Half of these stories are quite good, while the other half are a bit forgettable. That said, all of the stories exhibit the qualities and techniques that make Cable's prose so good. Chief among these are plots that advance in fits and starts with lots of backfill yet always with ambiguities and unanswered questions. These stories also frequently play with color, blurring and juxtaposing them in turn, and they frequently turn to gossip, rumor, and hearsay as an epistemological mode. Not unlike his novels, Cable occupies several different genres over the course of the collection and, at times, within individual stories. I would say that the best stories here are the haunting "Belles Demoiselles Plantation," the enigmatic "Cafe Des Exiles," and of course Cable's deservedly best-known story about interracial marriage, Catholicism, and New Orleans' transition into the republic: "Madame Delphine."