Praise for This Life She's Chosen

"Still and hauntingly ambiguous, these collected stories seem inspired, even inhabited, by the coastal fog of the Pacific Northwest, where the author grew up and where most of the pieces are set. This is the fiction of mood and sensibility, not of incident. Accordingly, it is fiction about women, and about the interactions between them...These ficitons evoke ongoing relationships that seem to stretch like a timeline fore and aft, passing briefly through one crystallizing moment." - Boston Globe

"Kirsten Sundberg Lunstrum makes an impressive debut with this collection of carefully composed stories, chiefly concerned with the cross-purposes at work within families... Throughout the collection, Lunstrum convincingly captures small cruelties and circumspect revolts...it's a relief to come across an author who's unafraid of small moments..." - New York Times Book Review

"These tales are polished tidbits, like translucent stones you find on the beach: smooth to the touch but full of veins and cracks of underlying complexity. You can feel each story spreading in multiple directions, leaving you wanting more." - Seattle Times

"This Life She's Chosen, finely wrought stories by Puget Sound area native Kirsten Sundberg Lunstrum, heralds the arrival of a striking new talent. In her mid-20's, Lunstrum writes with a quiet confidence rare in so young an author, and we willingly surrender ourselves to her sure and steady prose...this collection marks an impressive debut, written with an admirable restraint that throws into sharper relief that emotional turmoil of the characters. There is a clean whiff of the prairie - reminiscent of Willa Cather - in these tales of stoic people soldiering on as best they can through their lives. Lunstrum's next book will be eagerly awaited." - Tacoma News Tribune

"A fine debut collection of engaging short stories, many focused on dynamics between individuals." - Seattle Post-Intelligencer

"Northwest author Lunstrum's measured approach yields moments of lovely, imagistic immediacy: 'Her body was soft, dimpled just above her backside, her hips lined with fine pale stretch marks like hairline fractures on a porcelain dish.' Read one at a time, these stories have an atmospheric sort of power, like a melancholy song that haunts the listener hours after it's heard." - Seattle Weekly

"Lunstrum takes readers on a sensory tour of the West Coast, from Anchorage to Omak, from Spokane to Seattle and on down to northern California, detailing the landscape with the same sensitive focus as she does her characters. This Life is delicate in nature, bringing forth the subtlest tensions between mothers and daughters, husbands and wives. Lunstrum's language is deft and fluid...It's from within this soft insight that the messages emerge, messages about grace and letting go." - Spokane Inlander