Going Postal | |||||
edited by Gerard Daniel Houarner | |||||
Space & Time, 125 pages | |||||
A review by Lisa DuMond
Don't flip through the pages, searching for tales of USPS
shoot-em-ups. These are stories about all of us and the process of
going quietly berserk. From six-year-old Tony in "Boo!", Linda Addison's
quick jaunt into horror, to the grizzled wreck in "Spellchecked," it
is a phenomenon irrespective of age. Social class is no
protection. City or suburb. Not even a requirement of humanity.
Check your sanity at the door.
It will come as no surprise to anyone that one of the strongest
and most disturbing tales comes from Melanie Tem. "Sweet" is anything but.
This is a subtler cruelty than that which makes the front page of
your local paper. Roger is the kind of monster that already lives
next door; here is the "quiet guy," the "best neighbour you could
ask for." The kind of fellow who keeps to himself and doesn't
bother you with the screams or the stench of his victims. Just give him time.
The pressures of culture and the demands of society prove to be
the breaking point for the heroines of "Jinn" and "Legion." Final
meltdown occurs inside the minds of two women. When they
crumble under the load of fear and sorrow heaped upon them, they
take no one else with them. Jacob's "Legion" leaves the reader
wondering how much of what the main character perceives is true,
while Pollard's "Jinn" takes us to a horror that probably once
existed and continues without the woman, but will live forever in her mind.
Two commentaries on pop-culture fail only in that they are
somewhat predictable. "Toon-Boy" is a retelling of
Willam Goldman's Magic, and comes out on the losing end of the
comparison despite lively and engrossing narration. Saying that
the ending of "One Last E-Ticket Ride" is too obvious may well be
unfair; perhaps only those of us who grew up in the long shadow
of Mouse Town can see this one coming.
Science fiction, fantasy, and horror -- it's all there in
Going Postal. Houarner has gathered together the new names that
you will be seeing on book spines in all these genres for years to
come. Pay attention to the messages and the messengers; they're
going to be part of our lives for some time. Unless things suddenly
get drastically better. In other words, for some time.
Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. She co-authored the 45th anniversary issue cover of MAD Magazine. Previews of her latest, as yet unpublished, novel are available at Hades Online. |
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