Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Ice Cream

Rate this book
In a collection of short works by the author of The Siege and A Spell of Winter, a cafeteria cook confronts her pen pal, a boastful writer is put in his place, a future government ruthlessly controls conception, and a soulful woman remembers her past.

224 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2000

4 people are currently reading
138 people want to read

About the author

Helen Dunmore

117 books972 followers
I was born in December 1952, in Yorkshire, the second of four children. My father was the eldest of twelve, and this extended family has no doubt had a strong influence on my life, as have my own children. In a large family you hear a great many stories. You also come to understand very early that stories hold quite different meanings for different listeners, and can be recast from many viewpoints.

Poetry was very important to me from childhood. I began by listening to and learning by heart all kinds of rhymes and hymns and ballads, and then went on to make up my own poems, using the forms I’d heard. Writing these down came a little later.

I studied English at the University of York, and after graduation taught English as a foreign language in Finland.

At around this time I began to write the poems which formed my first poetry collection, The Apple Fall, and to publish these in magazines. I also completed two novels; fortunately neither survives, and it was more than ten years before I wrote another novel.

During this time I published several collections of poems, and wrote some of the short stories which were later collected in Love of Fat Men. I began to travel a great deal within the UK and around the world, for poetry tours and writing residences. This experience of working in many different countries and cultures has been very important to my work. I reviewed poetry for Stand and Poetry Review and later for The Observer, and subsequently reviewed fiction for The Observer, The Times and The Guardian. My critical work includes introductions to the poems of Emily Brontë, the short stories of D H Lawrence and F Scott Fitzgerald, a study of Virginia Woolf’s relationships with women and Introductions to the Folio Society's edition of Anna Karenina and to the new Penguin Classics edition of Tolstoy's My Confession.

During the 1980s and early 1990s I taught poetry and creative writing, tutored residential writing courses for the Arvon Foundation and took part in the Poetry Society's Writer in Schools scheme, as well as giving readings and workshops in schools, hospitals, prisons and every other kind of place where a poem could conceivably be welcome. I also taught at the University of Glamorgan, the University of Bristol's Continuing Education Department and for the Open College of the Arts.

In the late 1980s I began to publish short stories, and these were the beginning of a breakthrough into fiction. What I had learned of prose technique through the short story gave me the impetus to start writing novels. My first novel for children was Going to Egypt, published in 1992, and my first novel for adults was Zennor in Darkness, published in 1993, which won the McKitterick Prize. This was also my first researched novel, set in the First World War and dealing with the period when D H Lawrence and his wife Frieda lived in Zennor in Cornwall, and came under suspicion as German spies.

My third novel, A Spell of Winter, won the inaugural Orange Prize for Fiction in 1996, and since then I have published a number of novels, short story collections and books for children. Full details of all these books are available on this website. The last of The Ingo Quartet, The Crossing of Ingo, was published in paperback in Spring 2009.

My seventh novel, The Siege (2001) was shortlisted both for the Whitbread Novel Award and the Orange Prize for Fiction. This was another researched novel, which grew from a lifelong love of Russian history, culture and literature. It is is set in Leningrad during the first year of the siege of the city by German forces, which lasted for 880 days from the fall of Mga on 30th August 1941. The Siege has been translated into Russian by Tatyana Averchina, and extracts have been broadcast on radio in St Petersburg. House of Orphans was published in 2006, and in 2008 Counting the Stars. Its central characters are the Roman poet Catullus, who lived during the last years of the Republic,

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
45 (19%)
4 stars
84 (36%)
3 stars
68 (29%)
2 stars
27 (11%)
1 star
5 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 33 reviews
Profile Image for Rebecca.
4,193 reviews3,457 followers
July 23, 2025
These 18 pieces are quite varied: a few have historical settings, two are written in the second person, and several return to the life of Ulli (a recurring character from Love of Fat Men), a Finnish teenager who faces an unexpected pregnancy. Even the slight-seeming ones are satisfying slices of fiction. The title story and its follow-up, “Be Vigilant, Rejoice, Eat Plenty” advocate sensual indulgence, which I guess is the reason for the cover image – which I couldn’t decide whether to hide or flaunt as I was reading it in public.

Often, there is a hint of menace, whether the topic is salmon fishing, raspberry picking or the history of a lost ring. “The Clear and Rolling Water” has the atmosphere of a Scottish folk ballad, which made it perfect reading for our recent holiday to Scotland. “Leonardo, Michelangelo, SuperStork” and “Mason’s Mini-break” stand out for their dystopian and magic realist touches, respectively. In the former, couples are only allowed to conceive via state- sanctioned services; in the latter, an arrogant Booker Prize-winning author is patronizing when he meets a would-be writer while on holiday in Yorkshire.

Two of my favourites were “The Lighthouse Keeper’s Wife” and “Swimming into the Millennium,” which might have been written by Helen Simpson. All are of a high standard, and though they don’t fit together per se and mostly won’t stay with me, I really do rate Dunmore as a short story writer.

Originally published on my blog, Bookish Beck.
Profile Image for Owen Townend.
Author 9 books14 followers
April 24, 2021
Having sampled one of Dunmore's novels, I decided it was time to try her short stories. Ice Cream is a strong collection in which Dunmore covers a range of subjects and even genres.

For the most part she writes very sympathetic relationship dramas and the ones I responded to best had the simplest premises featuring naïve protagonists. While Dunmore can certainly write about characters who know their own minds, it is when she writes about shyness that I feel she is at her most moving.

That being said she also manages comedy stories well, especially when the humour is observational. There is even an element of science fiction in here that took me pleasantly by surprise. Suffice to say, throughout Ice Cream the writing style is clean and enjoyable, even if I didn't take to every single story.

I recommend Ice Cream to fans of Dunmore and anyone who likes a varied but comforting collection of short fiction.

Notable Stories

• My Polish Teacher’s Tie – a lovely tale of pen pals, Polish culture and poetry set in a believable school environment.

• Leonardo, Michelangelo, Superstork – a paranoid sci-fi story about genetic engineering, akin to Margaret Atwood.

• Ice Cream – a funny short vignette about the hardships of being a supermodel and giving in to yummy temptation.
Profile Image for Clare.
158 reviews
December 6, 2021
There's something wonderful about short stories that I can't really describe. This is a good mix of stories... ones that are self contained with neat satisfying endings, some leave you dangling as if you're expected to finish the story yourself, some end abruptly as leave you stunned, some are happy, some are devastating. More please!
16 reviews6 followers
Read
June 20, 2013
It is such a loss if you flip over one page of this book without having it carefully read. Beautiful way of writing, beautiful details and stories. Thanks Hala for lending me the book, enjoyable!
Profile Image for Sarah.
Author 39 books584 followers
March 23, 2011
Delicious stories, each one different, several worthy of re-reading. Dunmore is a wizard at writing flavours, scents, food and nature; every page is spiced with sensory experience. There are stories to sink into, to drift away with. Warm stories, and cool ones for when the summer gets too hot. Perfect!
Profile Image for Ariel.
19 reviews
August 5, 2016
Liked the way evocative stories are told in different voices. One story a day enriches me so much. Some of my favorite stories are... "My Polish Teacher's Tie", "Ice Cream" & "Lisette" !!!
72 reviews1 follower
August 21, 2019
I still think about some of these stories as i felt connected to the characters and cared about the situations. Other stories were too open-ended for me or I wasn't sure what I had read when I had finished, but I didn't care enough to read them again. My favourites were My Polish Teacher's Tie, Lilac, Ice Cream, Mason's Mini-Break, and Lisette.
1,095 reviews21 followers
March 6, 2023
3.5 stars

I read most of this short story collection mid last year, and then accidentally neglected it until this week.

I don't really remember most of the stories that I read in May/June, but I liked the writing (my first from Dunmore) and most of the stories. If not the cover.

I bought this second hand at a stall while I was doing an absentee vote in the federal election in May 2022.
Profile Image for Sandra.
Author 12 books33 followers
August 29, 2024
Stories of uncomfortable comings-together of disparate folk, against a variety of well-evoked backgrounds. Misunderstandings, concealments and awkward conversations. A thoroughly rich and entertaining collection.
Profile Image for Karin.
38 reviews
October 9, 2021
didnt really get some stories but my polish teacher's tie and lisette were the few of my favourites.
Profile Image for Flapidouille.
891 reviews3 followers
June 3, 2023
These are quite different stories, some of which I enjoyed more than others, but on the whole this is very fine and sensitive writing, very Dunmore-esque !
1,432 reviews5 followers
July 4, 2024
I liked these a lot. Short story is a format I'm slowly getting used to and I highly recommend this.
33 reviews
August 8, 2024
I don’t usually enjoy short stories but Helen Dunmore’s characters in each story really drew me in. The writing is beautiful and each short story stayed with me long after I finished it.
Profile Image for Christie (The Ludic Reader).
1,027 reviews67 followers
February 2, 2011
Helen Dunmore is a prolific and talented British writer, whose work I discovered several years ago when I picked up her novel With Your Crooked Heart in the bargain bin. She began her writing career as a poet but has written short stories and books for children as well. Her novel A Spell of Winter won the first-ever Orange Prize.

The fact that Dunmore is a poet is obvious in her collection of short stories, Ice Cream. Her use of language is spare and precise. But the thing that makes this collection of stories resonate is the subject matter: death, friendship, regret. And even more interestingly, I couldn’t name one story in this collection that has a tidy ending. So if you like a short story that wraps everything up in a neat bow - this volume will likely disappoint you.

I don’t know that many writers, though (Alice Munro excepted because she can write a short story about anything!) who could dedicate a few hundred words to the tale of a man driving at night who really, really wants a cigarette. Or tell the deeply affecting tale of a man watching his young wife die. Or the slightly creepy tale of a world where women have their babies through artificial means and what happens to one couple who chooses the natural route.

For the short time you spend with the characters in Dunmore’s stories, you are entranced, mystified and troubled. And even though we don’t always learn their ultimate fate, the stories are enough because of the writer telling their tale.

Profile Image for Janet.
164 reviews
October 17, 2008
These precisely drawn stories of mostly everyday people brought me entirely out of my own everyday... this was a dreamlike experience, or maybe I was just sleepy. "Swimming into the Millenium" was absolutely soaring without being full of itself at all. "Mason's Mini-break" was arch and very funny for readerly-type people. "Emily's Ring" was heart-stopping; it may have scarred me forever. Many of the stories in this collection are wonderful - one or two not so much - but those three are exquisite.
Profile Image for Helen.
1,202 reviews
December 19, 2007
I love short stories, but they always run that risk of being unfulfilling, having to cram some kind of plot or meaning into a few pages, like eating a meal on the run instead of getting to savor it.

Or in this case, failing to cram any meaning into a few short pages...I found the stories impressionistic, like they were simply trying to flash a few scenes or thoughts in my mind without really giving me something to grasp.

Eh...
Profile Image for Julia.
81 reviews2 followers
August 28, 2014
It is no secret that I love the short story, and some of these are even short-short stories. I love the way a glance, an observation, a pause in a sentence can reverberate. A good short story writer creates a little album of moments that together make a story richer than pure narative alone. I like the title story in particular, as well as the one where two childhood friends spend time at a summer house...what they talk about and what they do not are equally poignant.
Profile Image for Anne.
405 reviews39 followers
July 24, 2008
I enjoyed this book, as far as I ever enjoy short stories. There were a couple of stories that I just loved, like the Charlotte Brontë one and "Swimming Into the Millennium." And then there were some where I finished them and couldn't figure out what I had just read. Overall, a nice read--diverting enough for a few days.
Author 1 book9 followers
October 30, 2013
This book was a collection of multiple short stories. Some stories were definitely stronger than others in terms of emotional context and story plot-line. I constantly had to fight a huge temptation not to skip the short stories I didn't like altogether. While some of the stories were entertaining with the use of language, character and comedy- other's didn't make sense or just dragged on.
Profile Image for Nina.
222 reviews14 followers
September 2, 2011
A sensual collection with some memorable takles especially the dawn of sexuality and child's awareness in 'Lilac'.

'He gathers himself, but all he can see is Rose, naked, swimming our from between another woman's legs as if she'd been born there' p.158
Profile Image for Dottie.
867 reviews33 followers
October 7, 2007
I've been told one either likes Dunmore or doesn't. I definitely like her and reading this book was just like eating -- well -- ice cream.
2,700 reviews
November 8, 2017
I bought this book because I thought it would be good "fluff" reading on the plane. It really surprised me. Excellent book; very well written. I want to get more things from this author.
171 reviews
October 22, 2013
A lot of short stories, enjoyable, but I would rather just have a story. I wanted each story to continue.
Profile Image for Nicole Jacob.
190 reviews12 followers
June 2, 2015
Each story is written very poetically and concise.
I read through it quickly though, and so I felt that at the end of some stories I was missing something.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 33 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.