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Chargement... Uncanny Magazine Issue 25: November/December 2018par Lynne M. Thomas (Directeur de publication), Michael Damian Thomas (Directeur de publication), Michi Trota (Directeur de publication)
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. Read two so far: The Thing About Ghost Stories by Naomi Kritzer - 4* Story Link: https://uncannymagazine.com/article/the-thing-about-ghost-stories/ *A Hugo Award finalist for Best Novelette* http://www.thehugoawards.org/2019/04/2019-hugo-award-1944-retro-hugo-award-final..... I liked how there were a couple of stories going on. We have the research project where we learn all kinds of thing the MC is researching and hear various mini ghost stories. The MC/Researcher offers to buy the story tellers coffee or w/e if they will share "their" ghost story. And, we have the MC's life which just happened to tie in nicely to her research. Very pleasant read. 2019 re-read on an Uncanny podcast but I had enjoyed it more reading it myself. Read by Stephanie Malia Morris on the Uncanny Magazine Podcast Episode 25B. ------------------------------- The Rose MacGregor Drinking and Admiration Society by T. Kingfisher - 3* The author was inspired by some bit of info she saw in a twitter post. Something about women sitting around pining after sex with a fairy. She figured there was a woman who wouldn't be pining. Read by Erika Ensign on the Uncanny Magazine Podcast Episode 25A. T. Kingfisher for The Rose MacGregor Drinking and Admiration Society Nommed for Hugo '19 This short story had some cleverness to it and a bit more style. It was enjoyable, read from the PoV of a fairy. :) Naomi Kritzer for The Thing About Ghost Stories Also nommed for Hugo '19 Itself a ghost story about ghost stories, this academic ruminates on the nature of redemption. Entertaining. Solid. Worth the read. :) aucune critique | ajouter une critique
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“Are we pining?” asked the green-eyed fae suddenly.
“Is this what it’s like when they pine away after us?”
This was a short, sweet delight and it has my vote for this category so far, having soared above my other pieces in it's slots. This is the tale of Rose MacGregor and her 'Lost Sheep,' but even more it a scandalously lovely look at the feminist reclaiming inversion of the whole 'Fairies Seducing Humans' mythos.
I love that Rose McGregor is never chided for her gall, her appetites, or her actions by the ring regaling themselves with her. I love how easily they talk about her, about human falling love with fairies and wasting away to death, or women chasing down selkie skins, or pookas trying to kill them after they've gotten. But that through all of this Rose MacGregor was the one who was in control, all ease and no force, easy amusement and confident poise.
I laughed entirely when they got to the quote at the top, when they all recognized and denied, that they had been done to by Rose as they had done to hundreds or thousands before her, and that was why they gathered each year to remember her.
Merged review:
Summer 2019 (Hugo Award Nominee 2019 - Best Novelette);
I was so, so, so pleased to see Naomi Kritzer's name in the list of nominees this year and was looking forward to making it through my list and getting to her story. I have a love-hate relationship with horror of most kinds, because I have an all too overhelpful mind even when it is being sedate, and so I usually give anything in that realm a wide berth.
This story was incredibly well laid out, with slow reveals and detailed examples. Our main character is two things most importantly a) a ghost stories folklorist and b) the daughter of a mother with Alzheimer's. I love the number of different examples of ghost stories we see through the novelette in those places where she goes for interviews, and I love that it's balanced by several places where we see her breaking it down with logic, with research, with culture.
There's a chilling and comforting realism to this whole story. ( )