Agog! Terrific Tales | ||||||||
Cat Sparks | ||||||||
Agog! Press, 275 pages | ||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
Kyla Ward starts off the collection with a story of magic, belief, and the dark side -- of humans and other beings. "Kijin Tea" painfully
evokes the grief of a family drawn apart and priceless things tossed aside. Lord and Lady Tooth skate that whip-thin line between our
perceptions of good and evil as the story masterfully tugs at our perceptions and fears. Beliefs of an even stranger sort unite even
as they divide the languid residents hoping to see "Moonflowers at the Ritz."
Family relationships like no other you've encountered come to life in Kaaron Warren's downright creepy "Bone-Dog." Violence and madness
simmer just under the surface of poor Robert in "Tigershow," but the question remains as to which reality in the grisly tale is the true
one. Deborah Biancotti turns in a devilishly playful myth in "The Singular Life of Eddy Dovewater" that only adds to her already impressive body of work.
Glimpses of the future -- or several futures -- come to us in "Sigmund Freud & the Feral Highway," a snowballing bundle of laughs and
sly winks to readers. "The Butterfly Merchant" carries us to the strange disaster of an existence from The Stone Mage and the Sea.
Pondering the end of our world, Dirk Flinthart introduces a group of extreme sports fanatics that are not nearly as unbelievable as we
wish they were. See if the behaviour in "The Big One" really seems so absurd when compared to what fills the TV schedule these days. A
very different closing is proposed in "Eden." Jack Dann offers us a quick peek at a possible first contact that has
its sights squarely on the same black humour readers have become accustomed to finding in Cat Sparks' anthologies.
The true standout of the collection may well be Scott Westerfeld's chilling "That Which Does Not Kill Us." Rather than merely asking
if there are some things worse than death, Westerfeld goes far beyond that old bromide to examine the hypothetical question from both
sides of the grave, making it less and less hypothetical with every beautifully chiselled word.
Whatever the subject matter, the stories in Agog! Terrific Tales are precisely are promised. Does Sparks have an unerring
eye for quality or is ripping fiction thick on the ground down in Australia? Either way, it's time to bring this talent out onto
the world stage where everyone can marvel, and chuckle, at the gems they produce.
In between reviews, articles, and interviews, Lisa DuMond writes science fiction, horror, dark realism, and humour. DARKERS, her first novel, was published in August 2000 by Hard Shell Word Factory. She is a contributing editor at SF Site and for BLACK GATE magazine. Lisa has also written for BOOKPAGE, PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, Science Fiction Weekly, and SCIENCE FICTION CHRONICLE. You can check out Lisa and her work at her website hikeeba!. |
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