254 followers
March 31, 2026
shared via my blog:https://bookstalkerblog.wordpress.com/
𝘉𝘶𝘵 𝘯𝘰𝘸 𝘵𝘩𝘢𝘵 𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘳𝘦 𝘸𝘢𝘴 𝘯𝘰 𝘴𝘤𝘳𝘪𝘱𝘵 𝘭𝘦𝘧𝘵 𝘵𝘰 𝘧𝘰𝘭𝘭𝘰𝘸, 𝘯𝘰𝘸 𝘵𝘩𝘢𝘵 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘣𝘰𝘥𝘺 𝘸𝘢𝘴 𝘨𝘰𝘯𝘦, 𝘮𝘦𝘢𝘯𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘸𝘢𝘴 𝘢𝘭𝘭 𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘳𝘦 𝘸𝘢𝘴 𝘵𝘰 𝘱𝘰𝘯𝘥𝘦𝘳. 𝘚𝘩𝘦’𝘥 𝘣𝘦𝘦𝘯 𝘩𝘢𝘱𝘱𝘺 𝘸𝘪𝘵𝘩 𝘗𝘢𝘶𝘭. 𝘏𝘦’𝘥 𝘮𝘢𝘯𝘢𝘨𝘦𝘥 𝘵𝘰 𝘮𝘢𝘬𝘦 𝘩𝘦𝘳 𝘩𝘢𝘱𝘱𝘺 𝘸𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘦 𝘩𝘢𝘷𝘪𝘯𝘨 𝘰𝘯𝘭𝘺 𝘢 𝘷𝘢𝘨𝘶𝘦 𝘯𝘰𝘵𝘪𝘰𝘯 𝘰𝘧 𝘵𝘩𝘦 𝘸𝘰𝘳𝘥 𝘩𝘪𝘮𝘴𝘦𝘭𝘧. 𝘞𝘢𝘴 𝘵𝘩𝘢𝘵 𝘯𝘰𝘣𝘭𝘦 𝘰𝘳 𝘴𝘵𝘶𝘱𝘪𝘥?

I received this collection in November of 2025 and loved it from the start. I enjoy the endings too, you slowly pull away, like a song fade-out. Life goes on, there isn’t always a big revelation or solution. In no order, the stories-The State of Nature tickled me, the tale begins with the character admitting she slept through the burglary of her home. She scolds her cat “Catapult” for not acting ‘bitchy’ when its favorite resting place, a Moroccan rug, was stolen. At her mother’s advice, she is searching for her things at a flea market where stolen items often show up and thinking about her family of loners, her patients, and the use of a rape whistle. My heart sank reading The Presentation on Egypt where we meet Paul, a surgeon that deals with brain dead patients and their distraught families. Life doesn’t bring him joy, just dissatisfaction. It is his wife Anna and daughter Danielle who carry on. I would love an entire book about them, I realize these are short stories, but I wanted to stay with them longer. Danielle was an incredibly interesting character. The author may deliver a gut punch, but she doesn’t want you to feel bad for those who populate her book, it is not about that. None of us are immune to things that befall these fictional folks, it is a part of being alive. Good things happen; terrible things happen… things happen. In One Sun Only a divorced man has just lost his father and is spending time with his own young children, a son and daughter. He fondly thinks of his father, honest to the core, even if it meant favoring his gifted artistic granddaughter over his grandson, whom he saw as less intelligent.

In Most Die Young, Julie is a journalist and the keeper of anxieties. When her boyfriend tells her about a tribe that thinks of bravery as stupidity, she spends her time thinking about fear. According to him, Julie worries too much about illness, and all the dreaded things that befall ordinary people, yet bad things have happened in her life and there is always a chance they will again. The Lottery in Almeria– Andrés and his sister Elena grew up in France, children of Spanish exiles. Having lost their mother long ago, they inherited the house in Almeria from their father after his death, but it is Andrés who resides in it. Elena treats it as a place to vacation. Living a lonely life is his choice and playing the European lottery his passion while he writes schoolbooks and conversation manuals for French people traveling the Spanish-speaking world. He avoids drama, even if his niece and sister are fighting. Only Orange was wonderful. Jeanne does not like Audrey, her brother’s new girlfriend, and believes she is faking color blindness. It is such an odd, irrational thing to suspect someone of, but our emotions are sometimes ridiculous, silly things. The best part of this collection for me, there was an oddball feel to it. I enjoy Camille Bordas’s work, her writing delivery settles over me the same way that conversations with my favorite people do. Yes, read it!

Published: January 27, 2026

Random House

Profile Image for Eve.
205 reviews18 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 22, 2025
Disclosure: I received an advance review copy of One Sun Only from Random House via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.

I am consistently drawn to short story collections, particularly those that focus on everyday experiences and emotional nuance rather than overt plot. Books like After the Quake, Afterparties, and Inheritors are longtime favorites of mine, so I approached One Sun Only with interest and a clear sense of what I value in the form. Camille Bordas delivers a thoughtful and often quietly funny collection that pays close attention to interior lives and small, telling moments.

Many of these stories explore grief, childhood trauma, obsession, and the lingering desire for approval. Several pieces focus on children or teenagers with darker or more unusual fixations, including a teenager preoccupied with obituaries. These characters felt believable and carefully observed, and their perspectives often added both humor and emotional weight. I especially appreciated how Bordas allows her characters to be complicated without overexplaining them.

The writing style is spare and sometimes slow, but intentionally so. The pacing encourages reflection and allows the humor to surface naturally rather than forcefully. Some stories resonated more strongly than others, but the collection felt cohesive overall. The endings are frequently unexpected and unresolved, which reminded me of Murakami’s approach, though Bordas remains firmly grounded in realism. This lack of closure worked for me, but it may not appeal to readers who prefer clear conclusions.

By the end of the collection, I felt amused and reflective, with certain images and emotional beats lingering more than individual plot points. This is a book that invites attention rather than urgency, and it rewards readers who are comfortable sitting with ambiguity.

I would recommend One Sun Only to literary fiction fans and readers who enjoy short story collections, with the note that the open-ended endings are a defining feature. Readers who need resolution may want to skip it, but those who appreciate subtlety and character-driven work will likely find much to admire.
Profile Image for Stephanie.
522 reviews
March 3, 2026
The titular story in this charming collection is about death and its impact on children. The narrator explains that things keep dying — his father, the puppy his ex-wife got their kids to get over the death of grandpa, and then the kids’ school janitor. After a teacher raises concerns about his son’s drawings, the narrator scrutinizes them for trauma. “The Presentation on Egypt” also deals with death when a mother does not disclose to her teenage daughter that her surgeon father had died by hanging; instead, telling her that he had suffered a heart attack. Consequently, as an adult, the daughter has her heart checked more often than she admitted to her mother because, as far as she knew, a bad heart was what killed her father. Her mother felt some guilt about the heart scares, but rationalized that it was “better that her child worried about a nonexistent genetic condition than about the real one. . . .”

Other stories address the human condition. “Most Die Young” tells the tale of a journalist and hypochondriac who is writing an article on the Pawong, a Malaysian tribe, who live in constant fear of their enemies, but take no precautions. Her boyfriend had introduced her to the Pawong, but then had broken up with her because she was afraid of everything which she found unfair since the two had met a a group for people suffering from generalized anxiety disorder. In “the State of Nature,” an opthamologist who slept through a burglary is introduced to Rita — an “apartment therapist” — to see if they could recover her things at a local outdoor market. Rita recognizes that they’re losers: “We’re all here looking to pay a second time for stuff we already owned, I mean, we can’t let go of things — things! — that it took a stranger a minute to take away from us and profit from. They’re the winners.” “Beyond” is set at a camp for overweight kids where aspiring actor and “The Sopranos” aficionado Eugene, believes that he is fat and ugly. Eugene receives daily letters from his younger brother Max, “the child his parents had to taunt him: joyful and thin. Everyone loves Max. Eugene maybe more than anyone else.” This is an accomplished collection by a master of the short form. Thank you Will Lyman at Random House for an advance copy.
Profile Image for Nancy.
1,977 reviews489 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 5, 2026
Life’s not supposed to be exciting…Only certain things are, like a good soccer game, or wen you fall in love and stuff. from One Sun Only by Camille Bordas

First off, I want to call out the book’s great cover art. It caught my eye and interest.

What great stories! Odd, singular, funny, sharp, and relatable.

The author sums her own stories up in the story Color in Colorado. A writing teacher is asked what they write about. “About made-up, normal people,” she responds. “I love it, she is told; “nobodies are the best kind of people.” The writer’s student comments, “but your stories, they’re always just about people talking and thinking.”

One Sun Only begins with a series of deaths and a child who wishes the dead stayed dead, that people would move on past grief. A man sleeps while his house is burgled, while his mother was glad because “she got to use all the knowledge that she’d gleaned from reading crime novels for the past forty years.” He is taken to a “thieves’ market” to search for his missing things. A woman wins the lottery on the night her husband kills himself. A boy at a ‘fat camp’ is obsessed with The Sopranos and imagines he is an actor.

Eugene says he doesn’t understand why a person would challenge herself. Isn’t life itself challenging enough as it is? From One Sun Only by Camille Bordas

So many quotable passages!

Self-discovery?…What a joke. Life’s too short to find out who we really are. from One Sun Only by Camille Bordas

Isn’t this the twenty-first century? Who wants thoughts expressed clearly? Who wants clarity? Who wants thoughts? from One Suny Only by Camille Bordas

I loved the boy at ‘fat camp’ who imagines he is an actor, distancing himself from his own life. The woman who stopped watching tv shows because they were too long and you never knew how many seasons they would be renewed. The woman who puzzles over how species felt when they survived the asteroid that destroyed the dinosaurs: did they regret what the world could’ve been?

Masterful.

Thanks to the publisher for a free book through NetGalley.
Profile Image for alyssa.
127 reviews17 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 14, 2026
The author reviews for this set the bar real high but Camille Bordas delivered! I loved One Sun Only so much that I went and pre-ordered a copy because I know it's the kind of book I am going to revisit again and again. Short story collections are so hit or miss but I loved every one of these.

Each story in One Sun Only is character study exploring ordinary people living their ordinary lives. Bordas is exquisitely precise in describing the human condition; a thoughtful and deliberate observer of every day life. That so many other reviews wanted for any of these stories to be turned into a full length novel is such a testament to the way Bordas wrote them, but I felt that part of the sweetness of each character study was in its brevity.

Similarities weave in and out from story to story: the lottery, suicide, neurosurgeons, the movie Grease. Along the way, there are momentary (profound?) observations that gave me pause, and stuck with me for long after I'd completed the particular story, "How could you even like Grease if you can't see the color pink?", pondered one character. Another thought, "All humans fantasize that their generation will be the last."

Many stories explore themes of loss and death but I would not call One Sun Only a book about the end of life or grief, nor was it an overtly sad collection. In fact, there were a number of the stories that I found to be very funny, including 'Graceless' as well as 'Beyond'. I loved the title story as well.

So excited to have found this collection and to return to it soon to read some of these stories again and again. Would highly recommend for fans of Raymond Carver though Camille Bordas' voice is distinctly her own.

Thank you to Camille Bordas, Random House, and NetGalley for a free eARC in exchange for an honest review.
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