People Who Live Alone Talk Too Much

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1970s
1980s
A01=Sofi Stambo
A12=Yana Mihaylova
absurdist
aging
American
Author_Sofi Stambo
Author_Yana Mihaylova
autofiction
award-winning
balkans
birds
block
Brooklyn
Bulgaria
Category=FBA
Category=FXR
Category=FYB
cats
charming
chatty
city life
comedy
coming of age
communism
confession
daily life
debut
diners
dive bar
dogs
drama
eastern europe
eccentric
encounters
eq_anthologies-novellas-short-stories
eq_bestseller
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_modern-contemporary
eq_nobargain
experimental
family
first person
forthcoming
generational
grandparents
hilarious
humor
illustrated
immigration
introspective
language
linework
literary
magical realism
marriage
memoir
memory
miranda july
multi-generational
New York
nostalgia
observation
observational
offbeat
office job
pets
portraits
Queens
quirky
relationships
satire
Short stories
slice of life
socialism
soviet
still life
stream of consciousness
surreal
travel
USSR
wildlife
women

Product details

  • ISBN 9781632064172
  • Dimensions: 127 x 180mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: Restless Books
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Winner of the 2024 Kellman Prize for Immigrant Literature

With the puckish humor of Fran Lebowitz and the keen inventiveness of Lydia Davis, Sofi Stambo’s debut collection leans into curiosity, family, and the old-world bonds that draw her motley characters together.

A nervous dog takes flight over Manhattan. A woman soothes her neighbors with multilingual telepathy. A purse snatcher inherits her victim’s scribbled lists—and her worries. In these stories, immigrants to New York City work their way through absurd situations into even messier ones, communing with their fellow diners, officemates, and the local cemetery geese, and greeting chaos with a grin.

From Bulgaria to America, People Who Live Alone Talk Too Much pulls at the threads of daily life, unwinding the ordinary into scenes of hilarity, introspection, and surprising connection.

Sofi Stambo is a fiction writer based in New York. An excerpt from her forthcoming novel, This Train Has Sailed, won the 2024 LitMag Virginia Woolf Award. Her short stories have won the 2015 DISQUIET Literary Prize for fiction, and been nominated for the 2018 Pushcart Prize. Her work has appeared in Promethean, Ep;phany, The Kenyon Review, The MacGuffin, New Letters, Fourteen Hills, New England Review, Stand, American Short Fiction, Guernica, Agni, Chicago Quarterly Review, Granta Bulgaria, Tin House, Another Chicago Magazine, Bellevue Literary Review, The Common, River Styx, and The Rumpus. Links to some of her publications can be found on her website www.sofistambo.com. Stambo has a master’s degree in literature from Sofia University St. K. Ohridski, Bulgaria, and was a graduate student in Literature at City College, New York.  Yana Mihaylova is a Bulgarian-born and NYC-raised artist and designer. She received her BFA from Cooper Union in 2014, and has studied part-time at Grand Central Atelier, New York Academy of Art, Institute of Classical Art & Architecture, and the Art Students League. She lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

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