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Highway Thirteen: Stories Hardcover – August 13, 2024
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WINNER OF THE STORY PRIZE
Named a Best Fiction Book of the Year by Minnesota Star Tribune and Kirkus
A New Yorker Recommended Read of the Year
A gripping, enigmatic collection of linked short stories about the reverberations of a serial killer’s crimes in the lives of everyday people.
In the small town of Barrow, Australia, people go about their ordinary lives. They drive to work through the dense state forest. They raise their families. They flirt and yearn. They lie and confess. Some of them leave home. Some of them return.
Darkness thrums beneath the surface of these ordinary lives: the violence of one man, a serial killer whose murders made Barrow infamous. His twelve victims―women, men, mostly young―are long gone, but their deaths are felt, beyond the forest where they were buried, beyond this country, beyond even this time. In the past, where a young woman on a school trip to Rome sees something she shouldn’t have. In the present, where a man confronts an ancient grief on the suburban streets of Texas. In the future, in the hands of journalists and podcast hosts and television actors whose livelihoods hinge on the twin spectacles of loss and violence.
Highway Thirteen is a luminous wonder: a book about the collisions between public and private selves, between parents and children, between history and what comes after, between the living and the dead. Fiona McFarlane’s roving vision is itself a story about stories―those we tell, retell, forget, sell, disprove, inherit, live through―and a work of extraordinary power and magic.
- Print length272 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherFarrar, Straus and Giroux
- Publication dateAugust 13, 2024
- Dimensions5.75 x 0.95 x 8.5 inches
- ISBN-100374606269
- ISBN-13978-0374606268
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From the Publisher
Praise for Highway Thirteen: Stories by Fiona McFarlane
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Fiona McFarlane writes with psychological precision and a masterful sense of suspense. Each story is artfully constructed and the way they fit together, spanning seventy-eight years, is nothing short of dazzling. Fiona McFarlane’s book is a tour de force about the stories we tell, the surprising ways our lives connect, and the ripple effects of violence.”
―The Story Prize judges' citation
“An accomplished collection, stylish and lyrical in its prose and deeply sensitive in its characterization. The stories are richly layered, often turning back on themselves or in unexpected directions, and McFarlane’s precision and craft are one of the great pleasures of the book.”
―Fiona Wright, The Guardian
“The pages turn themselves . . . McFarlane’s a startlingly gifted stylist and she makes the correct call, keeping Biga shadowy . . . Highway Thirteen is a Cubist collage of grief and suspense, grand betrayals and cryptic desires. It entertains even as it plunges headfirst into unspeakable evil.”
―Hamilton Cain, Minnesota Star Tribune
“Reading Highway Thirteen is the literary equivalent of watching an eclipse: one must trace the shadow to see the spectacle . . . A masterclass in reflection and refraction. Fiona McFarlane is interested in what we choose to see and what we choose to ignore. It is easy to conjure up devils, demons and monsters―to spin blood-soaked tales of the murder forest. Far harder, she shows, is to face our own, ‘ordinary’ backyard cruelties.”
―Beejay Silcox, Times Literary Supplement
“[Highway Thirteen] operates more like a collection of short stories with a shared thematic spine than a traditional novel, earning a distinct stylistic character of its own . . . Under McFarlane’s apt curation, they lend themselves to a bigger picture, allowing her to examine situations from a number of angles without ever infringing on their complexity . . . Disturbing, entrancing, heartfelt.”
―Ellie Dean, Readings
“Twelve stories are artfully connected by one serial killer . . . As McFarlane weaves in and out of . . . daily lives and untangles their varying degrees of separation from Biga and the evil he embodies, she impressively captures a somewhat abstract feeling: the way something tragic that happened to a friend of a friend can haunt you. McFarlane’s dexterous writing offers sharp, evocative descriptors . . . With each passing page of each chapter, tension ramps up as the reader anticipates how each new character will wind up being related.”
―Naomi Elias, KQED
“McFarlane is a master at just about everything: dialogue, setting, comic timing . . . But her biggest accomplishment is creating an empathic bond with people whose lives are touched by unexplainable violence . . . McFarlane sets them off on journeys that are compulsively suspenseful and enormously readable.”
―Mary Ann Gwinn, Los Angeles Times
“McFarlane delivers stores that are as complex as they are haunting . . . A thrilling collection that explores an uncanny restlessness haunting the Australian psyche. Its crystalline prose and keen observations about everyday life open up new ways of thinking about the historical crimes that underpin our collective unsettlement.”
―Monique Rooney, The Conversation
“Highway 13 doesn’t so much investigate the psyche of a serial killer, or even the culture that created him (though it touches on both) as our preoccupation with crime as a mirror that reflects us. The stories we weave and draw on to explain our lives, form our personalities and understand others are perhaps the truest subject of this book . . . Vibrant and intricately crafted, from its taut sentences and pitch-perfect psychological observations to its very order of stories.”
―Jo Case, Sydney Morning Herald
“[A] smart, deeply moving collection . . . Readers may be tempted to hazard an opinion of who and what the killer is from the perspectives his ancestors, neighbors, the media, groupies, even the tangentially involved, offer, but in the end it is their stories―of loss, obsession and brokenness―that linger.”
―Paula L. Woods, Los Angeles Times
“Each story . . . stands alone beautifully. Woven together, they illustrate the long-reaching, often unexpected ripple effects evil has on every life it touches.”
―Jane Harper, Booklist
“However entertaining, McFarlane’s stories continually remind readers that behind true-crime stories’ escapist pleasure exist real death and human pain. Addictively engaging, profoundly serious fiction from an underappreciated master.”
―Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Eerie and insightful . . . McFarlane beautifully renders the ways in which news of the crimes warps some of her cast’s relationships and causes other characters to slip into obsession. It’s a standout meditation on a community’s legacy of violence.”
―Publisher’s Weekly
“This Möbius strip of linked stories bends and twists the crime genre until it is barely recognisable . . . The result is a riveting study of human nature.”
―Geraldine Brooks, author of Horse
“These sublime stories have the poise and clarity of classics. As Fiona McFarlane’s characters edge towards revelation or disaster, her artistry shines on every page.”
―Michelle de Kretser, author of Scary Monsters
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Farrar, Straus and Giroux (August 13, 2024)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 272 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0374606269
- ISBN-13 : 978-0374606268
- Item Weight : 12.9 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.75 x 0.95 x 8.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #209,765 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #2,538 in Short Stories Anthologies
- #5,784 in Short Stories (Books)
- #13,796 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2024The stories in here all center on a notorious Australian serial killer who murdered hitchhikers and backpackers in New South Wales some thirty years ago. These aren't horror stories or detective tales, instead each story centers on someone with a connection to the crimes, some very tangential, like the first story about a man whose co-worker is fascinated by the crimes; some closer, like a politician running for office who shares his last name, or an actor taking a role in a film.
<i>The serial killer Noah's playing is--was--a real man. Noah had heard of him before he took the part, of course. Every Australian has heard of him. Most Americans haven't. Wylie hadn't. Noah tried to explain: This is like playing Ted Bundy. This is like playing Jack the Ripper. Wylie said, Good! A complex, brave, meaty part! He knows she considers Australia, and everything in it, smaller than anything in the US or Europe. Unconsciously, of course. Smaller serial killers, smaller murders, smaller grief.</i>
But while the stories center on the serial killer, they often don't mention him at all, or in passing. People, even people affected by his actions, still lead complex lives of their own. So in <i>The Wake</i>, the spouse of a detective who worked on the task force finds out the killer has died, but the character and the story are more focused on an unsettling change to her morning routine.
I've read other short story collections that use a single person or event to tie the stories together and when they are well done, the result is a collection that is varied and also cohesive. McFarlane's collection was wonderful -- she hardly needed the connective tissue as each story stood fully on its own feet, but there was so much variety in the stories collected here, that the connections, however faint, did give added force to their impact.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2025This is an intriguing collection of interconnected short stories that I thoroughly enjoyed. The idea of following the impact of a single person—specifically a serial killer—on the lives of various others, even in seemingly incidental ways, is a fascinating and original approach. McFarlane weaves together these stories with such skill, revealing how lives intersect, sometimes unexpectedly, through a thread of shared experience that is both haunting and thought-provoking.
One of the aspects I appreciated most about this collection was how McFarlane keeps the reader in the dark initially about how each new character relates to the killer. As the stories unfold, little by little, we learn the ways in which these seemingly separate lives are connected, and that slow reveal is done so effectively. It kept me engaged, making me eager to keep reading to see how the next character would tie back into the overall narrative.
The structure of the stories is also worth noting. Each one can stand alone, yet they form a larger, cohesive whole. McFarlane does an excellent job of exploring the psychological effects of violence on those indirectly touched by it. The characters are well-drawn, and each one brings a unique perspective that adds depth to the exploration of the killer’s impact on the world around them.
While the subject matter is dark, McFarlane’s writing is thoughtful and nuanced. She doesn’t sensationalize the violence or the killer’s actions but instead focuses on the ripple effect of those actions on individuals and communities. It’s a meditation on fate, chance, and the way our lives can be forever altered by events that seem distant or disconnected at first.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 23, 2024As a big fan of McFarlane's previous work, The Sun Walks Down, I eagerly looked forward to reading Highway Thirteen. My expectations were not misplaced. In this collection of linked stories--revolving around the after-effects of a serial killer in a remote region of Australia--McFarlane moves across time, before, during and after the discovery of bodies in Barrow State Forest. She does an excellent job of portraying the ripple effects of these monstrous crimes on a variety of people, most of whom have had no personal contact with the convicted murderer. McFarlane's deceptively elegant prose, her impeccable sense of timing, and her beautiful descriptions of the Australian landscape all combine to make this a worthy successor to The Sun Walks Down. A very talented and ambitious writer
- Reviewed in the United States on August 27, 2024Just read this book and the stories go nowhere. I do not understand why people are raving about this book.
None of the stories leave you with suspense. Definitely not a page turner. All stories are boring with no direct connection to the serial killer. I kept getting to the end of a story expecting something to happen and it never did.
Got this on Kindle. If I could return it, I would.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 4, 2025This work is a collection of short stories that are all in some way related to a serial killer who murdered hitchhikers in Australia during the 1990s. The protagonists of the stories range from family members of the murderer to true crime junkies to a politician with the same last name of the murderer. They range in time from the 1950s to the present day.
I actually ended up listening to this book twice. The first time I just picked it up and went about my business, and spent over half the book confused, not remembering that this was a collection of short stories (my bad). Then I waited several months and gave it a relisten so I could focus on the stories and not my confusion.
The author’s creativity was evident in the wide range and variance of these stories. I loved how the stories were all vaguely related but were so unique in their own right. There was only one that I rated less than three stars, but most were solidly four stars for me.
If you enjoy short stories that are interconnected and tell a larger story, then this is a must read. I’m looking forward to reading more from this author. My thanks to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for allowing me to read this work. All thoughts and opinions expressed in this review are my own.