The Heart and Other Viscera
Stories
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
The New York Times bestselling author of the “supernatural tour de force” (M.J. Rose, bestselling author) The Map of Time crafts an enchanting collection of twelve evocative and macabre stories delving into the magical, ordinary, and darker aspects of love in all its powerful forms.
A young girl receives letters from her lost doll; a cat madly in love with her human neighbor; a bored office worker escapes his monotonous life by traveling on his grandfather’s model train; a man gives all of himself to the woman he loves, piece by piece.
These are just a few of the unforgettable characters that inhabit Félix J. Palma’s gorgeously wrought short story collection, by turns mesmerizing, morbid, and melancholy. This collection contains selections from three previously published anthologies, bringing together in one volume some of Palma’s most celebrated stories. Available for the first time in English and with his signature “lyrical storytelling and a rich attention to detail” (Library Journal), The Heart and Other Viscera explores the wonder, madness, and heartbreak of love, and the lengths to which some are willing to go to protect, honor, and cherish the ones they love.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In Palma's solid collection, following his The Map of Time trilogy, the surreal collides with the deeply mundane in transformative ways. In these stories, the protagonist almost always a man down on his luck or depressed in some way encounters something extraordinary. This might be a magical train set, where an avatar painted in one's likeness placed inside it can traverse the world ("Roses against the Wind"); a new apartment that's perfect in every way, except for the man behind the curtain in the den ("The Man behind the Curtain"); or, in the title story, a man who gives pieces of his body to his lover on birthdays and anniversaries. In the most ambitious story, "The Seven (or So) Lives of Sebastian Mingorance," Palma pulls off the impressive juggling act of considering one man and all the different directions a day in his life could have gone, with all seven alternative Sebastian Mingorances occupying the same room at one point. The scope of Palma's imagination is undeniable, even if his female characters suffer for it all of them are objectified or otherwise treated as accessories to the plot, and most meet rather gruesome fates. Palma proves he is an assured, creative writer with a knack for the unsettling.