And Go Like This
Stories
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
Reading John Crowley’s stories is to see almost-familiar lives running parallel to our own, secret histories that never quite happened, memories that might be real or might be invented. In the thirteen stories collected here, Crowley sets his imagination free to roam from a 20th century Shakespeare festival to spring break at a future Yale in his Edgar Award winning story “Spring Break”. And in the previously unpublished “Anosognosia” the world brought about by one John C.’s high-school accident may or may not exist.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A compassionate, ruminative eye frames the sepia-tinted worlds of the fifth collection from erudite fantasist Crowley (Ka). The stories are drawn from the last 20 years of Crowley's long career and span the breadth of speculative and literary short fiction. Standouts include the Bradburyan "The Girlhood of Shakespeare's Heroines," which laces together the Shakespeare authorship question, a 1959 Shakespeare festival, and the compromises of disability into an emotional bomb; the perspective-bending "In the Tom Mix Museum"; and the collection's original story, "Anosognosia," which deepens a classic Twilight Zone esque second chance into a humane examination of its own tropes that shakes the fourth wall. Weaker entries struggle to outgrow their concepts: "And Go like This" reduces a massively overpopulated New York to a punch line; the commentary on education and nostalgia at a future Yale falters into stereotype in "Spring Break." However, Crowley's overall style is utterly engrossing, with prose that treats a sun-washed rural road or a software box with the honor and admiration due a sacred relic. This collection's recurring refrains "pay attention," Shakespeare, injuries and aging, the agony of making choices coalesce into a reading experience like a long afternoon spent with an intimate, excellent raconteur.