Skip to content
goodListen.netgoodListen.net
goodListen.netgoodListen.net
  • Cart / $0.00
    • No products in the cart.

  • Cart

    No products in the cart.

  • Home
  • Browse Audiobooks
  • Explore Categories
  • Request
  • Contact Us
  • Login / Register
Home / Uncategorized

In the Forest of Forgetting by Theodora Goss

$4.99

Categories
  • Arts & Entertainment (2373)
  • Biographies & Memoirs (10818)
  • Business & Careers (4243)
  • Children's Audiobooks (6094)
  • Comedy & Humor (479)
  • Computers & Technology (548)
  • Education & Learning (1243)
  • Erotica (4290)
  • Health & Wellness (5045)
  • History (7353)
  • Home & Garden (520)
  • LGBTQ+ (5383)
  • Literature & Fiction (48426)
  • Money & Finance (1116)
  • Mystery/ Thriller & Suspense (24462)
  • Politics & Social Sciences (3622)
  • Relationships/ Parenting & Personal Development (514)
  • Religion & Spirituality (2132)
  • Romance (18447)
  • Science & Engineering (1375)
  • Science Fiction & Fantasy (21058)
  • Self-Improvement (1469)
  • Sports & Outdoors (249)
  • Teen & Young Adult (6902)
  • Travel & Tourism (185)
  • Uncategorized (25159)
  • Publisher's summary
  • Reviews (20)

Collection of sixteen stories which takes us to countries that are both imaginary and real.

Theodora Goss is the author of the (IMO excellent) Athena Club trilogy, all available on MaM as eBooks and audiobooks:

1) The Strange Case of the Alchemist’s Daughter
2) European Travel for the Monstrous Gentlewoman
3) The Sinister Mystery of the Mesmerizing Girl

She teaches at Boston University. Here are her degrees, from her BU page:

2012 Ph.D. Boston University (English)
1998 M.A. Boston University (English)
1993 J.D. Harvard Law School
1990 B.A. University of Virginia (English)

Apparently she practice law for about 3 years, then said nah and committed to English. She teaches writing. It shows.

Editorial Reviews of this book:

From Publishers Weekly

Goss’s collection of 16 gothic stories possesses a spare, surprising beauty, though her modern-day characters, like those in fairy tales, are constrained by the hard lessons she sets out to teach. The three linked stories, “Miss Emily Gray,” “Conrad” and “Lessons with Miss Gray,” turn on the character of the title, a dark Mary Poppins–like woman who exists to grant children their hearts’ desires—often at a high price. Goss layers the Victorian tone and everyday magic of these tales with commentary on familial negotiations and the grave consequences for heedless behavior. Other stories consider family cohesion and snobbery, as in “Sleeping with Bears,” about a Southern belle who exhibits “no originality” until she marries a bear named Trout Catcher. Her sister quickly comes to understand the attraction. In “Lily, with Clouds,” a bohemian woman dying of cancer returns to her blue-blooded family in Virginia, where her conventional sister can’t help judging her unusual life. Though Goss (The Rose in Twelve Petals and Other Stories) crafts these delicate stories with tight control and wit, in toto they become something of a moral sledgehammer. (Aug.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Goss’ contribution to the exciting showcase of the new weirdness, Feeling Very Strange (2006), is a version of Sleeping Beauty that unfolds in history as well as time: when the prince arrives for the great awakening, he’s a bulldozer driver clearing the forest. That story opens this collection of others that are frequently as incidentally funny. Comedy is here a seasoning, however, of the richly astringent flavor of fine literary fantasy, in which happy endings are tentative, temporary, or even repugnant. In “Professor Berkowitz Stands on the Threshold,” possible paradise is spurned because it requires death in the here and now. In “Sleeping with Bears,” the narrator’s best friend weds a bear, and how can that turn out? (Still, at the end, the narrator is dating the groom’s brother.) In “Letters from Budapest,” their recipient, a dealer of objets d’art, learns that his aspiring artist brother has found the ideal teacher but may never paint again; meanwhile, that Old Master–actually a mistress–wants the dealer to be hers. More conventionally but oh-so-satisfyingly developed are the stories in which the witch Miss Emily Gray and the turn-of-the-century North Carolina girl Rose appear. Both are in the volume closer, “Lessons with Miss Gray,” about learning how to obtain one’s heart’s desire–and it doesn’t seem too hasty to exclaim, “Classic!” Ray Olson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

20 reviews for In the Forest of Forgetting by Theodora Goss

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “In the Forest of Forgetting by Theodora Goss” Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a review.

May you like

Ritual in Death by J D Robb

Rated 3.42 out of 5
$4.99

Dead Man’s Footsteps by Peter James

Rated 3.4 out of 5
$4.99

Lord Loss by Darren Shan

Rated 4.8 out of 5
$4.99

A Season of Angels by Debbie Macomber

Rated 4.07 out of 5
$4.99

Brisingr by Christopher Paolini

Rated 4.08 out of 5
$4.99

With millions of narratives taking flight each day, our platform is a sanctuary for capturing and storing these tales.

About goodListen

About us
Contact us
Browse Audiobooks
Explore Categories

Policy

Sales Policy
Shipping Policy
Return Policy
Privacy Policy

Quick Links

My Account
Purchase Guide
Request
Terms and Conditions
© 2025 goodListen.net, All Rights Reserved
  • Home
  • Browse Audiobooks
  • Explore Categories
  • Request
  • Contact Us
  • Login