Back Cover:A woman hides from her husband in a fish tank and another absently bakes sponges inside her tarts. Appliances
drop from the sky, men grapple with chainsaws, women struggle with hormonal violence, and abandoned boys beg on doorsteps.
Enter into the territory of broken people and the folks that love them.
Sensitive and unruly, sincere and absurd, Stefanie Freele's "Feeding Strays" is a collection of fifty short stories, both
slipstream and modern, about children, family, relationships, and oysters.
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Feeding Strays is wonderful, full of strange, original invention. Never a cliche, seldom anything even resembling a wasted
word, full of surprises, and in all ways gratifying. Motherhood didn't seem to get in Ms. Freele's hair or her computer in
the slightest, except perhaps to reinforce what was lurking in the bottom of her mind, waiting to be let loose.
-- David Wagoner
As its title suggests, Feeding Strays is a deeply compassionate collection. Stefanie Freele has a knack for capturing stray
moments in her characters' lives -- moments most writers would overlook -- and charging them with a strange and wondrous grace.
These stories will unsettle you, inspire you, and make you feel part of the greater human family.
-- Gayle Brandeis, author of the Bellweather Prize-winning The Book Of Dead Birds, Fruitflesh, and Self
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These expert, graceful mini-portraits of the life-jostled, the uncallused, and all the others who struggle with familyhood,
are moving, sensitive, funny, and true. Stefanie Freele is a writer with a grip on the human spirit.
-- Deb Olin Unferth, author of Vacation
Stefanie Freele's stories are full of surprising details, some sweet and strange, some sharp and close to the bone. She
writes about women and men and babies. She writes about the things he carries (in his briefcase), the things she swallows,
the way this baby floats in the air and the way that one makes a break for it. Lemon zest, unexpected dehumidifiers, pewy
diapers, the salsa that speaks to us, frozen wildlife, too much to mention. Most of these honest and innovative stories are
also very short. Freele knows how to make every note count when she names that tune�just this much and not a word more.
Open this book and discover that sometimes a man in a banana suit really is just . . . well, you'll have to find out for yourself.
-- Ray Vukcevich, author of Meet Me in the Moon Room
Powerful, funny, not-to-be-missed short story collection.
-- Daniel Olivas, author of Anywhere But L.A.
How I love the stories of Stefanie Freele for their endless surprises, their lemon-tart humor, their beautiful-ugly characters.
I'm not always certain how she accomplishes her magic -- her stories as quick as a shell game -- but I am certain that you
will set down this book as I did, with a hurt heart and a curious smile.
-- Benjamin Percy, author of Refresh, Refresh and The Language of Elk