| Mars Dust & Magic Shows | ||||||||
| Mark Bourne | ||||||||
| Scorpius Digital, 49,500 words | ||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
Upon first reading, these stories are fun, light reading, just the thing to bring a smile to your
face. It's later, after you've set the book aside, that the full significance of the
tales comes back to weigh on your mind.
What could be funnier than a story where a young woman opts to
become a living dirigible, where a tired, middle-aged woman learns about her true place
among the kingdom of the fairies? On the other hand, what is so laden with wistfulness than these very selections?
No one can resist tales of redemption -- either reading them or writing them --
but "Mustard Seed" and the deceptively winsome "Baby Talk" are examples such as you've
never encountered. Perhaps the highest praise I can heap on "Baby Talk" is that it is
irresistibly reminiscent of that masterpiece of collaboration, Good Omens by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman.
The standout story of the collection is one of such deceptive subtlety that many may never get the
full import of the ending. Of course, many may choose not to adopt that interpretation, but there
it is. A parade of eccentric and laughable small town folk traipse through "Brokedown," showing
all the glaring flaws and delicate kindnesses of unsophisticated people everywhere, but there
is more to them. Much more. Perhaps, that is what gives the story its lingering feeling of
wistful submission. For a town so crowded and so too-knit, it is a lonely place.
Audience and industry get a thorough beating in the star-struck and scary "What Dreams Are
Made On." The repulsive characters in front of the camera, those running the show, and those
glued to the "entertainment" should make us all ashamed of how far we are willing to go for titillation.
Certainly, it's futuristic, but is it so distant from the endless,
emetic "reality-based" programs clogging the schedule right now?
History (even fictional history) does not escape Bourne's imaginings.
Never really satisfied with the way "King Kong" turned out? Perhaps, you'll lean more
toward the version here in "The Nature of the Beast." Purists may find fault, but that's what
fiction is for, isn't it? Historians will probably pull out handfuls of hair at the mere
thought of a mobster turned president of the United States, but in "Boss" the more troubling
aspect is how possible it really is.
That will give you something to chew on. Really, that's what Bourne does best: leaving
you plenty to mull over later, whether you had planned to or not.
And to think you would miss all this if you clung to the printed page, instead of trying something new.
In between reviews, articles, and interviews, Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. DARKERS, her latest novel, was published in August 2000 by Hard Shell Word Factory. She has also written for BOOKPAGE and PUBLISHERS WEEKLY. Her articles and short stories are all over the map. You can check out Lisa and her work at her website hikeeba!. |
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