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Short Story Review: "Heartburn" by Stefan Bourque

By Holly Bourque, published Dec 20, 2007
Published Content: 64  Total Views: 50,801  Favorited By: 13 CPs
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Rating: 4.0 of 5
Stefan Bourque's short story "Heartburn" is available on his website, www.darkwriter.com as a free download. You can download it for free here.

"Heartburn" is a weird little short story written by horror author, Stefan Bourque. It is distinctly different from Bourque's previous short horror stories, as "Heartburn" takes a turn into the drama genre. Although one could argue that "Heartburn" contains no plot, it is a great story nonetheless. In fact, the lack of a plot serves to make this story that much more believable as a real-life event.

The beginning of the story opens with a couple driving over to Mattie's house, an acquaintance of Alex, to do some shrooms. The girl, Rebecca, is clearly uncomfortable with the situation, as she struggles against her guilt-induced Catholic upbringing. Meanwhile, her boyfriend, Alex, sees no big deal with what they are about to do and secretly wishes that Rebecca would loosen up.

The awkwardness continues once the couple arrives at Mattie's house, and it carries through until all three begin to feel the effects of the shrooms. Suddenly, shy Rebecca turns into a chatterbox and carries on a lively conversation with Mattie. Meanwhile, Alex begins to suffer from heartburn, one of the side effects he experiences when he does shrooms.

After several hours, Alex's heartburn is no better, so the couple take their leave for the evening. Rebecca realizes she left her purse inside the house, so Alex waits out in the car for her while she goes back inside to retrieve it. He waits what he feels is more than a reasonable amount of time, and then heads to the house to find out what is taking so long. What he witnesses next leaves him feeling perplexed and dumb-founded. Stefan Bourque describes this scene perfectly with a dream-like quality and the reader gets the sense of having gone on a little trip themselves, wondering if the event actually happened or if it was a trick of the imagination. In the end, the term "heartburn" takes on new meaning.

Short Story Review: "Heartburn" by Stefan Bourque

Do you suffer from heartburn?

Credit: Wicked Pages Press

Copyright: Wicked Pages Press

Takeaways
  • This story holds a nice surprise ending.
  • Stefan Bourque's foray into a different genre is successful.
  • "Heartburn" will leave you with many questions - good questions.
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