Eclipse 3
فرمت کتاب
ebook
تاریخ انتشار
2009
نویسنده
Jonathan Strahanناشر
Night Shade Booksشابک
9781597802529
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
October 19, 2009
Australian editor Strahan continues his wide-ranging and occasionally controversial anthology series with 15 boundary-pushing stories. Pat Cadigan's “Don't Mention Madagascar” and Nnedi Okorafor's “On the Road” play wittily with reality and identity, and are exquisitely crafted. Maureen McHugh's “Useless Things” and Ellen Kushner's “Dolce Domum” are melancholy but no less fascinating. Jeffrey Ford's “The Coral Heart” nicely tweaks high fantasy tropes, while Peter S. Beagle's “Sleight of Hand” and Nicola Griffith's “It Takes Two” examine the nature and power of love from very different angles. The less successful efforts by Elizabeth Bear, Molly Gloss and Paul Di Filippo are still ambitious enough to be worth reading. Only Daniel Abraham's cliché-driven “The Pretender's Tourney” and Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple's predictable short-short “Mesopotamian Fire” seem really out of place. Despite the weak spots, Strahan continues to secure his place as a top anthologist.
November 15, 2009
A young girl discovers the power of imaginary numbers in Ellen Klages's "Lotion"; in "On the Road," Nnedi Okorafor explores the consequences of a policewoman's eerie encounter while visiting her Nigerian relatives; and a grieving nobleman's faith receives the ultimate test in Daniel Abraham's metaphysical tale "The Pretender's Tourney." These stories, along with 12 other contributions by authors including Peter S. Beagle, Pat Cadigan, and Jane Yolen, present a varied take on modern speculative fiction. VERDICT This mixed bag of fantasy, sf, horror, and magical realism should have a strong appeal for a wide audience and is a good addition to libraries with strong short story collections.
Copyright 2009 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
December 1, 2009
In a brilliant, wide-ranging anthology, Strahan presents stories by authors as diverse as Karen Joy Fowler, Elizabeth Bear, and Paul Di Filippo. Ellen Klages contributes Lotion, a story about imaginary numbers and the strange powers of math, in which a young girl discovers the magical potential of pure math. Ellen Kushners Dolce Domum is, perhaps, not about what its characters think it is. Bears Swell is a fairy tale about a musician seeking her voice, in which a mermaids gift is not as wonderful as at first glance it seems. Molly Gloss The Visited Man presents a lonely pensioner who lives upstairs from le douanier Rousseau and the relationship that develops after the painter brings the retiree a stray cat. As for the previous Eclipse anthologies, Strahan has picked stories whose authors care about both the craft of storytelling and the stories they tell. Each piece is distinctive and haunting.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)
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