Diane Williams is the founder and editor of the distinguished literary annual, NOON, the archive of which, as well as Williams' personal literary archive, was acquired in 2014 by the Lilly Library. She is the author of nine previous volumes of short fiction and the recipient of four Pushcart Prizes. She lives in New York City.
Praise for How High? — That High
A Lit Hub Most Anticipated Book of 2021
“I would describe Williams as the writer who saved my life—or my
soul, if one believes such a thing exists . . .
[Williams’] stories, many no longer than a page, suggest that
what is left unsaid between people remains more powerful than what
they have the capacity to articulate. Although Williams studied
with Gordon Lish (and before that, with Philip Roth), her
minimalism is distinctive for its sublimity and its spirituality,
its ability to evoke the laws of a world apart.”
—Merve Emre, The New Yorker
“These 34 stories, however compressed, are rooted in the dramatic
potential of extramarital affairs and erotic regret . . . Fiction
ought to lead us to those precipices where language fails and
silence begins. You would be well advised, with a master like
Williams, to take the plunge.”
—The New York Times
“Diane Williams writes short stories that are dares. They dare to
disorient, drawing near-subconscious connections between everyday
happenings and emotional turmoil . . . [How High?—That High]
creat[es] a unique headspace that invites revelation even as it
playfully breaks the rules.”
—New York Journal of Books
“[Williams’ stories] don't stamp their feet. When they make music,
they're not thumping. It's an internal music that is special to
[Diane Williams].”
—Michael Silverblatt, KCRW’s Bookworm
“How High? — That High is challenging, surprising, unsettling, and
very funny.”
—Southwest Review
“A true master of the short story format, How High? — That High
showcases author and storyteller Diane Williams’ genuine flair for
originality coupled with an unsurpassed literary skill and talent
for narrative driven stories and memorably crafted characters.”
—Midwest Book Review, Wisconsin Bookwatch
“The new stories are like the old stories in the pleasures they
deliver, starting with Williams’s irresistible, inimitable opening
sentences . . . How High? – That High is a slyly amusing book; even
the darker stories veer into humor.”
—BOMB Magazine
“Each short story in the collection depicts ordinary moments we've
all experienced, but Williams fully dissects each scene to reveal
the emotions and meaning tucked into the fabric of the everyday.
The collection can't help but leave you wondering what it means to
be human.”
—VERANDA
“To take How High?—That High onto a subway or beach is to risk
missing your stop, or a coming tsunami.”
—The Millions
“Diane Williams’ writing is like a fine wine; you’re enchanted by
the first sip, and it only gets better with age . . . [These
stories] cover your everyday mundanities, but the magic is in her
ability to turn a phrase, to surprise on the sentence-level.”
—LitHub
“Evading the constraints of typical short fiction, How High? — That
High . . . challenge[s] convention with fervor. Williams’ willful
brevity and tantalizing obscurity make How High? a subversive
puzzle box that dismantles standard notions of characterization and
storytelling with deft precision . . .
[Williams’] preoccupation with form is a testament to her
abiding love of the craft, as well as a reminder that craft’s
greatest enemy is always staidness.”
—Shelf Awareness
“Diane Williams probes the depths of human relationships in this
humorous and sensitive collection . . . We are not alone. Williams
shows that through her stories. It’s up to the reader to fill in
the rest.”
—BookBrowse
“Williams is a magician of the miniature . . . Brief, elliptical,
steeped in longing—or is that lust?—[these stories] offer slices of
life that rely on interior more than exterior details, which is to
say they are small road maps of the soul . . . [Williams' stories]
are rigorous in both language and emotion, using nuance and
inference to explore the implications, the contradictions, that
people rarely share aloud . . . Williams’ small gems are as dense
and beautiful as diamonds, compressed from the carbon of daily
life.”
—Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review
“Some of the pieces in How High?—That High, such as ‘A Type of
Vertigo’ and ‘Popping,’ are vivid portraits in miniature, and
tornado-like in the way that Williams bears down to reveal only a
moment or two in a fully imagined life. The effect leaves her
characters and readers stunned . . . After 30 years of work, some
writers grow lazy; Williams has grown more potent, like the venom
of certain snakes.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Every word matters in these micro entries, and ‘Finished Being’ is
among the collection’s most impressive feats, packing a book’s
worth of mystery and emotion into a single sentence . . . Despite
their small slivers of space, [these stories] have outsized
emotional and intellectual impacts.”
—Foreword Reviews
Praise for The Collected Stories of Diane Williams
“Erudite, elegant and stubbornly experimental. For any writer,
an omnibus collection is a triumph. To see years of Ms. Williams’
confounding fictions collected in so hefty a volume is like seeing
snowflakes accrue into an avalanche.”
—The New York Times
“This book will rewire your brain.”
—NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour
“Diane Williams seeks to stun, in something near the literal sense
of the word . . . There are no first sentences full of orienting
details, no dramatic dialogue, no neat epiphanies in a story's
final lines. A concluding sentence is more likely to open up a
story than to resolve it.”
—The New Republic
“Full of funny, libidinal and invigorating enigmas . .
. Readers who love the arresting phrase, the surprising word,
will gravitate to her . . . It’s perfect to leave on the
bedside table, to be consulted before one’s dreamlife begins.”
—The London Review of Books
“Williams can do more with two sentences than most writers can do
with two hundred pages.”
—The New York Review of Books
“Savage, wild, sideways stories flirt with reality and sever you
from your roots, only to bring you back changed.”
—San Francisco Chronicle
Praise for Diane Williams
"Not a single moment of the prose, here, is what you expect,
and even the ordinary is, in the context created by Diane Williams,
no longer ordinary: it is fresh, happy and peculiar—or is it we who
are refreshed, happy and more peculiar than before after reading
her?"
—Lydia Davis
“Flash fictions that are often beautiful but impenetrable,
structured like little riddles to unspool. While it is easy to
compare Williams' work to that of Lydia Davis, another expert
writer of absurdist shorts, this collection stands in its own
category as defiantly whimsical and weird . . . Williams creates
stories that can be consumed in small bites. But she provides
enough material in each to chew over for an entire meal.”
—The New York Times
“One of America's most exciting violators of habit.”
—Los Angeles Times
“Let's hear it for the magnificent Diane Williams, one of the
wittiest and most exacting writers of our time. Her fictions are
fervid endorsements of terrible, joyous life. But that's not quite
right, because like all great literature, they are life.”
—Sam Lipsyte
“Diane Williams is hilarious, brilliant, eccentric, powerful, and,
luckily, ours.”
—Deb Olin Unferth
“Discomfitingly and devastatingly funny, Williams upends the
mundane, the painful, and the unusual, resulting—much in the way an
art teacher might ask her class to copy a photograph upside-down—in
precision and clarity.”
—Elle
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