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The Girl Who Loved Animals: And Other Stories (Hardcover)

~ (Author), Harry Harrison (Introduction), Barry N. Malzberg (Afterword)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

How far would a person go to protect a loved one? That question is at the heart of many of the 17 stories in McAllister's career-spanning collection. The Vietnam-era novelette Dream Baby (later expanded into a novel) is a powerful story of a combat nurse suffering from prophetic dreams. In The Faces Outside and the title story, young women offer their bodies to save endangered species. The Ark and Kin find people desperate to save their family members, while Assassin and Moving On explore the limits of family ties, and Angels portrays an elderly woman's effort to create a perfect son, no matter the cost. The Boy in Zaquitos pits a near-future Typhoid Mary analogue against his creators. Twilight Zone-style twists drive Southpaw, an alternate history story about star baseball player Fidel Castro; World of the Wars, the story of a Mars colony gone wrong; and Benji's Pencil, about a man awakened from cryosleep who finds the future isn't what he expected. McAllister's haunting work will enthrall any reader who appreciates thoughtful, evocative science fiction. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


Review

"In stories spanning his career, McAllister creates characters and places with haunting presence . . . distinguished by a stunning array of ideas and a depth of characterization that is impressive. "  —Booklist



"Bruce McAllister is that rarity, a writer who can do anything. His stories range from the sweet to the terrifying, idea-dense to atmospheric, character-rich to event-packed. And sometimes all of this in the same story. Writers read other writers to learn tricks, but I often cannot see how he does it. He's a magician."  —Gregory Benford, author, Timescape, Nebula Award winner, 1980


"Bruce McAllister was widely regarded as one of the best science fiction writers of the '80s (although he really started all the way back in 1963), and the recent work in this collection shows that he's lost none of his skills here in the Oughts. The Girl Who Loved Animals and Other Stories, which spans five decades of his brilliant career, shows McAllister at his best: complex, compassionate, angry, thoughtful, subtle, and always concerned with exploring the hidden places of the human heart."  —Gardner Dozois, editor, Year's Best Science Fiction anthology series


"Among top short story talents in the field, McAllister is a leader. Polished, moving, thought-provoking—this collection is without parallel."  —Harry Harrison, author, The Stainless Steel Rat

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 308 pages
  • Publisher: Golden Gryphon Press (October 1, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1930846495
  • ISBN-13: 978-1930846494
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.5 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,195,710 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb collection by an underappreciated writer, September 8, 2007
By J Reston (Plymouth Meeting, PA United States) - See all my reviews
Bruce McAllister is one of those writers whose work has never quite gotten the attention it deserves. If there was justice in the universe, he would be a lot more famous than he currently is. Most of his work is science fiction, but anyone who appreciates great writing should be reading his work. As someone who has read hundreds of short story collections, I can state unequivocally that THE GIRL WHO LOVED ANIMALS is one of the best that I have ever read.

THE GIRL WHO LOVED ANIMALS is a collection of 17 stories spanning the 40+ years since McAllister began his writing career. He was certainly precocious; his first published story ("The Faces Outside", included in this collection) was sold at the tender age of 16, and was subsequently reprinted in The 9th Annual of the Year's Best SF (1964). This might make him the youngest writer to appear in a year's best collection. Since then, he has only improved his craft. While other, more prolific writers have garnered more attention, he has quietly continued to produce a thought-provoking body of work of astonishing emotional power.

A common theme in several of McAllister's stories involves the intensity of the bond between parents and children. "The Ark" is set in a near-future where species extinction has increased exponentially; the larger zoos have become the last sanctuaries for the remaining endangered species. In this haunting story, a young girl's life seems to be linked to the survival of two pandas, and her father is faced with a horrifying decision to ensure their survival. The final few pages are devastating. Set in the same future, "The Girl Who Loved Animals" features the relationship between a mentally-challenged girl who rents her womb to ensure the survival of an endangered species and the social worker who is assigned to her. In protecting the girl, the older woman finds a chance of redemption for her tragically failed relationship with her real daughter. In "The Man Inside", a young boy discovers why his father has become catatonic when a computer prints a transcript of his thoughts. "World of the Wars" cleverly conflates a near-future Los Angeles being torn apart by racial tensions with a young boy's imagination of the planet Mars.

Another fascinating set of stories deals with the Cold War/Vietnam War era. The Hugo and Nebula-nominated novelette "Dream Baby" is a searing first-person account of an Army nurse in Vietnam who is shattered by precognitive dreams predicting the deaths of soldiers whom she is unable to save. It was later expanded into a tour de force novel that is also a classic. "The Boy in Zaquitos" is narrated by a former CIA agent who was involved in a secret biological warfare program designed to destabilize third world countries in the 1960s and 1970s. McAllister did such a convincing job on this story that you find yourself believing that it might be true, which may be why some readers did not consider this story science fiction. The story has been selected to appear in THE BEST AMERICAN SHORT STORIES 2007 (guest-edited by Stephen King), an honor received by only a bare handful of stories by science fiction writers over the last 70 years. Set in the early 1950s, "Southpaw" is an alternate history story where Fidel Castro became a major-league pitcher for the New York Giants, but is tortured by dreams where he is a revolutionary in Cuba. "Stu" is a wonderful story that follows the career of an eccentric Navy inventor from the early 1950s to the present; although his inventions are most often ignored or misused, the story has an uplifting ending.

Even in an absurd situation, McAllister always makes you care about the characters. Nowhere is this better illustrated than in the story "Hero: The Movie", where young Rick Rowe saves his town from giant locusts in true 1950s-monster movie fashion, but subsequently falls apart when his fame inevitably fades away and his life becomes dull and average. He can find no meaning in the day-to-day struggles of ordinary life, until circumstances force him to become a different kind of hero. McAllister brilliantly balances the humor and pathos inherent in Rick's predicament.

All of McAllister's stories are filled with incident and three-dimensional characters facing haunting emotional dilemmas. The speculative elements often drive or heighten the conflicts within the stories. Their intensity is reminiscent of the best stories of Lucius Shepard and James Tiptree jr. (yes, he really is that good), although thematically McAllister's work is quite unique. As an added bonus, the collection contains extensive story notes providing background and insights that enhance appreciation of the stories, as well as an Introduction and Afterword by noted authors Harry Harrison and Barry Malzberg.

Again, I cannot recommend this book strongly enough to readers who appreciate top-notch writing that combines nuanced characterization with intriguing speculation. Buy this book! I doubt that you will be disappointed. Also seek out the novel version of DREAM BABY (although sadly out-of-print, used copies are easy to find online). Bruce McAllister has been an undiscovered secret for far too long.

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5.0 out of 5 stars The stories of The Girl Who Loved Animals speak to the human condition, July 11, 2008
By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) - See all my reviews
An exceptional set of short stories makes The Girl Who Loved Animals and Other Stories a top pick for any science fiction collection, deserving of ongoing recommendation and acclaim. From a young woman dedicated to preserving animals, to a little girl's life psychically linked to two pandas, the stories of The Girl Who Loved Animals speak to the human condition, offering an outstanding menu of fine characters and poignant situations.
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"The Faces Outside" => HUMANITY PRIME 0 December 2007
Bruce McAllister Interview 0 October 2007
"Kin" 2 June 2007
"The Boy in Zaquitos" 1 April 2007
Contents: The Girl Who Loved Animals and Other Stories 0 April 2007
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