As most of you who read my reviews know, Kage Baker is my favourite writer out there. She has written numerous short stories that are scattered hither and yon, almost impossible to keep up with. Thankfully, she has a habit of collecting her stories in compilations. Best known for her series of books about "The Company," Mother Aegypt and Other Stories is unusual in that it doesn't contain any Company stories. Instead, it draws together a bunch of her other fiction, mostly fantasy. It contains two stories about Lord Ermenwyr, from The Anvil of the World, as well as other fantastic stuff. I have to say that, after finding this book, I thought I had died and gone to heaven. I had read two of the stories already, which had drawn me to her in the first place, and this just made me want more of her stuff. As is usual with collections, there is the occasional clunker, but the overall quality is quite high. Strangely, most of the weak stories seem to be ones she wrote for sale on Fictionwise.com, which makes me wonder. They almost seem like they were churned out so that they would have some stories to sell. I'm not saying that's what happened, but it certainly feels like it. Thankfully, the final Fictionwise story is outstanding, redeeming the rest of them.
Probably the two best stories are "What the Tyger Told Her" and "Desolation Rose". While all the stories (even the weaker ones) have that wonderful Baker prose and characterization, these two just stand out. The Tyger in "What the Tyger Told Her" coaches a young girl into seeing what lurks beneath the surface of her high-society family, and what greed can do to you. It also touches on the role of women in a male-dominated world, as the child is effectively invisible because of her two brothers. "Desolation Rose" is a redemption story for Lord Ermenwyr as he finds that sometimes romance isn't the end-all and be-all. He ends up doing the right thing, though true to his personality he doesn't quite go all the way.
Probably the weakest of the stories is "How They Tried to Talk Indian Tony Down." I just found the characters uninteresting and the story was too slight. Thankfully, it was very short and thus didn't take that much time. If it had been longer, I may have done the unthinkable and actually skipped it. Other weak stories are "The Summer People" and "Miss Yahoo Has Her Say," both of which I didn't really care about. "Miss Yahoo Has Her Say" also forces the reader to get through a form of pidgin English which was annoying until I got used to it. Even the only original story in this collection, "Mother Aegypt," suffered from a weak ending, though the rest of the story was fabulous.
Overall, though, the collection is wonderful. If you're a Kage Baker fan, you have to pick this up. If you want to see what the fuss is all about but don't want to get involved in The Company just yet, this is a good taste of the quality writer that is Kage Baker.
Dave Roy