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Finding Creatures & Other Stories

par C. June Wolf

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Affichage de 1-5 de 13 (suivant | tout afficher)
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
It's taken me a long time to read this book. You read one story. Set the book down. Repeat again a few months later. It's nice to have the ability to do that. :) The stories are well-written and interesting, though I don't think it rates high on my re-readability meter. ( )
  chibikame | Nov 18, 2010 |
The cover of C. June Wolf’s collection of speculative shorts was enough to snare my attention, although the title supported that dynamic image. Then when I saw the man himself, Charles de Lint, had given his unequivocal support to the publication, I knew I would put aside everything else on my reading mountain.

It was an excellent decision.

There are fifteen stories that make up this eclectic collection, ranging from pure speculative, science fiction, fantasy and urban reality. They are all of them quiet, introspective tales, very Canadian in nature although certainly Wolf’s milieux range from unknown geographies of space, to the devastating poverty of Haiti and the cerebral spaces of the Art Gallery of Ontario.

Her geographies may vary, but Wolf’s themes remain central to the exploration of the human, and sometimes not so human, responses to sciences, situations and challenges, revealing our inner natures with a deft, honest hand that is absolutely readable and memorable.

By far, Finding Creatures & other stories is the best body of short, speculative fiction I’ve read all year, and certainly deserving of critical acclaim.

The only criticism I have is the publisher, Wattle and Daub Books, has very limited distribution and their website has little information to assist you to purchase (no price), although there is a link where the collection is available:

http://wattleanddaubbooks.ca/?page_id=64

It’s worth tracking down; you won’t be disappointed.

Finding Creatures & other stories
C. June Wolf
ISBN 9780981065809
Wattle & Daub Books (2008)
Trade Paperback 5.5” x 8.5”, 240 pgs ( )
  fiverivers | Oct 31, 2009 |
An Eclectic Buffet

I like story collections, and speaking as one who writes for kids, it has always puzzled me why many mainstream publishers are reluctant to publish them. Short stories are far less intimidating and generally more enjoyable than novels for “reluctant readers.” I have seldom been disappointed with a story collection, though I may have been disappointed with one or more of the stories in them. Still, as with an eclectic buffet, one can usually find something they like.

Finding Creatures & Other Stories by Casey June Wolf is by no means a young-adult book, though I’m sure that many teens, especially those who like sci-fi and fantasy, will enjoy it; and Ms. Wolf has offered a lavish and varied buffet with well-prepared entrees that should please most everyone, whether or not they hate vegetables or don’t eat meat.

While the stories are as varied as vegan salad and truck stop steak -- indeed, one of the stories, After Hours At The Black Hole, is about a space-going garbage truck -- it’s clear that Ms. Wolf knows her way around a literary kitchen, and even the most picky eater or fanatical food-faddist may be tempted into sampling things they thought they didn't like.

The collection opens with an offering titled Claude And The Henry Moores, about a security guard in an art gallery who senses the life trapped within certain pieces of sculpture and ultimately sets those lives free. In a case of “it tastes like chicken,” I was reminded of Thorne Smith’s novel, Night Life Of The Gods, although Mr. Smith tended to use magic and the supernatural merely to present his situations and then get on with the tale, while Ms. Wolf takes us much more deeply into how the magic happens and what the characters feel. There are also subtle echoes of Anne Rice and the process of transforming into a vampire, though by no means sinister.

However, Ms. Wolf is also adept in the horror genre with offerings such as Dana’s Hand and Aggie’s Game, both of which may generate within the reader a macabre but titillating tingle similar to forbidden or potentially deadly foods -- fugu fish come to mind -- that must be prepared with much skill by only the most experienced of chefs.

The title story, Finding Creatures, about a girl who finds a ethereal though not imaginary horse who helps her make friends, reminded me of The Celestial Omnibus by E. M. Forster, one of many stories that so-called adults should read from time to time to remind them that children usually see clearly though grownup pretension, self-involvement, indifference and hypocrisy.

As for the other stories, and as one reviewer eloquently put it, they “range throughout space and time... the aliens are actually alien, not just humans-with-twist. The gods are godlike, with all that that historically implies. Humans, wherever they are, are still human with human concerns and flaws.”

While, as I’m sure will be the case with many readers, I liked some of the stories better than others, I devoured every one and none disagreed with me. If I absolutely had to find a flaw in this book it would be the author’s introduction to each story. Having been a voracious reader since a very early age, I quickly learned to avoid prologues or introductions, especially those that tend to either describe a story or, worse, hint at or give away the ending. Nor am I interested in why an author wrote a story, what inspired it, or the author’s own interpretation of their work, though of course other readers may feel differently. In any event, it’s simple enough to ignore the intros -- as one might ignore a platter of Vienna Sausage appetizers -- and get to the good stuff.

Jess Mowry ( )
1 voter JessMowry | Oct 1, 2009 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
When I first read about this book and read the jacket I was very intreaged to start it, although once I started reading the stories I just couldn't get into them. Just not my cup o tea I guess. ( )
  Wickedmick | Jul 24, 2009 |
Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing.
Short story collections are difficult creatures. Each individual story must be able to stand alone and yet still fit among the others. C. June Wolf certainly has a cohesive enough writing voice for the collection to work together, but I found that often her stories did not work as stand alones.

She often attempted to fit more into an individual story than the form she chose allowed and by doing so made her stories feel bare. While she managed to make each a world unique unto itself, I often found myself unsatisfied with what the story was giving me. There are certainly interesting ideas within the pages of this collection and a few gems, but overall it left me wondering why I was reading a collection of bare bones short stories instead of a few novellas or one full length novel. ( )
  midnightbex | Jul 9, 2009 |
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