The protagonists of Suzana Tratnik's short stories in Games with Greta
all share a sense of isolation on society's margins. Whether
non-participants in the mainstream, rebels against it, or its occasional
victims, they're well practiced at recognizing the herd instinct in
action. From the six-year-old girl who discovers transgressive new games
to play with her glamorous cousin from England; to a decidedly unusual
schoolchild inventing a novel way of getting back at playground bullies;
to young women who find their love interests drifting away, seduced by
conventional notions of popularity and success; to a narrator who
suddenly finds herself on no ordinary train trip through the heart of
Slovenia--these are characters and stories that deftly and sardonically
underscore the phantom nature of "normalcy" itself and the risks of its
tyranny for dissenters and conformists alike.