Amaryllis and Other Stories
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
For more than fifteen years Carrie Vaughn has published short fiction across all genres, through time and space, earning praise from critics and readers for twists and turns, shocks and delights, and emotional heart. This collection brings together alien encounters, classic fantasy creatures, strange magic, historical milieus; stories with heart, of people making their ways in the world the best they can, however strange and hostile those worlds might be; rare, hard-to-find stories that haven't been available in years. All this, now brought together in the first widely-available retrospective collection of Vaughn's work, including her Hugo-nominated, WSFA Small Press Award winning story "Amaryllis," about a post-catastrophe future in which a community struggles to live in balance with the environment and each other.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Vaughn's second collection (and first without her series protagonist, Kitty Norville) displays impressive talent across a range of both styles and subgenres. The Hugo-nominated title story, unsurprisingly, is among the best here, a short tale filled with emotional moments and impressive worldbuilding in a future in which families are created by committees, and one woman is dealing with the consequences of her mother's rebellion. A prequel, "Bannerless," is also impressive, as are the Prohibition-era "Roaring Twenties" and "Draw Thy Breath in Pain," which relates the secret origins of Shakespeare's works. "For Fear of Dragons" is another highlight, an update of the virgin-sacrifice-to-dragons trope that avoids the snark of so many contemporary revamps. A few of the space-focused science fiction stories are frustrating, less because of the quality of the writing than because they feel unfinished. In particular, "The Best We Can" and "Salvage" falter at both the plot and character levels, merely teasing the beginning of something interesting. Still, fans of Vaughn who only know her urban fantasy will be impressed by just how far she can stretch her wings.