From Publishers Weekly
Elizabeth Engstrom (Lizzie Borden, etc.) has selected 25 stories most previously published from her 20-year writing career and gathered them up in Suspicions, a spooky collection of tales inspired by the author's questions and theories about death, sex, government, technology, family and the unknown. The characters, places and even genres vary widely: while "Fates Entwined" leans toward erotica, for example, "Rivering" is a fantastical tale of a woman who fishes for souls, and "Romana" reveals a basic love triangle with a paranormal twist.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Engstrom claims she is suspicious by nature, and she has something to say about seemingly everything: sex, death, the unknown, friends, family--everything. She presents these 25 stories categorically by object of suspicion, beginning with the "Unknown." They cover quite a bit of territory--physically from a judgment train to the river Styx and emotionally from horror to simple happiness--and, often touched by a strange muse, run the affective gamut from pure fluff to thought-provoking inspiration. One of the most memorable ones, "Music Ascending," concerns someone who creates experiences with carefully mixed cocktails of sound, and who has been asked to give his customer the experience of death, so that the customer can live to tell about it; it is a request that, though seeming innocent enough, contains implicit yet unforeseen temptations. Altogether, these stories make up a hefty, genre-crossing pie, spiced with images capable of snagging the imagination for at least some small, suspicious time. Regina Schroeder
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

