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Faerie Tales edited by Martin H. Greenberg
and Russell Davies
pub: DAW. 309 page paperback. Price: $ 6.99 (US),
$ 9.99 (CAN). ISBN: 0-7564-0182-8
check out website: www.dawbooks.com
The
Victorians were very fond of fairy tales. Their image, though was
often of cute, diminutive beings frequently associated with flowers.
Faerie has roots far, far older. Where there is a tradition of folklore,
there will be tales of magical beings from the Otherworld.
Many of them were malicious. It is the dangerous side of faerie
that fantasy writers have embraced. Nowhere in the twelve original
stories in this anthology is there room for cute. There is an edge
to all of them. Most of the stories are from established writers
within the fantasy field.

The stories are set within the context of the modern
world. Charles de Lint has for a long time written novels and stories
set in the fictional city of Newford where, for those who can see,
lurk Otherworld creatures. 'Sweet Forget-Me-Not', the first story
in this volume, adds to the Newford oeuvre. Those familiar with
his work may have met his gemmin. They are spirits of a place that
soak up information then disappear, breaking hearts. Ahmad meets
a group of them when he most needs to and forms a liaison with one.
This is a quiet story and adds to our knowledge of de Lint's magical
people.
Tim Waggoner's 'The September People' has the same
kind of ambience, but instead of youth it is age that needs the
boost in confidence. At seventy-four, Maggie takes the path into
the Otherworld that she first followed as a child of nine. After
her first encounter with the creatures she called the September
People, she grew up to become an expert in local myth and folklore.
Now, towards the end of her life she decides to see if she can find
them again.
It is not only humans that venture into the Otherworld.
Sometimes, their denizens enter ours. In Kristine Kathryn Rusch's
'Judgement', the being that calls himself Tyrone Briggs was lured
into the human world by the music of the Meistersinger of Nuremberg,
Hans Sachs. Now, after centuries away, he finds himself back in
the city, as a photographer at the Nazi trials. He finds that it
is not only the war criminals that are being judged.
While music may be a lure to them, drugs can be used
to lure the young in the other direction as Sandra, straight cop
finds in Sarah A. Hoye's 'Yellow Tide Foam'.
The Sidhe also make it into the space age. Traditionally,
time runs differently in the Otherworld. A day there may be a year
passing in our world. In 'A Very Special Relativity' by James Fiscus,
the discovery of a dead chicken outside the pilot's module on the
spaceship Dunkwart Rowtow leads the indentured Mike Horvath to discover
how this skill of time distortion has been put to use in navigating
space.
In only one story, 'Wyvern' by Watt Spencer, is there
real co-operation between the magical and non-magical worlds. Kate,
a human has to work with the Crowsong to catch the wyvern that is
picking off the elfin workforce along the construction route of
the railway between the two worlds.
Whereas most of the stories here deal with the principle
denizens of the Otherworld, the Sidhe, even though they are not
always called that, they are not the only inhabitants. In her contribution,
'Witches' Broom, Apple Soon', Jane Lindskold tells of Satyrs and
Dryads. These are the creatures Johanna encounters when she trespasses
in search of the witches' broom, a growth sometimes found on trees
such as apple, that she hopes to develop as a new apple cultivar
similar to the one she lost when all her young trees were bought
from her before they had a chance to fruit.
All these stories are new takes on the theme of Faerie.
The remaining five give new twists to traditional folklore. It was
believed that a woman could rescue the man she loves from the clutches
of the Queen of the Faeries by physically holding on to him, whatever
happens.
'He Said, Sidhe Said' by Tanya Huff is one of the
best in this volume as it also touched with humour. It is told as
alternating view points. When Titania takes a fancy to Tommy Lane,
a skater-boy, there is a serious clash of cultures. Whereas, Tommy
is enjoying himself, Titania realises she has made a serious mistake
and has to find a way of remedying it without becoming the laughing
stock of Faerie.
The remaining four stories are all changeling tales,
but are very different from each other. John Helfers 'Changeling'
concerns the problems the changeling has in fitting in to modern
society, while 'The Filial Fiddler' by Elizabeth Ann Scarborough,
contrasts the adult changeling and the returned child at the end
of the mother's life. Adam Stemple's 'A Piece Of Flesh' tells of
the problems the narrator has in trying to get her brother back.
It is a chilling piece as it is a first person narration and the
question arises as to her reliability as a witness and the reality
she relates.
The last story in the volume is probably the best.
In Michelle West's 'The Stolen Child', the father of the stolen
child has spent years not only finding where his daughter is hidden
but of the trials he must go through to get her back. It is a beautifully
crafted story filled with determination and hope. The book is worth
reading for gems such as this.
Pauline Morgan
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OTHER REVIEWS - May 2004
Non Fiction
Mythology: The DC Comics Art Of
Alex Ross
Futures: 50 Years In Space The
Challenge Of The Stars by David A. Hardy and Patrick Moore
Lyra’s Oxford by Philip Pullman
Tolkien: A Cultural Phenomenon:
Second Edition by Brian Roseberry
DVDs
Millennium
Babylon 5: The Complete First
Season: Signs and Portents
Fantasy
Jinn by Matthew B.J. Delaney
Midnight Tides by Steven Erikson
The Siege Of Mithila by Ashok
K. Banker
Broken Crescent by S. Andrew Swann
The Magician’s Guild by Trudi
Canavan
The Destroyer Goddess by Laura
Resnick
Fool's Errand by Robin Hobb
White Wolf by David Gemmell
The Weavers Of Saramyr by Chris
Wooding
The Iron Grail by Robert Holdstock
Faerie Tales edited by Martin H.
Greenberg and Russell Davies
Darknesses by L.E. Modesitt, Jr.
Slipstream
Changing Of Faces by Tim Lebbon
Karloff’s Circus by Steve Aylett
The Well Of Lost Plots by Jasper
Fforde
Science Fiction
The Golden Globe by John Varley
Market Forces by Richard Morgan
It Came From Outer Space screenplay
by Ray Bradbury
A Gift Of Dragons by Anne McCaffrey
Zero Calvin by Brian Cramer
Different Kinds Of Darkness by
David Langford
Felaheen The Third Arabesk by
Jon Courtenay Grimwood
Absolution Gap by Adrian Reynolds
The Line Of Polity by Neal Asher
The Affinity Trap by Martin Sketchley
Natural History by Justina Robson
Horror
Living Dead In Dallas by Charlaine
Harris
Magazines
Challenging Destiny # 17
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