Over on The Bookshop Blog they're praising Wherever I Lie Is Your Bed. Have a look:
After spending the last few months consciously trying to read translated books, I found the newest anthology by Center for the Art of Translation, Wherever I Lie Is Your Bed, the perfect introduction to translated literature from around the world. . . . The anthology is a mixture of short stories, book excerpts and poems. The works are stellar; one after another capturing a haunting moment, the beauty of a life, the isolation of a life alone, with an immediacy that some people believe cannot be translated from one language to another.
1. Did you have a special bookstore in your life when you were growing up, that helped foster your love of reading and writing?
Yes! The Corner Bookstore, which was where Nicolls Road met 25A in Setauket, New York. It was owned by a very short woman named Mrs. Mullins who had big brown glasses and a bun of gray hair, and there was at least one huge cat always perched on a stack of books somewhere, or wandering through the store. A bell rang when you opened the door, not the electronic kind, but an actual bell . . .