Amazon.com Review
Looking for a collection of stories that will briskly sweep the cobwebs of tradition out of your science fiction-loving head? This is it. Bryan Cholfin has grabbed the best bits from the pages of his eclectic, intelligent magazine,
Crank!, and created an anthology in the edgy tradition of
Dangerous Visions. Here you'll find stories by the literary lights of SF and fantasy--Gene Wolfe, Ursula K. Le Guin, Michael Bishop, David R. Bunch, Jonathan Lethem, Brian Aldiss, and oh, so many more.
Some of the 17 stories are startling, some hilarious, and some sad, but all meet Cholfin's criterion--they "encourage the growth of a richer, livelier, more interesting and more meaningful literature with space for all the possibilities of tomorrow." And while there are some familiar elements here (like spaceships, strange futures, and aliens), every science fiction device in the book is necessary, used carefully to further a great story, and not just thrown in gratuitously to fit a marketable cover. This outstanding anthology will challenge fans to reach between and beyond established genre definitions. Those who make the leap will find themselves holding a collection of pure gold literary nuggets. --Therese Littleton
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Publishers Weekly
The 17 stories harvested from the pages of Cholfin's cutting-edge SF zine Crank! provide an excellent survey of today's writers in the field, from the old guard (Ursula K. Le Guin) to the newer and edgier (Jonathan Lethem) and the promising but little known (A.M. Dellamonica). Though the collection is militantly antithematic, there's a noticeable lack of hard science here. Generally, the SF hooks take a back seat to character and plot. In "Moonbender," one of three stories by Lethem, a vendor of disposable ambiatronic puppets and a middlebrow artist drag each other to ruin when they attempt to combine their efforts. "I, Iscariot" by Michael Bishop puts Judas on trial using scripture and a running fictional online commentary. "Nixon in Space" by Rob McCleary posits a world based on the myth of the disgraced president's pathetic efforts to participate in a moonshot. Lisa Tuttle's "Food Man," one of the more inspired stories in the anthology, portrays a teenage girl's eating disorder as an incubus that comes to life out of the food she hides under her bed. Tuttle ingeniously and unexpectedly resolves the tension between food and sex with an ending reminiscent of insect mating ritual. Also notable, not least for its originality and its brilliant playfulness of language, is Eliot Fintushel's "Santacide." Other name authors represented in this fine sampling of the field include A.A. Attanasio and Gene Wolfe (whose entries, not surprisingly, tend more toward fantasy than SF), as well as Brian Aldiss, R.A. Lafferty and David R. Bunch.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.