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Oxygen

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This title was sold to McClelland & Stewart.

160 pages, Paperback

First published January 28, 2000

4 people are currently reading
127 people want to read

About the author

Annabel Lyon

18 books127 followers
Annabel Lyon was born in 1971. Her first book of fiction, the short story collection Oxygen (Porcupine's Quill, 2000), was published to wide acclaim, and was nominated for the Danuta Gleed and ReLit awards.

Her short fiction has appeared in numerous publications, including Toronto Life, The Journey Prize Anthology, and Write Turns: New Directions in Canadian Fiction. Lyon is also a frequent contributor to the Vancouver Sun and The Globe and Mail.

In addition to creative writing, Annabel Lyon has studied music, philosophy, and law. She lives in Vancouver, where she writes full time.

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5 stars
32 (29%)
4 stars
35 (32%)
3 stars
27 (24%)
2 stars
10 (9%)
1 star
5 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews
Profile Image for Bonnie.
169 reviews311 followers
June 4, 2009
A typical comment from Annabel Lyon, on learning the craft of writing fiction: “I learned to treat a short story like a carrot and chop off the green woody stuff at the beginnings and the too-pointed stuff at the end to make it tastier.” [Booklounge:]

This collection of 13 short stories and one novella was Annabel Lyon’s stunning debut. I still pull it off the shelf now and then to enjoy her smooth but precisely worded prose: thoughts and images that shine in their brilliance.

Oxygen is a refreshing read, and well worth re-reading, too.

Profile Image for Miz Moffatt.
93 reviews26 followers
September 22, 2010
Annabel Lyon debuted with a forceful, impressive collection of short stories fine-tuned to haunt the quiet hours of the night. Here, we see an experimental form rarely seen in Canadian short prose -- the author teases out complex narratives through compact, often fragmented sections of dialogue/description, allowing her to flicker across timelines and skip between perspectives in a matter of sentences. She whittles her prose to a fine point and is unyielding with her approach.

Highlights of Oxygen include: the dizzying, bittersweet portrait of Suzy and her guardian, Morris, in "Black"; the loneliness and alienation of a young woman, framed through a simple grocery list in "Things"; the terrifying, splintered testimony of three teens in "Song"; and the danger of the stalker-made-familiar in "Run".

Ideal for: Kids who like their Can. lit. shaken, not stirred; Folks with a penchant for literary journals and firecracker prose; Public transit commuters in need of a rough morning jolt.
Profile Image for Genie.
48 reviews1 follower
August 17, 2011
It felt really disjointed to me... I believe the author intended for the reader to have that feeling, but I felt that I was missing the thread that held all these stories together.
Profile Image for Rhea Tregebov.
Author 31 books44 followers
May 18, 2012
What a magnificent book. I know it came out quite a while ago, and it's taken me this long to read, though I read and enjoyed The Golden Mean. Lyon is a superb writer.
Profile Image for Léa Taranto.
Author 1 book7 followers
December 18, 2020
A debut collection of contemporary short stories with taut, precise prose and equally refined pacing.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
106 reviews5 followers
February 15, 2017
Annabel Lyon paints vivid scenes with simple brush strokes and leaves it to the reader to saturate the story with meaning. I love her efficient style. She is not tempted to reveal too much. She shares just enough to titillate without overburdening the reader.

Each line is poetry.

"...scribbled with kelp..."
"...carbonated with pleasure..."
"Lily wished she had a tail so she too could turn her bum to Meredith and trace such indolent arabesques of contempt."

Profile Image for Suze.
435 reviews
March 16, 2012
This collection of pared down stories stunned me in a couple of ways. Often I felt like I didn’t *get it* in the end – Lyon hurtles through episodic snippets with fanatic faith in the reader’s imagination to fill in the blanks. But I clung to every urgent detail, drooled like a groupie over her tingling language – carbonated with pleasure (p.149) – and offbeat images – preschooler … in an elbow-swallowing shirt (p.179). I read the book slowly, never two stories in a row, to savour the punch – her eyes squinched … as though sleep were a fight she lost (p.186). I searched for a thread to tie these stories together – what? Something about vulnerability, I think, about our sloppy grip on control. Ultimately I was in love with *how* she said it, though I wasn’t always certain *what* she said.
Profile Image for Laura.
416 reviews26 followers
July 22, 2012
“My friend is an archaeologist. He likes bones. Dinosaur bones, Neanderthal bones, ribs from the Chinese takeaway. When I am Egyptian he brushes me with his brushes, my flesh his dust. When I am Siberian he ladles warm water over me, thawing me slowly. I open my eyes. My mother says, Just remember: if it’s pink inside, it isn’t done.”
Profile Image for Loretta.
1,322 reviews14 followers
December 12, 2013
Gorgeous. I am continuing on my discovery of short stories, and this book includes many gorgeous examples of the form. I will definitely read more Lyon (including her novels) - I am very interested to see how the spare, sometimes elliptical language she uses in these stories translates to a novel. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Andrea  Taylor.
787 reviews46 followers
August 9, 2011

These stories challenge the imagination. I found myself getting frustrated at times and that means the stories were working on my mind. I do think they are worth reading and some stories leave you wanting more. So it is in life, you are always coming up for air.
629 reviews
August 17, 2010
Intriguing story of an anesthesiologist who loves her job but who finds herself in the unthinkable position of being accused of causing the death of a little girl during what should have been routine surgery. Especially interesting because the author IS an anesthesiologist.
Profile Image for Kristin.
33 reviews
March 9, 2015
Overall this is not one of my favourite short story collections. I found that a lot of the stories were missing the mark - whether it be the characters didn't seem real or the stylistic elements were off. Will be sticking with the likes of Alice Munro and Margaret Atwood in the future.
Profile Image for Pamela.
57 reviews2 followers
November 24, 2014
Here writing is sometimes so intriguing that it lifted me out of the story. A writer's writer I would say.
Profile Image for Mar.
2,115 reviews
July 31, 2015
Collection of short stories. I liked some more than others, but overall, think it is a good collection.
Profile Image for Alice.
240 reviews2 followers
November 6, 2016
Poor read, couldn't finish it!!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews

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