April 6th, 2009 / 11:19 am
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Keeping up with 52 Stories

Why is this the 4th most popular Google image for fifty-two weeks?

Why is this the 4th most popular Google image result for "fifty-two weeks?" Your guess is as good as mine.

Hey remember when Blake Butler was on Cal Morgan’s Fifty-Two Stories and we all got excited? Yeah, me too. Well that was a few weeks ago, so I thought tonight I’d pop back over to see what’s been going on since.

As you’ll recall, Blake’s “The Copy Family” was #11.

The copy family would not speak when spoken in to—though they had heartbeat, they were breathing. Their copy eyes were wet and stretched with strain.

That was followed by a classic, Stephen Crane’s “The Pace of Youth” at #12.

The summer sunlight sprinkled its gold upon the garnet canopies carried by the tireless racers and upon all the devices of decoration that made Stimson’s machine magnificent and famous.

Then things got even, um, classicer, with Dostoyevsky’s “The Dream of a Ridiculous Man” at #13.

I suddenly felt that it made no difference to me whether the world existed or whether nothing existed anywhere at all. I began to be acutely conscious that nothing existed in my own lifetime.

And now, the current story, in at #14, the second-ever story (after Blake’s) to emerge from the 52 slushbox, Casey Kait’s “Year of the Dog.

At first, I saw her only at school events—the annual party or the one day each summer the class drove to the beach. But over time she’d stop by when I got home from school with containers of noodles or dumplings that she had made. “So Mommy doesn’t have to cook tonight, okay?” We started to love her. All of us.

I’m especially excited because, as it happens, I actually know Casey Kait a little bit as well. We were MFAs at New School at the same time, and if memory serves, we took Dale Peck’s literature seminar together. Congrats, Casey!

And cheers to 52 Stories– keep it coming!

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6 Comments

  1. David Erlewine

      Loved this story. Very well done and perfect last line. Going to sound like a quibble but there was a lot of “I heard” and “I saw” and I kept flashing back to Gardner’s order to cut the effing filters and just say “the snake writhed”. Very minor point. The story is fantastic. I’m liking this 52 stories concept and hoping they publish more stories by folks like Casey and Blake and less of Dickens.

  2. David Erlewine

      Loved this story. Very well done and perfect last line. Going to sound like a quibble but there was a lot of “I heard” and “I saw” and I kept flashing back to Gardner’s order to cut the effing filters and just say “the snake writhed”. Very minor point. The story is fantastic. I’m liking this 52 stories concept and hoping they publish more stories by folks like Casey and Blake and less of Dickens.

  3. Blake Butler

      i enjoyed reading the dostoyevsky, i hadn’t seen that story before and it was quite something i think. but yeah, new is good. :)

  4. Blake Butler

      i enjoyed reading the dostoyevsky, i hadn’t seen that story before and it was quite something i think. but yeah, new is good. :)

  5. David Erlewine

      Indeed, it was something. I’m good with three of four new ones to each old one.

      I hope the concept sticks and this thing keeps going next year.

  6. David Erlewine

      Indeed, it was something. I’m good with three of four new ones to each old one.

      I hope the concept sticks and this thing keeps going next year.