Tales From the Liminal
In this collection of fifteen curious and delightful short stories, you never know who you're going to meet or where you're going to end up. You can be certain, however, that you'll always find yourself smack dab in the middle of some befuddling predicament of existence. Using humor and horror, satire and allegory, fabulism and realism, Tales from the Liminal takes you for an extraordinary ride, submerging you in spaces where anything is possible, especially transformation.
"... a breed of storytelling that encases an entire cosmos within a compact form, with prose that pulses with life, with tableaus that transfix the imagination with glimmers of divine order in an emotionally turbulent landscape." - Timothy Cech, Reed Magazine "A sometimes dizzying, eclectic look at the hunger of the human soul for more. The collection at times feels like embodied philosophy, with perspectives contending ... stirring up timeless questions you've forgotten, or the unformed whispers of questions you haven't yet articulated." - Dr. Matthew Flaherty, Literature Faculty, Bard High School, Early College Baltimore "If this imaginative world of S.K. Kruse creates more perplexity than certainty, literary sojourners should know that they have arrived in the right place. I know that happened for my students as we read, studied, and discussed this most delightful book." - Dr. Timothy Carson, Honors College, MU, author of numerous books on liminality The Collection- Bigfoot's Got a Lover
- The Birthday Party
- Man Posts Picture of Unusual Rock then Gets Call from Concerned Parties
- When They Come for Me
- Mistakes May Have Been Made
- All He Could Do Is Sing
- She Saw Gertrude Stein in the Condensation on Her Window
- The Ferryman and His Brother
- Goodbye, Bonavento
- The Stretch Motel
- I Followed Schrödinger's Cat and Here's What I Found
- My Streak of Nobody
- The Unexpected Consequence of an Unsolicited Revolution
- The Carousel
- Summoned by a Star
"The world in Kruse's new book is ... both deeply strange and oddly familiar ... a vast catalogue of philosophical ideas sprung from their hypothetical cages ... tight, surreal stories carefully polished and compiled with singular purpose ..." - Matt Geiger, multi-award-winning journalist and author of The Geiger Counter