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Chimerascope

por Douglas Smith

Otros autores: Ver la sección otros autores.

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543483,365 (3.71)2
Chimerascope is the first full collection of short fiction from award-winning Canadian author, Douglas Smith. Sixteen engaging stories of fantasy and science fiction that take you from love in fourteenth-century Japan to humanity's last stand, from virtual reality to the end of reality, from alien drug addictions to a dinner where a man loses everything.… (más)
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Mostrando 3 de 3
A collection of short SFF stories, some verging on horror. They were variable, some I definitely wanted to spend more time in their world, most were OK, and only one I was tempted to abandon, and that was just because I didn't find it very interesting. ( )
  Robertgreaves | May 11, 2023 |
This had a couple good stories in it, and some that I only read to get to the next one. The variety was fun, though. ( )
  amaraduende | Mar 30, 2013 |
Originally published at ideomancer.com ( http://www.ideomancer.com/?p=426 ):

Chimerascope, Douglas Smith. ChiZine Publications, Toronto, March 2010, paperback, $16.95, ISBN 978-0981297859.
Reviewed by Alyssa Smith.

There are few misses in Chimerascope, a superb collection of Douglas Smith’s previously published speculative fiction, stuffed with Aurora nominees (and one winner) and Year’s Best Fantasy & Horror honorable mentions. Spanning a wide spectrum of classic sci-fi, stories inspired by mythology, and post-apocalyptic fiction, this is an collection you’ll want to own and re-read.
Smith’s greatest talent lies in creating and then exploring worlds fashioned by posing a deceptively simple question. If a man awoke each morning and died each night, each time waking in someone else’s body, as in “A Taste Sweet and Salty,” would he be able to escape? What if, as in the book’s opening story, “Scream Angel,” an alien species secreted a chemical substance that warped humans’ emotional responses—changing extreme lows into torrid, wonderful highs?
His aliens are fully-fleshed, complicated beings with tangible challenges. They are occasionally horrific (as in the dark “By Her Hand, She Draws You Down,” populated by an entity that absorbs the life force of humans by drawing their portrait on paper). But more often, like his humans, they must make terrible decisions without the promise of a happy resolution. “Memories of a Dead Man,” for example, presents the titular character at a crossroads where he could choose to abandon his quest for vengeance, or wallow in it.
Few of Smith’s stories end on a feel-good note. In his introduction, he writes, “[M]y preferred ending is bittersweet, because that’s how I see life.” And nowhere is that more true than in “Going Harvey in the Big House,” narrated by a man who is—and eventually chooses to be—no more than a cog in the world’s wheel. Given the opportunity to cast down the machine, Big G walks down the easier road with no regrets. Flawed characters are the hardest to write because they are the most realistic: like us, they are plagued by doubts, insecurities, and are woefully void of foresight. Smith manages to capture the sympathy inherent in Big G’s decision; he is, after all, only human.
Another standout is the masterful “State of Disorder,” which contemplates the flexibility and fluidity of time. A number of events occur during a single, three-course dinner: the fortunes of two men are swapped, retrospectively, in time; a child’s life is erased permanently from the timeline; and finally, all three participants finish the meal with the knowledge of what has occurred, and how—one is triumphant, another despairing, and the third seeks revenge. In the hands of a less skillful writer, it would have been chaos.
An introduction to the book by editor and sci-fi novelist Julie Czerneda adds little, as this collection stands handily on its own legs. However, the author’s notes Smith provides before (and sometimes after, to avoid spoilers) the stories are tremendously interesting; each augments the tales with how the story came to be, and why it was written. Smith refers twice to Roger Zelazny, and once each to Poe, Jack London, and Bogey, all as sources of inspiration. It’s a complex mix: one of the many reasons this collection succeeds so powerfully. ( )
  ideomancer | Sep 1, 2010 |
Mostrando 3 de 3
Chimerascope is a sterling set, with nary a weak or disposable entry. Smith’s writing, evocative yet understated, gracefully brings to life his imagined realms.
 

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Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
Smith, Douglasautor principaltodas las edicionesconfirmado
Czerneda, JulieIntroducciónautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
Mohr, ErikArtista de Cubiertaautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
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To my writer friends in the Ink*Specs, who provided much needed critique and support for each of the creatures contained herein: Mici Gold, Lorraine Pooley, Isaac Szpindel, Alex von Thorn, Sue Witts, and the late Ken Basarke.

To the many editors who gave these creatures a home, but most especially to Julie Czerneda, Tracy Schoenle at Cicada, Andy Cox at TTA, and everyone at On Spec.

And finally, with love, to my wife, Susan, and my sons, Mike and Chris, for the love they have always given to the creature who wrote this.
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Chimerascope is the first full collection of short fiction from award-winning Canadian author, Douglas Smith. Sixteen engaging stories of fantasy and science fiction that take you from love in fourteenth-century Japan to humanity's last stand, from virtual reality to the end of reality, from alien drug addictions to a dinner where a man loses everything.

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