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Al Sarrantonio

Auteur de Stories: All-New Tales

80+ oeuvres 4,551 utilisateurs 135 critiques 3 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Al Sarrantonio has written 28 novels and has had his short stories appear in publications such as, "Heavy Metal," Twilight Zone," "Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine" and "Realms of Fantasy." He has also had his work appear in such anthologies as "The Year's Best Horror Stories," Visions of afficher plus Fantasies: Tales from the Masters," "Great Ghost Stories" and "The Best of Shadows." Sarrantonio writes a host of genres, including, science fiction, fantasy, horror and western. His novels include, "Exile," "Moonbane," "October," "West Texas" and "Campbell Wood." He was nominated for the Bram Stoker Award of the Horror Writer's Association and the Private Eye Writer's of America's Shamus Award. Sarrantonio has edited three volumes of humor as well as co-edited "100 Hair Raising Little Horror Stories." (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Séries

Œuvres de Al Sarrantonio

Stories: All-New Tales (2010) — Contributeur; Directeur de publication — 1,392 exemplaires
999, le livre du millénaire des maîtres du fantastique (1999) — Contributeur — 617 exemplaires
100 Hair-Raising Little Horror Stories (1993) — Directeur de publication; Contributeur — 445 exemplaires
Flights: Extreme Visions of Fantasy (2004) — Directeur de publication; Contributeur — 396 exemplaires
Redshift: Extreme Visions of Speculative Fiction (2001) — Directeur de publication — 250 exemplaires
Personal Agendas (1997) — Auteur — 220 exemplaires
Halloweenland (2007) 130 exemplaires
Hallows Eve (2004) 106 exemplaires
Horrorween (2006) 105 exemplaires
Toybox (1999) 101 exemplaires
Moonbane (1989) 86 exemplaires
Flights: Extreme Visions Fantasy, Vol II (2006) — Directeur de publication; Contributeur — 45 exemplaires
Halloween and Other Seasons (2008) 44 exemplaires
Haydn of Mars (2004) 40 exemplaires
Halloween: New Poems (2010) 40 exemplaires
Totentanz (1985) 31 exemplaires
Exile (1991) 26 exemplaires
Skeletons (1992) 25 exemplaires
House Haunted (1991) 25 exemplaires
Hornets and Others (2004) 24 exemplaires
The Boy with Penny Eyes (1987) 23 exemplaires
The Fireside Treasury of New Humor (1989) 23 exemplaires
Orangefield (2002) 21 exemplaires
October (1668) 20 exemplaires
Treasury of Great Humor (1987) 18 exemplaires
West Texas (1991) 17 exemplaires
Sebastian of Mars (2005) 17 exemplaires
The Baby (2006) 16 exemplaires
Looking Glass (2006) — Contributeur — 16 exemplaires
Campbell Wood (1986) 15 exemplaires
Underground (2013) 15 exemplaires
Queen of Mars (2006) 15 exemplaires
Masters of Mars (2006) 14 exemplaires
Kitt Peak (1993) 13 exemplaires
The Worms (1985) 11 exemplaires
Journey (1997) 9 exemplaires
Portents (2011) — Directeur de publication — 8 exemplaires
The Orangefield Cycle Omnibus (2015) 7 exemplaires
The Pumpkin Boy (2005) 6 exemplaires
Summer Cool: A Jack Paine Mystery (1993) 5 exemplaires
Bad Candy — Auteur — 3 exemplaires
Cemetery Dance Issue 63 (2010) 3 exemplaires
Cold Night (1989) 3 exemplaires
Cemetery Dance Issue 37 (2002) 2 exemplaires
Pumpkin Head 2 exemplaires
Scheletri : romanzo 1 exemplaire
Summer 1 exemplaire
Orange Lake (2015) 1 exemplaire
Two 1 exemplaire
Cemetery Dance Issue 46 (2003) 1 exemplaire
Rudý posuv (2005) 1 exemplaire
Fossils 1 exemplaire
The Man With Legs 1 exemplaire
Billy The Fetus 1 exemplaire
Boxes 1 exemplaire
Simple 1 exemplaire
50 Horror Stories (2008) 1 exemplaire
Richard's Head 1 exemplaire
Under My Bed 1 exemplaire
Modrý posuv (2009) 1 exemplaire
The Ropy Thing 1 exemplaire
Father Dear 1 exemplaire
Sisters in Mystery (2012) 1 exemplaire
Hornets 1 exemplaire
Ahead of the Joneses 1 exemplaire
Letters from Camp 1 exemplaire
The Green Face 1 exemplaire
Mondbestien (1991) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

The Mammoth Book of Comic Fantasy (1998) — Contributeur, quelques éditions503 exemplaires
Great Ghost Stories (1985) — Contributeur — 398 exemplaires
100 Ghastly Little Ghost Stories (1993) — Contributeur — 341 exemplaires
Ghosts: A Treasury of Chilling Tales Old & New (1981) — Contributeur — 336 exemplaires
100 Great Fantasy Short, Short Stories (1984) — Contributeur — 247 exemplaires
Stalkers: 19 Original Tales by the Masters of Terror (1989) — Contributeur — 224 exemplaires
The Urban Fantasy Anthology (2011) — Contributeur — 200 exemplaires
Under the Fang (1991) — Contributeur — 188 exemplaires
Visions of Fantasy: Tales from the Masters (1989) — Contributeur — 101 exemplaires
Razored Saddles (1989) — Contributeur — 87 exemplaires
Night Screams (1996) — Contributeur — 82 exemplaires
The Mammoth Book of Best New Horror 18 (2007) — Contributeur — 76 exemplaires
Shadows 4 (1981) — Contributeur — 75 exemplaires
Halloween (2011) — Contributeur — 74 exemplaires
Creatures: Thirty Years of Monsters (2011) — Contributeur — 68 exemplaires
Shadows 5 (1982) — Contributeur — 67 exemplaires
Greystone Bay (1985) — Contributeur — 67 exemplaires
100 Twisted Little Tales of Torment (1998) — Contributeur — 64 exemplaires
Space Mail II (1982) — Contributeur — 64 exemplaires
Shadows 8 (1985) — Contributeur — 59 exemplaires
Shivers VII (2013) — Contributeur — 58 exemplaires
Fears (1983) — Contributeur — 57 exemplaires
Laughing Space: An Anthology of Science Fiction Humour (1982) — Contributeur — 55 exemplaires
Shadows 6 (1983) — Contributeur — 54 exemplaires
The Ultimate Halloween (2001) — Contributeur — 47 exemplaires
The Year's Best Horror Stories: Series XI (1983) — Contributeur — 46 exemplaires
Terrors (1982) — Contributeur — 37 exemplaires
The Seaharp Hotel (1990) — Contributeur — 36 exemplaires
Retro Pulp Tales (2006) — Contributeur — 32 exemplaires
October Dreams II (Anthology) (2016) — Contributeur — 29 exemplaires
Shivers (2002) 29 exemplaires
Best of Shadows (1988) — Contributeur — 28 exemplaires
Shivers II (2003) 25 exemplaires
Nursery Crimes (1993) — Contributeur — 24 exemplaires
Trick or Treat: A Collection of Halloween Novellas (Anthology) (2001) — Contributeur — 22 exemplaires
Impossible Monsters (2013) — Contributeur — 22 exemplaires
Shadows 10 (1987) — Contributeur — 22 exemplaires
Chrysalis 7 (1980) — Contributeur — 21 exemplaires
Chrysalis 9 (1981) — Contributeur — 18 exemplaires
Halloween Carnival Volume 2 (2017) — Auteur — 16 exemplaires
Dark Hallows: 10 Halloween Haunts (Anthology) (2015) — Contributeur — 8 exemplaires
The Crane House: A Halloween Story (2012) — Contributeur — 8 exemplaires
Bruce Coville's UFOs (2000) — Contributeur — 7 exemplaires
Territoires de l'inquiétude. 7 (1993) — Contributeur — 3 exemplaires
Harvest Hill (2009) — Avant-propos — 1 exemplaire
Subterranean Magazine Fall 2010 — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

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Recent Short Stories by DWJ à Diana Wynne Jones Fans (Mai 2013)

Critiques

I don't know what it is but I've been taking forever to get through short story collections. It does not matter if the anthology is an interesting topic, a single author, or random choices by an editor. I can't seem to get into them. I try for a story a week but that doesn't week to work very well. Airplane rides are about the best so far to get me through them. Oh, it also doesn't seem to matter if the stories are good or not. I have several favorites from this collection but it still took me longer than I would have liked. Here's to hoping for me trips.

* "Anwari" by Nina Kiriki Hoffman - A baby doll, an ex-girlfriend, and maybe a genie.
* "Dead Hit" by Neal Barrett, Jr. - An unexpected assassin takes a job.
* "Miss Dowdy" by Elizabeth Massie - A witch is discovered by a young girl.
* "Forced Entry" by Kealan Patrick Burke - A woman has unexpected visitors. The ending leaves a punch.
* "The Casual Progression of Homesickness" by Tom Piccirilli - A man's world unravels. Piccirilli's stories always grabs your heart and won't let go. This one is no exception.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
dagon12 | Mar 24, 2024 |
I was just getting into Neil Gaiman when this was announced and had to have it. It had to be good. Right? Eh.

Neil's contribution was pretty good, as were a couple others. A few stories were real clinkers. The rest pretty average. There are some big names here. I expected better.
 
Signalé
zot79 | 64 autres critiques | Aug 20, 2023 |
I haven't read an anthology in several years, so I wasn't sure what to expect in terms on consistency of theme and quality.

Overall, for an anthology that is looking to branch out beyond genre categories, the stories mesh relatively nicely with each other; although many fail to achieve the intended theme of "and then what happened?" The editing was well done, with the collection laid out in a way the flows, with stories with similar themes placed near each other, but not such that they blur with one another. There's a nice mix of long and short stories that makes the collection readable for long stretches of time. I found most of my favorite stories bunched at the back end, so keep reading if you don't like the beginning too well.

In terms of quality, I felt that most of the stories were well-written, although several were not to my liking.

The introduction by Neil Gaiman is probably the best part of the book. I loved the description of why people read and write fantasy and where fantasy as a genre can let us down. The desire to defy genres is ambitious and motivating.

Blood is a great opening story. It's evocative and plays directly to the "and then what happened" theme.
Fossil Figures was not to my liking. It's a kind of generic twin story with some nice turns of phrase, but not much substance.
Wildfire in Manhattan on the one hand, Gods are real and they live in cities has been done before and better (by two authors included in this collection, no less.) That being said, if not particularly original, this was still fun. I enjoyed the writing style and the characterizations. There was plenty of really nice imagery.
The Truth is a Cave in the Black Mountains Gaiman's contribution to the collection was probably the closest to the intended theme. A very well-written play on the traditional fairy tale of Aladdin's cave of gold. Written in a very traditional folk tale style, but with new takes on the typical folk tale themes.
Unbelief A story of an assassin sent to kill a mysterious figure. Went straight in one ear and out the other. This has been done before and done better. I would have lost nothing had this story been excluded completely.
The Stars are Falling I hated this one, too. This is the typical story of a WWI veteran who comes home and tries to reconcile with his old life. It was so cliche in plot, tone and writing style and every piece of the plot was telegraphed from the beginning. Instead of "and then what happened?" I felt like "oh, that happened, really? I'm so totally unsurprised."
Juvenal Nyx Sometimes, when you read fantasy, the setting is so complex that once author takes so long to set it up, you still don't understand it and you don't care. This story is how to do a complex setting correctly. Very little set up was ever done, but by the end you got the feeling that his world was so complicated and so rich. I wish I could have read whole series in this setting.
The Knife This story reminded me a lot of "Blood." More a story-let, it felt like a nice palate cleanser after two relatively long stories; however, it's not something I would reread on its own.
Weights and Measures as a sad story about a couple that had lost their daughter, this worked. Picoult excels at writing emotion and this was a very sad, very moving story. As a magical realism piece, this didn't work. The conceit of the magic didn't make sense to me, and it distracted me from the emotions and themes of the piece rather than adding to it.
Goblin Lake A beautifully written piece of meta-fiction that nicely explores the relationship between fiction and reality. I found this very insightful on the topics of why we read and why we write.
Mallon the Guru The writing in this was so evocative and full of gorgeous imagery. The feeling of mysticism and growing feeling of dread worked their way into every sentence. The story left me more with feelings than with a concrete understanding of the plot (such that I immediately reread the story to make sure I hadn't missed anything.)
Catch and Release Another nice twist on a genre -- a story told from the point of view of a reformed serial killer. I found the narrative chilling and fascinating. The analogy of fishing really carried the story.
Polka Dots and Moonbeams one part 1920's gangsters, one part...something else. The writing is outstanding; the setting is established impeccably from the first sentence. Although as the reader you never quite figure out what's happening, the feelings of needing to escape, of love and of desperation all come through so clearly that it doesn't really matter.
Loser Chuck Palahniuk always writes in the same Chuck Palahniuk genre and this is no exception. Take something banal, such as the Price is Right, and add grit. This was a fun, but superficial, read.
Samantha's Diary I was so disappointed by this that I almost don't want to review it. I love Jones. I've read every book she's ever written. I bought this collection because it advertised a new Diana Wynne Jones story. But there's no two ways about it: this story sucked. There was no intrigue, none of the plot twists Jones fans live for and no depth of characterization. It was the saddest thing ever.
Land of the Lost Maybe I could have handled this story better had I not been still grieving from Samantha's Diary. As was, this was a trite story about a woman who will find the grave of a serial killer's victim, even though the police have given up. Sound like something you've read about a million times before? Well, that's exactly what it was like.
Lief in the Wind On the other hand, this was so fantastic. A completely original science fiction story about a team exploring a new planet and contacting the alien life there. Sound like something you've read a million times before? Well, this was absolutely nothing like all of those others. This started with the beautiful imagery of the "birds that get smaller as they get closer" and built open that with so much metaphor and so much detail of language. The story was also about how to recollect yourself when loved ones die and hope is lost and was gorgeous on that front as well.
Unwell This story gets you totally lost in the mind of a toxic woman and you realize too late that although she's toxic there might be something else to the story. I adore stories with untrustworthy narrators and this was done perfectly.
A Life in Fictions One of the few stories that felt completely new. Not a twist on a genre, or an old tale with a new spin, but just something new. It's a story about a woman who disappears into her boyfriend's novels when he writes characters based on her and how this affects her life. At a larger level it's about the many facets of self and what we do to integrate them. I really loved this piece.
Let the Past Begin A lot of fluff surrounding a middle segment of a beautifully told folk legend. The meat of the story was haunting and so well-described that I could close my eyes and see the fortune teller. But the rest of it was chaff.
The Therapist I loved this work. Very soft science fiction about what causes people to lose their tempers mixed with court fiction. I loved the idea of a neme (a contagious feeling of rage). I felt the first part could stand on its own and then loved the twist brought by the second part.
Parallel Lines Now this was the twin story that I've been waiting for. At first glance, this is a boring Ouiji board twin-twin communication story. But it's actually so much more. The relationship between the twins and the characterization of each is done beautifully and the exploration of what we do and don't owe other people is unique.
The Cult of the Nose This read along the same lines as the Therapist. What of the narrative should the reader choose to believe? The narrative itself was spooky with the sinister members of the Cult of the Nose inevitably showing up amid chaos and destruction.
Human Intelligence about an alien spy on earth and the women who finds him out, but also about loneliness and goals and what one should do to achieve them.
Stories A fictionalized autobiography of Moorcock. The first half reads like propaganda for the breaking down of genre barriers, which Gaiman had already given us (and better) in the introduction. The remainder, once he gets down to it, is a character-driven piece about love, loss and betrayal that is well done.
The Maiden Flight of BellerophonI really enjoyed this while I was reading it for the well-drawn characters and the attention to detail (probably one highlight was a character who was obsessed with the flying machine Bellerophon having written the overly laudatory wikipedia article thereon.) However the plot never really came together for me.
The Devil Staircase First of all, the layout (like stairs) is so distracting and not set up correctly with the page breaks. But once I got past that, I found that the central part of the story -- about a man who finds the devil's son, who offers him tempting gifts and who ends up taking a bird who sings when he lies -- interesting and creative. However, the beginning of the story really drags.

Overall, I would say that if, like me, you're picking up this book because you're a Diana Wynne Jones fan, do not do it!
Otherwise, this book is totally worth reading for the contributions from Gaiman, Mosley, Swanwick, Ford, Wolfe, Howard, Deaver and Powers, particularly and several other solid entries.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
settingshadow | 64 autres critiques | Aug 19, 2023 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
80
Aussi par
52
Membres
4,551
Popularité
#5,525
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
135
ISBN
122
Langues
7
Favoris
3

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