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Furry!: The Best Anthropomorphic Fiction!
 
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Furry!: The Best Anthropomorphic Fiction! [Paperback]

Fred Patten (Editor)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 1, 2006
Over 24 of the best furry fiction stories of the past 15 years. Winner of Furry Fandoms' Ursus Award. Furry fiction revolves around sentient animals or characters who have animal aspects, ranging from genetically engineered creatures to aliens to werewolves. Although related to science fiction, fantasy, and horror, this branch of speculative fiction has a style all its own. This volume, in addition to the wide-variety of entertaining stories, contains non-fiction material explaining the origin and development of furry fiction.

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Furry!: The Best Anthropomorphic Fiction! + Different Worlds, Different Skins: Humanity's Encounters with Other Races + New Technicolor Dreams: The Collected Stories Of Will A. Sanborn
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Product Details

  • Paperback: 456 pages
  • Publisher: Ibooks, Inc.; 2nd edition (February 1, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1596873191
  • ISBN-13: 978-1596873193
  • Product Dimensions: 8 x 5.3 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.9 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #364,521 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Nice stories but lack depth, November 19, 2010
This review is from: Furry!: The Best Anthropomorphic Fiction! (Paperback)
Congratulations to the editor for doing a big job of introducing us to one of the first books of anthropomorphic fiction on the market.

You do not see too many sci-fi books around with stories featuring anthropomorphic characters. You can't be wrong saying that this is a pilot book. It's aimed at rather a wide audience so that any reader could find it interesting whether they are part of the furry fandom or not.

This book is worth reading because it shows you the difference between profound stories which raise personal, psychological and social questions--and satisfactory prose largely made of dialogues between characters of most typical species. Speaking of which, it is to be admitted that having read the book up to the end I failed to find a principle character belonging to species other than felines and canids which abound throughout the book. The lavish presence of these species cannot but hint at a somewhat limited approach to depicting furries in fiction. With every next story I started reading I was honestly expecting a story about a bird or a horse just to change the dog/fox subject. There exist quite decent examples of tales about other sentient animals or non-human people, like Charlotte's Web or The Wonderful Adventures of Nils, or Maggie Furey's Harp of Winds for that matter. Why not broaden the circle of species? Canines and felines are cute but after a few stories it gets a bit tiresome.

It's worth noting that in this book there are stories which make it worth acquiring. Wings and The Foxy Lady are definitely one of these. The plots of these two stories are not the main thing; it's the portrayal of characters and relations that matters. These stories leave a trail of compassion, they involve the problem of choice and touch upon moral aspects too. Speaking from a personal point, I found the characters vivid and unique in the sense that I could not only read about their appearance but also understand their values and personality.

I've read this book to see what furry writers have to offer us regarding the plot, characters and the language. As a person with strong interest in animal psychology, I was expecting a delicious mix of good science fiction topped with an insight into societies of sentient beings possessing animal characteristics. Maybe this book is not the right place to take this quest. I would love to see sentient anthro- or zoomorphic people stand against choices hard to make, get involved in situations which would require their personality to show itself. In most of the stories, however, I could replace character species with "human" without influencing the plot much. The word "shallow" is begging to be put here, but I have no intention of being evaluative.

In order to be shown to the public and sell in large book stores, furry fiction stories have yet to reach their maturity. In writing furry fiction it is not enough to dress your character as a rat or a cat; it's about knowing your animal's specific way of interacting with the world, with other representatives of their own species as well as with other species.

Impress me. Show me what makes a sentient deer take a certain decision. Tell me why a panther character did something that could look insane to a human. Bring up moral issues and problems of communication. Furry writing is a serious business requiring knowledge of human and animal psychology and language mastery. Let me express hope that future editions of Furry!: The Best Anthropomorphic Fiction! will be proud to present us with more thoughtful and vivid stories about characters that you would remember for longer than half an hour.
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18 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Something different, May 18, 2006
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This review is from: Furry!: The Best Anthropomorphic Fiction! (Paperback)
If you're like me, you're tired of sword-and-magic fantasy, weary of Lord of the Rings clones and you couldn't care any less about Harry what's-his-name. You do not understand what is so fantastic about the medieval period. You are tired of humans getting all the attention. You wish Jurassic Park had been told from the dinosaur's point of view without all those humans getting in the way (and you were rooting for the raptors). We want something different.

This collection of furry stories breaks out of what is considered normal fantasy by making animals the center of attention, and it's a refreshing break!

Fully realized worlds with intelligent, humanized animals. Some by genetic manipulation, some by transformation, and many where there is no explanation. If you're willing to buy into this and get a dose of a different kind of fantasy, this is a great find! These are writers who have broken from the norm and explored the less-traveled road of animal stories for adults. Humanized animals have a nasty reputation as being cartoons exclusively for kids, but these authors write them for adults who are open-minded enough to take them seriously. There's nothing childish about them; they explore themes meant for adult minds and I'm not talking about sex. Yes, there is some (and it's all tasteful), but a lot of these stories will make you think about far-reaching subjects. Some will touch you emotionally, like good literature should.

As with all collections of short stories, the quality varies from story to story, but there are some real gems in here.

Foxy Lady--a very touching love story. It tickles the hormones without ever breaching good taste. Wish it was longer!
Canis Major--great action with a cute ending.
Wings--this one alone is worth the retail price of the book. Emotionally, it is the deepest story of them all. It gets you in the heart.

Secret Weapon--you just don't see dragons portrayed like this! The funniest in the collection.
Mercy to the Cubs--I thought the ending needed to be poignant instead of happy, but it's still a suspenseful read.
Messenger--the Eater is a unique idea.

Find the Beauty--I like foxes, so I have to like this one. An unexpected twist in a transformation story.
Little Monster--the most original take on a werewolf story I've ever read! Real fun!

The rest range from barely passable (only 2 or 3) to very good. I'm glad to find fantasy that does not copy TLOTR and rehash the tired old dethroned-king-peasant-becomes-unlikely-warrior-medieval-politics-group-of-friends-on-epic-journey plots that dominate much of fantasy. We've been there and done all that for over 50 years. It was fresh and original when Tolkin did it, but it's time for something different. Time to view talking animals as something other than childish cartoons. I'm glad I read this.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The best ever? Who knows. But definitely good!, October 20, 2009
This review is from: Furry!: The Best Anthropomorphic Fiction! (Paperback)
Well, I probably can't add much to what the other people have said here but I'll give it a shot! My writing skills can always use work if nothing more.

This book was really a great surprise for me. Since I'm a mild fan of anthropomorphics (not a crazy one) I thought this might be an interesting read, and it surely was! You have 26 stories from over 20 authors over 15 years for a plethora of variety in not just stories but also in characters and plots. You've got humorous stories, emotional stories, thought-provoking, suspenseful, exciting, romantic, weird, cute, etc. The three categories include furries (anthropomorphics) and humans living together, furries living in their own worlds, and humans transforming into furries, and from these you'll get tales of space explorers, pirates, a detective, archaeologists, assassins, bounty hunters, warriors, dragons, and more.

Here's my top ten favorites just for fun (it wasn't easy to pick them):

10. "Rosettes and Ribbons." An archaeologist girl and her teacher visit a far away land to research the secrets of the Aeran culture. However, Peli finds much more than she wanted when she finds herself hurled into a situation that could threaten her life. A long story but still enjoyable and clever.

9. "Canis Major." Midge the bounty hunter collie follows a coded message to her next mission but discovers that it won't be as easy as she thought to know who to trust and who to kill. Behold the mystery, suspense, and humor of "I'll never not call you Canis Major."

8. "Painted Memories." A girl in a spaceship is unable to remember much about her beloved homeworld until she meets someone who gives her a gift even better than that.

7. "A Snapshot from Fayetteville." Human Dimitri meets a fox-wolf hybrid in a large city and decides to go with her and learn more about the culture of the anthro world. He finds out that it's much more than everyone thinks. A good example of racism and overcoming it.

6. "Foxy Lady." When Al wins a game show and receives an anthropomorph fox woman as a prize, he isn't sure what to think about her at first. Of course that soon changes and he falls in love with her. But when Sally learns that she no longer belongs to him and has important business to attend, she's forced to leave. Will she come back or has he seen the last of his new love?

5. "To the Magic Born." A good first story that's very simple, funny, and adorable (I don't like to use that word but it's the best one I could think of) A human father spends time with his foxoid stepson and talk about things of life, such as whether or not he has the magic ability.

4. "Crucible." A cat girl on a spaceship finds herself in the middle of two very delicate situations with lives on the balance in either one. No matter what she chooses, at least one person will die and revolution will come.

3. "Graduation Day." In my opinion this one should have been the very last story (even thought Little Monster was also good). A man-turned-rabbit volunteer career counselor tries to help 6 strangely transformed high school students find jobs after graduation along with hope for their future. It's incredibly funny at times and also heart-warming. This is the kind of story that reminds us that no matter who you are or what your limitations, there is still hope for you and a place where you belong.

2. "Wings." A female dog morph takes care of a sick blind boy and tries to find a way to heal him before he runs out of time. A highly emotional story and also thought-provking one that ponders the question whether or not morphs have souls. I felt that Todd Sutherland wrote this very well and treated religious people fairly.

1. "Mercy to the Cubs: A Tale of the Furkindred." Another emotional story. I thought for sure that Wings would be my all-time favorite but after finishing this one I soon decided I had found the winner. A wolf ambassador stuck in a village he can't stand makes a truly horrifying decision to do the unthinkable and unspeakable. Half-way through the story you may find yourself, as I did, holding your breath until the end and fearing to turn the next page. I wish I could say more but I better not. If any of the stories could make you cry, "Mercy" and "Wings" have the power to do it.

(More stories I liked just as much but didn't know where to put them include "Rat's Reputation," "Secret Weapon," "Beneath the Crystal Sea," "Castlefail," "Repas du Vivant," and "Little Monster")

Now as you probably already know this book is not for children (thank goodness!) and contains some PG-13 elements, and I feel like I should warn you about them in case you're someone who cares like I do. You'll occasionally run into bad language, including the F word in "A Snapshot from Fayetville" and a handful in "Graduation Day" plus other words. You'll also run into some senusuality that may not put the book in the adult category but should still be noted. "Foxy Lady," "How George Miles Almost Saved the World," and "Beneath the Crystal Sea" are likely the most descriptive, and it's the last one that really gets close to the line. However, not all of the stories are like that and for anyone who thinks this book is all about a gross fetish, that's not the case. Most of the love stories don't include physical love.

Now for some of my few complaints. The picture of the cat-human morph on the cover of the book looks amazing though I wish the nose looked more... uh... complete. Some of the stories lack important descriptions I wanted to know, especially what kind of anthros the characters are. (you have to just guess sometimes) It's also a shame that the illustrations from Best in Show couldn't be here and I really wanted to see them. However, the biographies at the end of the book are a nice treat.

I will admit that I didn't buy this book--I only borrowed it from a library--but if I had bought it I would say that it's definitely worth the price. If you want a break the from usual fiction, appreciate anthropomorphics, and love variety as much as I do then get this! Just as Elizabeth Barrett said, the stories will make you laugh, cry, and think. Give it a try.

One final note. Fred Patten, please make another one!
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