The Pelican Child Stories

The Pelican Child Stories by Joy Williams is a new collection published by Random House on November 18, 2025, featuring 176 pages in English. This edition presents a series of stories that delve into the lives of visionary childhood misfits and struggling adult dreamers, showcasing Williams’ distinctive narrative style. The collection captures the essence of characters navigating a complex world, marked by both beauty and despair.
Readers will encounter a range of lost souls, including twin-sister heiresses grappling with their family’s dark legacy and a young man caught in the remnants of his childhood innocence. The stories explore themes of family life and the human experience, reflecting on the challenges posed by an indifferent world. Through her sharp wit and evocative prose, Williams invites readers to engage with the haunting realities of existence, making this anthology a significant addition to contemporary literature and fiction.
Official synopsis Publisher
LONGLISTED FOR THE NATIONAL BOOK AWARD • A razor-sharp new collection of stories of visionary childhood misfits and struggling adult dreamers from this legendary writer of “perfectly indescribable fiction . . . To read Williams is to look into the abyss” (The Atlantic).
“Night was best, for, as everyone knows, but does not tell, the sobbing of the earth is most audible at night.” “Men are but unconscious machines and they perform their cruelties so effortlessly.” “Caring was a power she’d once possessed but had given up freely.” The sentences of Joy Williams are like no other—the coiled wit, the sense of a confused and ruined landscape, even the slight chortle of hope that lurks between the words—for the scrupulous effort of telling, in these eleven stories, has a ravishing beauty that belies their substance. We meet lost souls like the twin-sister heiresses of a dirty industrial fortune in “After the Haiku Period,” who must commit a violent act in recompense for their family’s deeds; in “Nettle,” a newly grown man who still revolves in a dreamscape of his childhood boarding-school innocence; the ghost of George Gurdieff, on an obsessive visit to the Arizona birthplace of the shining Susan Sontag; the “pelican child” who lives with the bony, ill-tempered Baba Yaga in a little hut on chicken legs.
All of these characters insist on exploring, often at their peril, an indifferent and caustic world: they struggle against our degradation of the climate, of each other, and of honest human experience (“I try to relate only to what is immediately verifiable,” says one narrator ruefully), possibly in vain. But each brief, haunted triumph of understanding is celebrated by Williams, a writer for our time and all time.
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