Friday, June 12, 2026

Seasons of Glass & Iron: Stories by Amal El-Mohtar



Reviewed by Kristin

These stories often read like fairy tales. In the titular story, “Seasons of Glass and Iron”, Tabitha is wearing iron shoes. She must walk and walk until they are worn out, and then begin anew in a new pair. Amira is sitting on a high glass hill, trapped there with a continual supply of golden apples. Only when the iron meets glass do the women find a possible escape.

“Florilegia; or, Some Lies about Flowers” is of Blodeuwedd, a woman who was formed from blossoms and trapped into a loveless marriage. She is more at home communing with the mud, the bees, and the books of the library, than with the life she is expected to lead. As in most tales cleverness prevails, and with El-Mohtar’s skill, in a mere sixteen pages.

“Pockets” finishes the collection, as strange and impossible items appear in Nadia’s pocket. Somewhere between a scientific investigation and a wise librarian, Nadia finds some measure of resolution to her mysterious collection.

This is a hard collection to describe. El-Mohtar does not suffer from using too many words. In almost everything I’ve read from her, she makes every word count. This slim volume contains eighteen writings published in a magazine, anthology, or online between 2008 and 2023. As El-Mohtar notes in the introduction, she saw a lot of life changes in those fifteen years. Each entry serves as a snapshot of that particular time in her life. There is not cohesion between stories, both poems and prose, but for the beauty of the precise words chosen.

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