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Been wanting to read and submit work to this anthology.
I really enjoyed Interfictions, which had a lot of stories which 1) struck me as a reader and 2) inspired me as a writer, so I was admittedly afraid that I wouldn't have the same experience. And I didn't, but that's only because these are different stories by different authors with different tones and uses of the written word. I thought that for the most part all of the stories were solid enough, but my favorites were the following:- "Remembrance Is Something Like a House," Will Ludwigsen- "The
My favorite stories were "The Long and Short of Long-Term Memory," which I could relate to because I want to erase a number of my own memories and "Llle Close" because I love archetypes and Arthurian mythology. I didn't like the stories focused on war and politics as much.
Favorite stories:Will Ludwigsen "Memory Is Something Like a House"Elizabeth Ziemska "Count Poniatowski and the Beautiful Chicken"
An excellent collection of genre-crossing short fictions -- recommended to literary fiction fans who like to dip into fantasy and science fiction now and then, and F&SF fans who want more than standard genre fare.
4-4.5
I rated more toward 3.3 to 3.4 stars. A mixed bag of interesting in-between stories. Some tales were playful, while some were too heavy-laden with politics for my taste.
They didn't all work for me, but many of them did, and all of them were very different and interesting. I think my favorites were Theodora Goss's "Child Empress of Mars", Will Ludwigsen's "Remembrance is Something Like a House", Shira Lipkin's "Valentines", and Stephanie Shaw's "Afterbirth".Although I gotta say to Camilla Bruce ("Berry Moon: Laments of a Muse"): SEMEN DOES NOT TASTE LIKE SUGAR. Semen will never taste like sugar! No, not even if he's really hot and his eyes are cinnamon brown. (W...
This is one of those anthologies with a pretentious introduction, and apparently demanded that all the authors write a brief blurb explaining WHY their work is ‘interstitial.’ I am firmly in a ‘let the work speak for itself’ camp. However, the whole idea of interstitiality is interesting to me, and I like things that don’t necessarily fit into neat pockets… so here goes:Jeffrey Ford, “The War Between Heaven and Hell Wallpaper” – Ever have that urge to write down your dream as soon as you wake up...
So, last week I went to the library and perused the new fiction section. I came upon this book and for some weird reason I picked it up. Let me confess one thing - I rarely read short fiction books. The only other book of short stories I've read was The Girl in the Flammable Skirt by Aimee Bender, a book filled with stories that had a mix of surrealism and an honest examination of real life.And this book, oddly enough, turned out to be very similar. I decided not to think of the odds of running
I enjoyed the first anthology better than the second. Every story engaged me in the first anthology, it was like it had been written for me. That wasn't the case with the second anthology, but the gems in this book more than make up for that. The strong stories in this collection are incredibly strong, evocative, well written, emotional. And the ones I didn't care for? Well, obviously, not everyone has the same taste and interests I do. They weren't bad stories or duds, they just weren't tailor
I am half-way through this anthology, and so far there have been mostly very good stories and a couple of average ones. I found of especial interest "rememberance is something like a house", a haunted house story from the point of view of the house itself and "the score" with its mixed media approach. With regards to what is interstitial writing I think some of the examples are good but, for instace "Two of me" would seems to me to be magical realism, which is fine, but I wouldn't call interstit...
As with all collections, some were better than others. "After Verona" was amazing. There were about three or four other really good ones. The rest were kind of meh. Worth checking out of the library for AV, but not worth buying.
A fascinating and eclectic collection of stories that run the gamut from merely odd to freaky to fantastical to just a bit horrific. The idea of interstitial fiction is a provocative and interesting one--fiction that doesn't really fit anywhere else, that plays with conventions of form and genre.