Subscriber OnlyBooksReview

Tenterhooks by Claire-Lise Kieffer: A strikingly original debut story collection

The stories are humorous but never cheerful, the characters often repellently fascinating

Claire-Lise Kieffer: darkly funny
Claire-Lise Kieffer: darkly funny
Tenterhooks
Author: Claire-Lise Kieffer
ISBN-13: 978-1-7393979-6-8
Publisher: Banshee
Guideline Price: €18

Tenterhooks is the debut short story collection from Galway-based, Franco-German writer Claire-Lise Kieffer, a graduate of the creative writing master’s at the University of Galway and this collection would sit very comfortably alongside the type of surreal stories popularised by writers such as Miranda July and Cathy Sweeney.

The story concepts are impressively inventive. In Sons & Daughters, a reality TV show offers a €1 million prize to contestants who successfully pick their unknown biological parent out of a selection of strangers. In The Chicken, a woman’s bladder is possessed by the ghost of her dead mother. In A Life Well Lived, an aesthetic procedure adds wrinkles to women’s faces, so they can look as if they have lived full lives. And then there’s Holding Babies, a story about a woman who doesn’t want to have children but seeks out other people’s babies to hold … un...il they make her feel like vomiting.

Kieffer has a talent for shifting the focus of her story in an enjoyably unpredictable way. This is exemplified in the title story about a brutish Galway garda who is waiting for a past secret to be exposed. While the outcome of the plot is easily guessed, Kieffer makes it a much more interesting story by shifting her ending to an unexpected element of the story, which imbues the story and the characters with deeper meaning.

The Ghosts of Rome by Joseph O’Connor: Follow-up to My Father’s House draws an extraordinary picture of Rome under Nazi controlOpens in new window ]

Kieffer’s stories are humorous but never cheerful, and her characters are often repellently fascinating. The sales assistant in Marmite, who tricks hapless men into buying suits they don’t want, is an utter creep, but Kieffer’s characters more often evoke a sense of despair as they seek a way out of loneliness and alienation.

READ MORE

As with many debut collections, some stories are less successful. Kieffer’s writing style is original but at times I found her unusual word and image selections jarring, obstructing rather than enhancing the stories. And while some stories are strongly rooted in place, at other times I am jolted out of a story by the late-stage introduction of a heretofore unsuspected setting. But these are small, technical issues and there is much to enjoy here. For the most part, Kieffer’s stories are strikingly original and make for unique, intriguing and often darkly funny reading.

Edel Coffey

Edel Coffey

Edel Coffey, a contributor to The Irish Times, is a journalist and broadcaster. Her first novel, Breaking Point, is published by Sphere