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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent collection of lovely varied fantasy tales
Jeffrey Ford has made quite an impression in the last few years, with several fine novels including the World Fantasy Award winning The Physiognomy, The Portrait of Mrs. Charbuque, and The Girl in the Glass. But my favorite Ford works have been short fiction -- and it so happens that my personal favorites appear in this new collection, his second.

The title...
Published on September 28, 2006 by Richard R. Horton

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0 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars frankly I couldn't get past second story
I give it 3 stars because - maybe - the rest of the stories are better. It's possible that I'll never find out.. Is this a book for children? If it is, I should give it 4 stars...
Published on May 9, 2007 by S. Popa


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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent collection of lovely varied fantasy tales, September 28, 2006
By 
Richard R. Horton (Webster Groves, MO United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Empire of Ice Cream (Hardcover)
Jeffrey Ford has made quite an impression in the last few years, with several fine novels including the World Fantasy Award winning The Physiognomy, The Portrait of Mrs. Charbuque, and The Girl in the Glass. But my favorite Ford works have been short fiction -- and it so happens that my personal favorites appear in this new collection, his second.

The title story, indeed, is one of my favorite stories by anyone from the last few years. My interest was immediately engaged by the Wallace Stevens reference, though Ford, in his introduction, disclaims any intention of alluding to Stevens' great poem. The story is about a man with synesthaesia. He becomes an accomplished piano player and composer, even as he perceives the notes he plays or composes as sights or smells or tastes. Somehow coffee ice cream causes a special hallucination: a young woman. As he grows older, he finds that pure coffee allows real contact with this woman, and he learns that she, too, is an artist and a synesthaesiac. The story climaxes as he tries to complete a major musical composition -- coming to a predictable but still quite satisfying and moving conclusion.

Another brilliant piece is "The Weight of Words." This suggests that the placement and appearance of words can affect their meaning in such mundane ways as subliminal advertising, or such more profound ways as causing death, love, or the appreciation of beauty. It's told by a man who has lost his wife and hopes to regain her by the use of weighted word -- instead he gains something quite different.

There is one new story in the book, a very long novella (nearly novel length): "Botch Town". This is a pitch perfect and rather sad evocation of childhood in a lower middle class New Jersey suburb. The title refers to a model town that the narrator's brother constructs in his basement -- somehow their sister, who is in some way brilliant but not very comprehensible, seems to use this town to reflect real happenings in their own town, including the whereabouts of a mysterious visitor who may be connected with the disappearance of a neighborhood boy.

There are many other jewels here. "The Annals of Eelin-Ok" is a tender, bittersweet, story of a Twilmish, a creature that colonizes a sand castle and lives only until the castle is washed away. "The Beautiful Gelreesh" is quite different in mood, a sardonic piece about a doglike creature with a rather extreme means of curing depression.

"A Night at the Tropics" concerns a cursed chess set and the bully who stumbles into possession of it. The story is framed in a very Kiplingesque manner: the narrator, named Ford, tells of his return to his childhood house, and a visit to a bar his father frequented, "The Tropics." It is there that he again encounters the bully, and hears the tale of the chess set. And, much as Kipling so often and so brilliantly managed, the frame ends up blending with and enhancing the central story. (And, to my relief after Ford's denial of the Stevens reference in "The Empire of Ice Cream," his introduction here explicitly acknowledges Kipling's influence.)

I won't mention the other stories, but I'll say that they are a varied and intriguing lot. The book itself is a lovely physical object, as we expect from Golden Gryphon. And Ford's introductions are fairly brief but very interesting, definitely significant value added. This is surely one of the best story collections of the year.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Boy, I enjoy this author's work, July 19, 2006
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Eyesk (from the swamps of Jersey) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Empire of Ice Cream (Hardcover)
I'd seen a dramatic reading of "The Annals of Eelin-Ok" (one of the stories in this collection), an experience that has stuck with me much longer than most dramatic productions... Mr. Ford does not profess to be a playwright (yet), but he writes with SO much immediacy, whatever is happening in his stories is so important to his characters, that you get sucked into the stories very quickly - what is important to those characters now becomes important to you, too. I'm currently enjoying very much his earlier THE FANTASY WRITER'S ASSISTANT collection of stories, and look forward to re-visiting "The Annals of Eelin-Ok" in this volume, as well as discovering the accompanying tales. To be transported into his stories is a very gratifying experience. Who'd have thought that a dramatic reading about the sprites/spirits that inhabit sandcastles between low and high tides could become a epic tale, full of romance, action, and contemplation on life itself? And all the while having you on the edge of your seat? I've seen a lot of theatre, and wish more of it was an engaging to experience as the work of this non-playwright.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An impressively engaging collection of fourteen of the author's most evocative and best crafted short stories, May 3, 2006
This review is from: The Empire of Ice Cream (Hardcover)
The Empire Of Ice Cream by Jeffrey Ford is an impressively engaging collection of fourteen of the author's most evocative and best crafted short stories. Intertwining fantasy, reality, the straight-up peculiar, The Empire Of Ice Cream showcases: The Annals of Eelin-Ok, Jupiter's Skull, A Night in the Tropics, The Beautiful Gelreesh, Boatman's Holiday, Botch Town, A Man of Light, The Green Word, Giant Land, Coffins on the River, Summer Afternoon, The Weight of Words, The Trentino Kid, and the title piece, The Empire of Ice Cream. With a conclusive analysis and detailing of each story in the form of an author note, The Empire Of Ice Cream is confidently recommended to fantasy enthusiasts, as well as (and most particularly) to those who have not yet discovered the literary talent and storytelling style of Jeffrey Ford.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Better Than The Title Might Suggest, January 7, 2008
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This review is from: The Empire of Ice Cream (Hardcover)
Despite its award winning status, the title of this anthology led me to believe it was either young adult oriented or in the vein of the recent plethora of updated fairy tale collections. I was very pleased to find I was wrong.

Jeffrey Ford is a highly intelligent, clever wordsmith that more closely resembles Bradbury and Wolfe than the Datlow/Windling crowd. Like his unstable scholar's work in "The Weight of Words", Ford's writings are greater than the sum of their parts.

In particular, I'd like to praise the novella, "Botch Town." As soon as I was a few paragraphs into it, I recognized the familiar territory of the "remember the year when..." stories by Bradbury, King, et al, that I enjoy so much. The autobiographical tone was convincing, and the characters were universal and believable. My friends and I had our own version of Mr. Blah Blah, and our own Halloween hijinx were remarkably similar to those described within. (I also appreciated the subtle nod to Spike Jones fans.)

Among my other favorites are the darkly humorous "Boatman's Holiday" and the surreal tour-de-force, "Giant Land."

If you're looking for a collection of substantial, sophisticated yet accessible, stick-to-your-ribs short fiction, then pick up The Empire of Ice Cream.

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5.0 out of 5 stars The Empire of Ice Cream, March 9, 2011
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Jeffrey Ford is a must read author. He is a master storyteller, and his stories set many others aside. If you wish to be completely lost in a tale, this man is the one. Some writers will find his work to be a significant learning curve in their own craft. I do hope you'll like it as much as I.
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7 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Taste the ice cream on your tongue. . ., May 26, 2006
This review is from: The Empire of Ice Cream (Hardcover)
Jeffrey Ford is AMAZING. There are not many authors I could describe as such, but he is one. Buy his book; this man is an undiscovered gem. His literary fantasy is gorgeous in the way he tells it and the stories themselves. As much as I devoured this anthology, I was also really disheartened when I turned the last page.

To make myself feel better, I've been giving everyone I know copies of the book or encouraging him or her to try Mr. Ford. Let me do the same for you; you won't regret it (something I do not say lightly).
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Magical, mystical worlds, June 11, 2009
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Magical, mystical worlds are what Jeffrey Ford creates in this book of short stories. The Introduction talks about our loss of wonder as we age, but this book brings all that back and more. It is a spell-binding novel which will keep you enchanted story after story. The very first story in this book is entitled "The Annals of Eelin-Ok" which is about a fairy creature who lives in a sand castle built by a child and can only survive until the tide washes the sand castle out to sea. But for this fairy time moves at a different pace than it does for you and I. Other wonderful stories in this book were "The Empire of Ice Cream" about a young man who has synesthesia. He is the product of over-protective parents who shelter him his whole life. He is gifted with playing the piano and through the experience of coffee he can conjure an image of a young woman who is an artist. It is a very interesting story. Another favorite story of mine was "Botch Town" about a family in the 1950s and it centers on the children of the family. The oldest boy, Jim, builds a town replica in their basement and calls it Botch Town. The youngest child, a girl, moves the people around as things happen to them. It's as though she is psychic. It's about all the wonderful and horrible things that happen to you as a child. The "Boatman's Holiday" was another interesting story in this book. It is about the Egyptian underworld where Charon steers the dead in his boat along the river Acheron. In this story he goes on holiday and you'll love what happens on this holiday.

All the stories are really well written and fascinating. You will love these stories and they will stay with you after you have finished the book. There will be many I will come back to time and time again. I highly recommend this book.
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0 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars frankly I couldn't get past second story, May 9, 2007
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This review is from: The Empire of Ice Cream (Hardcover)
I give it 3 stars because - maybe - the rest of the stories are better. It's possible that I'll never find out.. Is this a book for children? If it is, I should give it 4 stars...
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The Empire of Ice Cream
The Empire of Ice Cream by Jeffrey Ford (Hardcover - April 1, 2006)
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