Black Dahlia & White Rose

{{Infobox book

| image = Black Dahlia & White Rose.jpg

| caption = First edition

| name = Black Dahlia & White Rose

| cover artist =

| cover art =

| author = Joyce Carol Oates

| country = United States

| language = English

| publisher = Ecco/HarperCollins

| genre =

| media_type = Print (hardback)

| pub_date = 2012

| pages = 288

| isbn = 978-0062195708

| oclc =

}}

Black Dahlia & White Rose is a collection of Gothic short fiction by Joyce Carol Oates published in 2012 by Ecco Press.

The title story is a fictional rendering of the early careers of Hollywood starlets Elizabeth Short, dubbed the “Black Dahlia” by the press after her brutal murder in 1947 and her contemporary Norma Jean Baker.Cheuse, 2012: "Black Dahlia and White Rose extend far beyond the psychological, into a style we have to say has become her watermark. Every day gothic I'd call it…”Boyagoda, 2013: “The stories in this collection generally involve a combination of macabre events, fantastical turns and unguarded first-person storytelling.”

The volume received the 2012 Bram Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in a Fiction Collection, and was shortlisted for the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award in 2013. The short story “I. D.” appeared in Best American Short Stories, 2011.{{cite web |title=Black Dahlia & White Rose |url=https://celestialtimepiece.com/2016/09/28/black-dahlia-white-rose/ |website=Celestial Timepiece: A Joyce Carol Oates Patchwork |date=28 September 2016 |publisher=Celestial Timepiece}}

Stories

Original publisher and date indicated.Oates, 2012: Acknowledgments

Dedication

I

  • "Black Dahlia & White Ros" (L. A. Noire: The Collected Stories, Mulholland Books, 2011)

II

III

  • "A Brutal Murder in a Public Place" (McSweeney’s, Issue 37, 2011)
  • 'Roma!" (Conjunctions, 55 Fall 2010)
  • "Spotted Hyenas: A Romance" (The Atlantic online, May 31, 2012)

IV

Reception

National Public Radio literary critic Alan Cheuse characterizes the stories as “explorations of human loneliness and misery,” delivered in the Oatesian style that is both vigorous and “shocking.”Cheuse, 2012: “In her fresh, direct, energetic and often shocking prose…”

{{blockquote | Oates bestows life wherever she turns, excavating in what first appears to be ordinary ground and discovering that to live means to be in trouble.Cheuse, 2012}}

New York Times reviewer Randy Boyagoda asks rhetorically whether Oates—notable for her “immense productivity” as a writer—offers anything “fresh or urgent” in these 11 short stories. Boyagoda confirms the Gothic nature of the narratives and the author’s focus on “the rough fortunes of (mostly) women who think they’re in control of their situations but are inevitably proved wrong, sometimes brutally so.”Boyagoda, 2013: “The stories in this collection generally involve a combination of macabre events, fantastical turns and unguarded first-person storytelling.”

Footnotes

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Sources

  • Boyagoda, Randy. 2013. Fame and Misfortune. New York Times, January 18, 2013. https://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/20/books/review/black-dahlia-white-rose-by-joyce-carol-oates.html Accessed 05 March, 2025.
  • Cheuse, Alan. 2012. Book Review: 'Black Dahlia and White Rose' National Public Radio (transcript), September 18, 2012. https://www.npr.org/2012/09/18/161369272/book-review-black-dahlia-and-white-rose Accessed 10 March, 2025.
  • Oates, Joyce Carol. 2012. Black Dahlia & White Rose. Ecco/HarperCollins, New York. {{ISBN | 978-0062195708}}

{{Joyce Carol Oates}}

Category: American short stories

Category: Ecco Press books