The twenty-first century doesn't much care for subtlety. Now is the era
of the gist, the elevator pitch, the big idea boiled down. This is
precisely why Christopher Woodall's fiction gives such pleasure. His
meticulous stories about love, death, fidelity, friendship, and human
solitude do not wave their narrative arms wildly, demanding unwarranted
attention. They speak in a calm voice, inviting the reader
closer--inviting him not merely to react but to feel and think. Sweets
and Toxins is the first collection of short fiction to be published by
this talented novelist (November) and it marks him as a writer whose
sharp eye for detail and feeling for people is a rare commodity indeed.
He is one of the major English authors writing today.