Like Dubliners, if Dubliners were “Cat Person” as a feminist mock-epic about a writer’s coming of age—and every Dubliner was named Margaret.
A woman pursues the man who cut ahead of her in line. Two nice people report that a child has been left unsupervised at a local beach. Romances, old and new, shift and sour. Following Maggie Armstrong’s intrepid hero, Margaret, through first love, first bad date, first job, first extremely bad date, and on into midlife and its attendant disillusionment and revelations, Old Romantics is an acutely observed and hideously entertaining collection of linked short stories from an astonishing new talent. Endearingly flawed and perilously honest, Armstrong’s characters navigate a world of awkward expectation and latent hostility with piercing insight and indelible wit.
⤖ My Review ⬻
Old Romantics by Maggie Armstrong definitely stood out to me for its unique voice. I also really liked that the short stories were interconnected—I’ve honestly never experienced a collection of short stories like this, where characters pop in and out or reappear in ways that tie the whole book together. Despite this structure, I didn’t find myself really caring for said characters, which made it a bit hard to stay engaged. It’s left me wondering if short stories maybe just aren’t for me? Doesn’t give me time to connect maybe, especially when I’m more used to novels that let characters grow over hundreds of pages.

While I didn’t so much connect with the characters, I did resonate with one of the short stories in which a mother is in labour and is walking through a hospital’s maternity ward around Christmas time, as that was my own experience just a few months ago! That moment felt so vivid and familiar! Some of the transitions within the stories confused me a little bit, and I occasionally had to backtrack to figure out what was happening or how scenes shifted. Still, I appreciate the experimentation and structure Armstrong brought to the table, even if it wasn’t quite a perfect fit for me personally.





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Thank you for reading my review! Have you read this book? What did you think? And if you haven’t read it yet, do you plan to? Let me know in the comments!
