I adore 'Terribly Tiny Tales', but picking a "best" story is tough because they're all so fleeting and personal. For me, it's the ones with the sharpest twist in the tail that linger. There's this one about a lighthouse keeper who signals not to ships, but to his love across the bay, and the final line reveals they've both been dead for years, sending messages through the light. It's a ghost story in two sentences that somehow feels epic.
I think the collection's power is its inconsistency, though. You'll scroll through a dozen and maybe two will truly punch you in the gut, but those two make the whole experience worth it. The minimalist format forces every word to carry weight, and when it clicks, it's like a perfect, tiny explosion of feeling. My other favorite is probably the one about the old woman watering a cactus she thinks is her son—devastating in its quiet absurdity.