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Wither and Other Stories

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Should we or shouldn’t we? It’s a question many ask themselves each day. Should we or shouldn’t we wither in a wooded paradise instead of a broken city? Leave our home when the news warns us of what’s outside? Join in a circle of nighttime delights? Be with someone who awakens our sins?

“Wither and Other Stories” tells four tales of the choice to partake. In the end, the choice may not need to be made. For when we ask ourselves, “Should we or shouldn’t we,” the answer is always yes.

Published October 9, 2018

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About the author

Sonora Taylor

35 books160 followers
Sonora Taylor is the award-winning author of Little Paranoias: Stories, Without Condition, The Crow’s Gift and Other Tales, Please Give, and Wither and Other Stories. Her short stories have appeared in multiple publications, including Camden Park Press’s Quoth the Raven, Kandisha Press’s Women of Horror Vol. 2: Graveyard Smash, The Sirens Call, Frozen Wavelets, Mercurial Stories, Tales to Terrify, and the Ladies of Horror fiction podcast. Her latest book, Seeing Things, is now available on Amazon. She lives in Arlington, Virginia, with her husband.

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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Sadie Hartmann.
Author 23 books7,883 followers
January 9, 2020
"Wither and Other Stories” tells four tales of the choice to partake. In the end, the choice may not need to be made. For when we ask ourselves, “Should we or shouldn’t we,” the answer is always yes."
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Having recently read Sonora Taylor's collection, LITTLE PARANOIAS (5 stars, highly recommend) I was eager to read more. I was given a digital copy of WITHER AND OTHER STORIES by the author for review consideration and I didn't waste any time getting into it.
There are four stories here, two are what could be considered flash fiction and then two longer pieces. The title story, WITHER is 50% of the book and my favorite piece.
Taylor did an excellent job setting the story up and deftly leading the reader down a well-formed path to discovery. What I've learned about Sonora's writing style is that she inherently trusts her audience. She doesn't telegraph anything--maybe just a few breadcrumbs here and there to create doubt or curiosity but there's a lot of showing and very little telling--which I love. It allows the reader the freedom to imagine or speculate without being spoon-fed information.
WITHER is the story of a young girl living with her parents off the grid; totally apart from society. They feed off the land--whatever can be foraged but for our growing protagonist, it's just not enough.
She's hungry.
I loved where this story took me and all the feelings I got to feel and process while reading it.

I also quite enjoyed the last story, I think it's called "SHOULD WE OR SHOULDN'T WE". This time, Sonora engages her audience through dialog and wordplay between the two main characters. As a romantic, sexually charged drama unfolds I kept wondering if Sonora was practicing the art of distraction--if you read this one, let me know what you think. I found this story to be clever and unsettling. Loved it.
My only feedback here would be that the two bookend stories could have been filled out a little more and then packaged as two novellas--giving both stories equal footing and leaving the two other stories for a full collection of short fiction (Like PARANOIAS). I felt like the length, quality and development of the longer pieces made the other two look "less than" or just filler between the two. Just my take.
I'm definitely a fan. Sonora Taylor is one to watch.
Profile Image for Heather.
1,151 reviews15 followers
July 31, 2020
I’ve been a fan of Sonora Taylor’s work since stumbling across the oh-so-twisted Without Condition. Her Wither and Other Stories contains four short stories, not all of which fit the horror or apocalyptic milieu.

In “Wither,” Katie’s parents left the Wicked Place (the city) to come to live in the forest. They’re determined to live off of the land as much as possible, and believe that the residents in the city are poisoning themselves by proxy: they poisoned the earth, and now she’s poisoning them through their food. When things go wrong, Katie is forced to decide which sort of end she’d prefer. This is a slow, winding apocalyptic. There’s no sudden world-ending event. People just gradually sicken and die. This story is a bit long and a little heavy-handed with the “we’re poisoning the earth” theme, but it’s still pretty fascinating.

“Nesting” is a very short story which perhaps takes place in the same apocalypse as “Wither”? Maybe? “Smoke Circles” is just an odd little interlude of people around a bonfire. There isn’t a lot to it, but it’s very vivid.

“We Really Shouldn’t” is my favorite story in here. Kelly and Josh run into each other again months after she broke up with him. He wants to reconnect, and the two of them have so very much in common. This one takes some wonderful twists and turns.

I can’t wait to read more of Taylor’s work!


Original review posted on my blog: http://www.errantdreams.com/2020/06/s...
Profile Image for Ross Jeffery.
Author 28 books363 followers
September 5, 2021
Five stars alone for the title story ‘Wither’ - this is a short collection, only four stories in total, two short ones and two longish stories.

This one has a bit of a ecohorror feel but I have also noticed that some of Sonora Taylor’s best works have some element of food in them, whether that’s food prep or eating - strange thing to notice I know, but it’s there! It’s that sharing of food, that preparing of it where we are truly laid bare!

Profile Image for Melanie.
Author 11 books22 followers
December 31, 2018
Sonora Taylor writes elegantly and with a creepy tension that keeps you turning pages. You just know something is a little off with each story and you can't wait to find out what it is.
In each short story, you get a feel for each character as they struggle with their situation. My favourite of the bunch was the last one, "We Really Shouldn't." Sonora captures the tension and the realism of forbidden love just right in this one.
Wither and Other Stories is a real treat to read. I'm looking forward to reading Taylor's other works.
Profile Image for Tiffany Brown.
Author 44 books21 followers
October 24, 2018
Sonora Taylor has a knack for drawing you in, making you believe one thing, and then challenging that belief with a chilling truth. Nothing is what it seems in Wither and Other Stories. From strained family ties to impending apocalypse to a failed relationship, it's what lurks beneath in these tales that's truly terrifying. A creepy collection that's a delight to read!
Profile Image for Amy Dozal.
373 reviews1 follower
December 23, 2021
Wither: 5⭐️😭😭
Nesting: 4⭐️ 👀👀
Smoke circles: 1⭐️
We really shouldn’t: 5⭐️ 🤌🏼🔪

Profile Image for Cat Voleur.
Author 42 books49 followers
March 31, 2020
I don't think it had as much to offer as the other collection I've read by Taylor, which makes sense because this collection is shorter, with fewer stories.

I was also a tiny bit disappointed because 'Wither' was my favorite story, and is first in the collection. Having it placed last in the collection (building up to it) might have been a more effective placement -- but with that as my only real complaint, I think it works out better.

I would still suggest 'Little Paranoias' first as a collection overall for its variety as well as its abundance of dark humor, but the titular 'Wither' is one of my favorite stand alone short stories by the author.

Well worth reading, for sure.
Profile Image for Kate Alvarez.
173 reviews8 followers
July 28, 2020
Interesting and often left me thinking about what the hell each story meant, which I liked.
Profile Image for Kas.
114 reviews6 followers
November 7, 2021
I have read better but I have also read Exponentially Worse
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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