The Dissolution of Small Worlds
-
- $4.99
-
- $4.99
Publisher Description
Eerie and unnerving events are welcome reads for horror and weird fiction aficionados, and Kurt Fawver's new collection delivers: a group of work-study students grow obsessed with a particular, otherworldly room at the university library; a monster's mother wants her to assume a traditional life; and a mysterious calling haunts an elderly man at a nursing home; strange Halloween traditions draw a writer to a remote town. Includes the Shirley Jackson Award winning story “The Convexity of Our Youth.”
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This collection of 14 short, gruesome takes on existential terror likes to make it personal. Apocalypses, when they come, as to the inhabitants of a nursing home ("A Silence of Starlings"), bring a familiar, sour taste of disappointment and abandonment. The young are no more likely than the old to escape terrifying fates, whether working on a school's "Special Collections" or trying to merely complete a physics degree ("All That is Thrown Away"). The universe, though uncaring, is not unmindful, which makes each morsel of existence seem a toy for unaware tots, to be taken away at the whim of immensely powerful beings ("The Cone of Heaven"). Fawver deploys metafictional reflections, turning a trapped play audience ("The Gods in their Seats, Unblinking") or an author tortured by a publisher ("An Interview with Samuel X. Slayden") into clear reader surrogates. The most successful tale, "The Final Correspondence of Sabrina Locker" (original to the collection), takes the traditional motifs of Lovecraft country shunned farms, cryptic locals, curses from out of time and space and makes them scream again with both fear and wonder. This is a satisfying exploration of "seething, conscious torment."