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Spirit Fruit: Collected Speculative Fiction
 
 

Spirit Fruit: Collected Speculative Fiction [Kindle Edition]

Carole McDonnell
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 17, 2011
This collection of published stories by novelist Carole McDonnell bring together multicultural concerns, spirituality, and speculative fiction. The fantastical elements in these tales range from contemporary worlds, to days of courtly love, to fairytales and to worlds not yet discovered.

About the Author:

Carole McDonnell is a Jamaican-American writer of Christian, speculative fiction, and multicultural stories. She is the author of Wind Follower, which was nominated for the Clives Staples award for Christian speculative, and The Constant Tower, among other books. She is married and has two sons.

The stories in this collection include:
-- “Homecoming” – Won first prize in New Mass Media's Annual contest and was a third place winner in the annual national Contemporary Western Fiction contest.
-- “Lingua Franca” – So Long Been Dreaming: Post-Colonialism in Science Fiction, edited by Nalo Hopkinson and Uppinder Mehan -- Arsenal Pulp Press – October 2004.
-- “Black is the color of my true love’s hair,” – Fantastic Visions III, edited by William Horner – Fantasist Enterprises – August 2005.
-- Homecoming at the Borderlands Cafe – Jigsaw Nation anthology, edited by Kat Sedia – DNA Publications March 2006
The Gleaners -- in Black Faery anthology
So Far -- in Black Science Fiction Society anthology 2009
Changeling -- in Griots edited by Milton Davis and Charles Saunders 2011
Housewarming -- in When the Morning Stars Sang anthology edited by Lyndon Perry 2011
A Cry For Hire – Fantastic Stories of the Imagination, edited by Warren Lapine
The Substance of Things Hoped For
The Night Wife, published in Griots II: Women of the Spear

Review from Marvin Katzoff:
These short stories are one terrific "read!" Whatever the setting for each story, Carol McDonnell (one of our most gifted authors) manages to imbue each of them with a sense of humanity and compassion that shines through on every page. You'll love them!

I especially enjoyed "As in the Days of Noah," which builds terrific suspense in its story of a man on his wedding day, who comes to realize that something ominous may be about to occur to all of us; "Black is the Color of My True Love's Hair," about a knight returning home to his beloved wife, who's joined by a spirit; and "Housewarming," a lighthearted tale of a harried hostess who has to deal with a pesky ghost at her dinner party (don't you just hate when ghosts show up uninvited?) This wonderfully humorous tale clearly shows that having a ghost hanging around a dinner party doesn't exactly help a harried hostess - especially when he turns out to be a demon! Fortunately our heroine knows how to handle a pesky spirit.

"So Far," great story about a man who doesn't appreciate his wonderful wife due to his desire for the "other girl." As the story is related in the second person of "you" rather than the first or third, it enables the reader to more readily identify with the lead character.

The decree that each family should have only one child reminded me of China; and the baby girls being killed reminded me of India and other poor nations where baby girls are often put to death.

"Lingua Franca" - interesting perspective on how what we would consider a "gift" - the ability to hear and speak - is seen by Mist as a threat to her way of life. Give new meaning to the term "cut throat."

"Black is the Color of My True Love's Hair" - wonderful story.

"The Gleaners" - nice to see spirits who want to help the starving inhabitants of a poor village. I like how it shows the power of forgiveness at the end (even with such a villain).

"The People of the Dark Mirror" - an interesting parable on segregation, and how people can't stand to see the evil in themselves.

Meat For the Journey -- Wonderfully spooky story, with Father Giorgiou trying to save the soul of the dying Louise.

Changeling -- This story is a classic, beautifully showing what jealousy and greed can do to families, even royal ones.

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Product Details

  • File Size: 418 KB
  • Print Length: 174 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1105261174
  • Publisher: Carole McDonnell (November 17, 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B0069VMX22
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #391,873 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
McDonnell weaves an enchanting net of short stories, a series of stories which are as varied as their characters. Her stories address the human condition while at the same time exploring it in unexpected, sometimes tragic ways. My particular favorite was Lingua Franca. That particular story gave me chills, unusual for a typical science fiction story. But that seems to be typical for McDonnell. This particular story looked at family and newcomers to the family setting in a different way that makes our own "trivial" challenges suddenly more apparent. No matter what the genre, McDonnell uses language to craft a tale that digs deeper into who we are as people, people from different countries, perhaps even worlds or planes, but people all the same. Our issues, spiritual, physical, and emotional, provide the backdrop for these stories which often deal with a uniting theme of ends. Though I must say, that as delightful as this compilation is, her novel, Windfollower, is even better. With enough space and an entire world to explore, McDonnell really unleashes her creative prowess and crafts an incredible tale. This little anthology provides a wonderful sampler of McDonnell's talents, which are sure to only further increase with time. Enjoy. And be sure to read your favorite stories more than once. Her writing is greatly rereadable.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
Carole McDonnell's collection will appeal both to readers of science fiction/speculative fiction and to readers of shorter fiction in general. Like Bradbury's fiction, this collection has that kind of crossover appeal, partly because the situations, conflicts, and characters all connect to our contemporary lives even as they transport us to other places. Among the stories' many strengths are 1) their ability to shed light on how conflicts between cultures and groups materialize and develop (how prejudice manifests itself variously) and 2) the many ways in which they represent the spirituality of existence. The characters are gripping, the situations believable, and the style lucid.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
The borderline of cultures December 9, 2011
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
No one is better at exploring the borderline of cultures than Carole McDonnell. This collection of stories displays that skill as characters live out their convictions along side those with different convictions. Most of the stories were stellar, while a few needed better editing and were minor. I have a hunch that other readers would rearrange the list of those stellar and those not, but everybody should find the story that they think about long after the book is closed.
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