Laurie H. (lah) reviewed The Female of the Species: Tales of Mystery and Suspense on + 37 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This collection of short storis examines the capacity of women to do evil. Bringing us into the depths of horror, Oates's protagonists range in age, interest, and situation. We meet a six-year-old girl, a young nurse, a middle-aged fashionista, and an elderly woman dying in a nursing home, among others. What unites all of these women across their stories are the desperate personal circumstances in which they find themselves, and the realization that the only path out is a dark and disturbing one. As with much of Oates's work, this collection addresses the exploitation and marginalization of women in American society, yet it does so through horror and suspense. This is a deliciously suspenseful collection, excellent reading for a spooky October night.
Shannon Y. (dolphinlover) reviewed The Female of the Species: Tales of Mystery and Suspense on + 209 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Bizarre tales by Joyce Carol Oates. LOVED IT! Just what I needed to get out of the rut I was stuck in. Very different and unique

Another nightmarish collection of stories from Oates. I've come to believe that JCO is one of the best writers out there. I have enjoyed both her novels and her story collections and she has yet to disappoint me. This collection of previously printed stories that came from such publications as Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, and Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine were as the title implies, stories about females ranging from a six-year old to wives, mothers, and career nurses. All of these were sometimes rather ghoulish but once started could not be put down.
In "The Banshee" a six-year-old drags her baby brother onto a rooftop to get daddy's attention, with dire results. A razor-wielding miss who can pass for 11 is rented to pedophiles by her (step)daddy in "Doll: A Romance of the Mississippi"; Ugly cellar traumas await youngsters at the hands of their mommas in "The Haunting" and "Tell Me You Forgive Me." In a turnabout, the young mom in "Angel of Wrath" coaxes her stalker to murder. Then there are the wives: lonely and lusting on the Cape in "Hunger," rich and bored and window-shopping in Madison Avenue boutiques with sinister back rooms in "Madison at Guignol" and posing as the ultimate Daddy's Girl in "So Help Me God." What about the poor working lass? Two summa cum laude graduates of Mount Saint Joseph's Nursing School, class of '54 and class of '99, invade the hospital wards in "Angel of Mercy."
Overall, a page-turning collection of rather macabre tales that left me wanting to read more of Oates.
In "The Banshee" a six-year-old drags her baby brother onto a rooftop to get daddy's attention, with dire results. A razor-wielding miss who can pass for 11 is rented to pedophiles by her (step)daddy in "Doll: A Romance of the Mississippi"; Ugly cellar traumas await youngsters at the hands of their mommas in "The Haunting" and "Tell Me You Forgive Me." In a turnabout, the young mom in "Angel of Wrath" coaxes her stalker to murder. Then there are the wives: lonely and lusting on the Cape in "Hunger," rich and bored and window-shopping in Madison Avenue boutiques with sinister back rooms in "Madison at Guignol" and posing as the ultimate Daddy's Girl in "So Help Me God." What about the poor working lass? Two summa cum laude graduates of Mount Saint Joseph's Nursing School, class of '54 and class of '99, invade the hospital wards in "Angel of Mercy."
Overall, a page-turning collection of rather macabre tales that left me wanting to read more of Oates.

"Whatever the situation, Oates, with her usual clarity and precision, creates a world where danger lurks within every woman, and no one is safe!" - Library Journal
Quite an interesting book with 9 different short stories by Joyce Carol Oates. Some were very suspenseful!
Quite an interesting book with 9 different short stories by Joyce Carol Oates. Some were very suspenseful!

A couple of the stories had merit and I will admit they held my attention but they held my attention because of morbid curiosity. I think this woman, this writer, is seriously disturbed. Real gaps in sanity. I am absolutely sure of it. Now if you are the type to enjoy the slide into that realm and like to feel somewhat off balance then this is the book for you. I tend to read for escape from the day to day grind.