The Atmospheric Railway
The Atmospheric Railway: New and Selected Stories, is a 2008 short story collection by British author Shena Mackay comprising thirteen new stories, and twenty-three selected from earlier collections.
Stories
- "The Atmospheric Railway" - Neville is returning by train to Poole in Dorset after spending the weekend with his cousin Beryl who has been researching a distant aunt - Florence Graham and her companion Archie Erskine. Florence founded a school for sickly children, Archie worked on the construction of an 'atmospheric railway' in South London.
- "Nanny" - Writer and critic Campbell Forsyth gives a lecture on "Fiction and Metafiction" to a literary society in a country town. After the talk he is accosted by an old flame who was once a nanny for his children. After they leave the hall together she turns into a vengeful goat.
- "Radio Gannet" - Sisters Norma and Dolly live contrasting lives in a seaside town; Norma is a respected grandmother living in a large detached house and has no contact with Dolly who lives in a run-down caravan on the other side of the tracks. Then unbelievably Norma hears her sister's voice on the radio - she has started her own station: "Radio Gannet" including campaigns such as "Send a Pet to Lourdes"...
- "The Lower Loxley Affect" - Linda and her brother Maurice are united in their love of The Archers, a long-running BBC radio soap set in Lower Loxley. Whilst Linda plans a nasty surprise for 'Flatface', a tomcat who has been terrorizing her. Maurice makes cardboard cut-outs of his family, used to fool neighbours that he has company..
- "That Innocent Bird" - On the West coast of Scotland Jock MacSiller is the tall, soft-spoken landlord of the "Walrus Inn" with his Martiniquan wife, daughter and two talkative parrots for company. Unheard, the parrots reveal Jock to be Long John Silver.
- "The Heart of Saturday Night" - Alex has just completed a year as visiting professor of a university but is staying on to run a couple of workshops at the university's summer poetry school, both to give him inspiration for his entry in his university apartment visitors book but more importantly to allow him opportunity to spend more time with Blythe Gridley, the American wife of a colleague.
- "Jumbo Takes a Bath" - Eloise prepares for a blind date with a friend of a friend which turns out far more eventful than she had feared when he arrives with bleeding fingers and a squirrel in his jacket acquired at Green Park tube station.
- "Shalimar" - Effie de Vere no longer lets out rooms in 'Shalimar', her Ayr guest house. As she takes her 'crazy yellow dog' for a walk one stormy day she recalls the dramatic events surrounding its arrival and the earlier 'disappearance' of one of her guests...
- "Nay, Ivy, Nay" - the title and theme comes from the chorus of an old English carol, "The Contest of the Ivy and the Holly" describing the conflict between man and woman. A botany professor suffers an unwelcome disturbance from Ivy, a neighbour, asking for a sprig of his beloved holly to decorate a Christmas pudding for her sister...
- "Wasp's Nest" - A man explains his love for wasp's nests.
- "Windfalls" - On Martinmas, Martin collects his grandson from school and makes an apple pie from windfalls found in his garden.
- "Swansong" - after 40 years Louisa returns to her home town for a friends funeral and spots her first love Jeff in a charity shop, but her boots keep beating out "Heartbreak Hotel".
- "Ennui" - Milly and Hubert live in a rented flat in Camden Town where Milly is worried about the Camden Town Murder. Hubert is the assistant of the painter Walter Sickert, but Milly has lost her job and together they pose in many of Sickert's paintings.
- "Bananas" - Imogen Lemon suffers unwelcome attention from the owner of a local convenience store whom she nicknames 'bananas'. To her embarrassment he keeps trying to sell her gin and cigarettes. He later disappears only to reappear on the fly-ridden meat display.
- "Evening Surgery" - Dr Frazer, a GP is having an affair with one of his patients which takes place during evening surgery, meanwhile Mavis his formidable receptionist has a firm grip on fast approaching Christmas.
- "Pink Cigarettes" - Simon who should be studying for his O-levels is instead acting as amanuensis for Vivian Violett, an elderly poet who is writing his memoirs.
- "Babies in Rhinestone" - Art teacher Alfred Ellis and dance tutor Araidne ' Elliot run their respective schools from adjoining premises. Their mutual antagonism comes to a head over a cat which shares their attentions...
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Reception
Reviews are generally positive :- Jane Shilling of The Daily Telegraph writes "Her themes are generally contained within a domestic framework. She writes about families, loneliness, railways, suburbia, cats, clothes, old age, poets, shape-shifting, the oppression of kindness and the fatal stab of unkindness. Her style has a lyric elegance that has deceived critics into describing her, with that most dismissive term of faint praise, as 'gentle'. But she is not gentle. She writes with a beautiful, controlled savagery of 'the familiar tenderised and made strange by the darkness'. There are other writers with this gift - Helen Simpson, Hilary Mantel, Jane Gardam come to mind. Mackay resembles them both in the beauty of her prose and in the absolute originality of her voice."
- Aamer Hussein in The Independent finishes his review with "The bizarre and the banal, the half-remembered and the yet-to-come, brilliantly intertwine in the sentences of this most imaginative yet most practical of writers".
- Booktrust says "This is a wonderfully bittersweet selection of works by one of the modern masters of the short story. Shena Mackay is always entertaining, even as she conveys the humour and poignancy of relationships beset by the ravages of time and family life, as well as hard-earned compassion for her characters.
- Alyssa McDonald in the New Statesman writes "There are many writers who can elicit much feeling from a rollicking plot, but very few can manipulate the dreaminess of memory and fantasy with such exacting precision, or make the minutiae of other people's lives so sympathetic."
- However Jenny Turner writing in The Guardian says the stories are "fabulous in patches, but do not quite add up"