I first came across Guy de Maupassant in high school, when we read his delightful, G-rated (for a de Maupassant story) The Necklace. Interesting to note how some of the stories in this collection share the same backgrounder: low to mid-level clerk marries ambitious beauty, marriage is usually childless, expect surprises at the end. The rest of the stories are very French, so I'm left with the impression that these stories encapsulate what to me embodies, but not necessarily defines, the French short story: aristocracy and snobbery, slighted honor and ensuing duels, marital indiscretions (by both men and women). And amour. De Maupassant does love best, be it among humans or animals. The stories which merited a heart from me were Happiness, which reveals the joys and pleasures felt only by the heart, and Love, a short tale about a duck hunt, leaving me with a visual of one of the most bittersweet endings in short stories.
And speaking of endings, some tales here left me with the impression how it would have been more powerful to leave out the last paragraph. Happiness is one example. While that one last paragraph doesn't diminish the impact of the ending, it reads like it was written as an afterthought, more like a footnote. On another note--and this coming from a reader whose stories of choice are short--I found some stories, such as A Parisian Affair, so engaging, with the main character so thoroughly threshed out in so few words, that I realized, I would have wanted to stretch the story out into a novel, or a novella, at least.
All considered, however, this has been a very enjoyable read, and I wish I could get my hands on more of de Maupassant's stories.