Barry Gifford has been called a master of the dark side of American reality. He is the author of more than forty works of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, including Wild at Heart, adapted in film by director David Lynch; Imagining Paradise: New and Selected Poems; Roy’s World, also the title of the documentary film about Gifford; The Boy Who Ran Away to Sea (2022); Writers (expanded ed., 2023); and Ghost Years (2024). In 2006 he was awarded the Christopher Isherwood Foundation Prize for Fiction.

Photograph by Tiago Russo Pinto.

The Age of Fable

A Short Short Story

by Barry Gifford

Roy read a story about a tribe of female warriors who interrupted the conflict between the Greeks and the Trojans in their quest for males to assist in the propagation of their race. These women called themselves Amazons and were led by Penthesilea, who, as had the rest of the tribe, severed her right breast in order to more swiftly and easily draw back her bow. The most exciting part of the story, Roy thought, was the Amazon queen’s confrontation with the champion of the Greeks, Achilles, whose ferocity in battle attracted Penthesilea as no man ever had. For the first time she encountered a man she could consider her equal.

The idea of a tribe of brave, vicious, single-breasted women was almost beyond the comprehension of Roy’s eleven-year-old mind. He drew pictures of the Amazons as he imagined them, naked, tall, and lean, their long hair tied back with leather thongs.

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