Anthony’s Reviews > The Best American Short Stories 2011 > Status Update
Anthony
is 56% done
Read the vivid, grim “The Dungeon Master” by Sam Lipsyte.
— Oct 18, 2025 04:46AM
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Anthony’s Previous Updates
Anthony
is 98% done
Read “Escape from Spiderhead,” a magnificent story by George Saunders. It’s the second story of his that I’ve read, and both were fantastic.
— Nov 08, 2025 05:08AM
Anthony
is 91% done
Read Jess Row’s “The Call of Blood.” The story of a nurse and his relationship with his Alzheimer’s patient and her daughter, it’s quite moving. Very intimately told, complex, featuring keen, clear-eyed depictions of wonderfully human characters.
— Nov 07, 2025 08:52AM
Anthony
is 84% done
Read “To the Measures Fall” by Richard Powers. This was my first encounter with Powers’ work, and it won’t be my last. His story here is inventive, urgent, crisply and wittily crafted, and packed with ideas. I understand why he’s so acclaimed.
— Nov 01, 2025 02:14PM
Anthony
is 80% done
Read Joyce Carol Oates’ “ID,” a harrowing, sad portrait of a neglected, emotionally scarred and stunted 13-year-old girl.
— Nov 01, 2025 01:33PM
Anthony
is 75% done
Read Ricardo Nuila’s “Dog Bites,” a fascinating portrait of an eccentric doctor and his eccentric son.
— Oct 30, 2025 10:54PM
Anthony
is 71% done
Read “Phantoms” by Steven Millhauser, an intriguing piece with an inventive form and style. Quite different in all those respects from anything else in the anthology.
— Oct 18, 2025 11:02AM
Anthony
is 65% done
Read Elizabeth McCracken’s “Property.” She’s such an inventive, energetic writer, whose approach here gives unfiltered, messy life to the chaos of grief.
— Oct 18, 2025 07:25AM
Anthony
is 60% done
Read Rebecca Makkai’s heart achingly piercing “Peter Torelli, Falling Apart.”
— Oct 18, 2025 05:39AM
Anthony
is 51% done
Read Claire Keegan’s “Foster,” about an Irish girl being handed off to another couple’s home for a summer. Its subtlety and grace and emotional depths knocked me out.
— Oct 16, 2025 12:13PM
Anthony
is 44% done
Read 3 less-than-satisfying stories: Ehud Havezelet’s “Gurov in Manhattan,” which had affecting moments but was also a bit too fussy; and Caitlin Horrocks’ “The Sleep” and Bret Anthony Johnston’s “Soldier of Fortune,” both of which sank under the weight of their irritating pretensions.
— Sep 30, 2025 03:58PM

