overall, this is a rewarding read, as it contains everything a good short story can have - believable, yet somehow peculiar characters, a strong plot often with a shocking twist, beauty in description of the surroundings and on top of it all a smidgen of "special effects" (by those, I mean an author's signature elements).
however, this being said, Švantner sort of overdoes it from time to time - a plot twist too bombastic, a character shaped by attributes in such a way it becomes flawed in terms of not convincing the reader he/she really can exist, a slow description slowing down to a moment of ornamental boredom.
this is why Švantner's best known work, Nevesta hôľ, tops this collection - while in Malka, some of the pieces fall apart from the main body of the text, Švantner manages to hold those together in the aforementioned novel.
still, this is worth reading, especially if you like mystery and horror genre, because the evocation of that kind of atmosphere works brilliantly (as it does in Nevesta hôľ, too). in my opinion, the best short stories are Stretnutie, Horiaci vrch and Piargy.