Yates was also an acclaimed author of short stories.
Eleven Kinds of Loneliness, Yates's first collection, followed the publication of his first novel,
Revolutionary Road, by a single year. It was compared favorably to Joyce's
Dubliners (all but one of its stories take place in and around the
boroughs of New York City rather than Joyce's
Dublin) and eventually achieved a kind of
cult status among fiction writers despite its relative obscurity. One later
New York Times essay by Robert Towers praised Yates's "exposure of the small fiercely defended dignities and much vaster humiliations of characters who might have been picked almost at random from the fat telephone book of the Borough of
Queens." Yates's second collection,
Liars in Love, appeared nearly 20 years later, in 1981, and was again met with a positive critical reception.
Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, writing for the
Times, called the stories "wonderfully crafted", and concluded that "every detail of this collection stays alive and fresh in one's memory." Despite this, only one of Yates's short stories ever appeared in
The New Yorker (after repeated rejections), and this was done posthumously. "The Canal" was published in the magazine nine years after the author's death, to celebrate the 2001 release of
The Collected Stories of Richard Yates, a collection that was again met with great critical fanfare. ==In popular culture==