Shannon Iwanski
Autor(a) de A Body to Die For (Strip Mall Mysteries) (Volume 1)
Séries
Obras de Shannon Iwanski
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Conhecimento Comum
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Estatísticas
- Obras
- 2
- Membros
- 8
- Popularidade
- #1,038,911
- Avaliação
- 4.0
- Resenhas
- 1
- ISBNs
- 2
As the name implies, this volume collects stories involving fairies, though they cross genres from science fiction, to urban fantasy, to horror as is demonstrated by the very first entry, a fun sf/urban fantasy mashup called, 'High Tech Fairies and the Pandora Perplexity'. This is shortly followed by 'Wild, Wild Humans', another urban (if you can call modern ships urban?) fantasy/detective story that is equally entertaining. Tracey Fahey's 'Under the Whitethorn' is a beautiful written, sadly tragic, slice-of-life tale...if that life included the supernatural and Sandra Odell's 'Wings' though quite brief brought tears to my eyes.
Jack Campbell's 'The Polka Man' fits right alongside Matthew Bartlett's (much later appearing) 'Pharaoh' both as a more horror leaning inclusion, and in certain other themes. F. Charles Murdock's 'Not Light' and Adrean Messmer's 'Down to Bones' are equally horrific, and like Barlett's story, be prepared for it to involve children to adolescents in their events.
Samantha Kymmell-Harvey's 'The Corbie Lass' and Shannon Iwanski's 'Afternoon Tea' were some of my favorites here, and couched more in traditional fantasy and legends. Though with different outcomes, both lean dark, and have a similar feel of the protagonist overcoming challenges posed by otherworldly forces. 'Sequins' by Nicole Tanquery is, if anything, darker still...really verging on horror as well as having the feel of a survival tale and protagonist of questionable ethics. A real standout inclusion.
Do you love Puppetmaster or just possessed toy tropes in general? Then Aubrey Campbell's 'The Toy Maker' is right for you!
Adan Ramie's 'Mary Pickford' is a good mix of comedy and suspense, and feels like a leadup to a much more erotic story. It wouldn't be out of place in one of Scott Jone's Martian Migraine collections in that regard.
'The Price' by Thomas Mead is one of the longest entries, and integrates fairies into the fine tradition of dark/horror stories about haunted, cursed, or otherwise supernatural films.
Overall a good collection for fans of horror or fairy stories, and light enough not to place huge demands on the reader. I'll certainly be looking for more by a few of these authors.… (mais)