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Cargando... New Terrors 2por Ramsey Campbell
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Pertenece a las seriesNew Terrors (2)
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)823.9Literature English English fiction Modern PeriodClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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As the book description doesn't list the stories, I've included them here:
Christopher Priest - The Miraculous Cairn
John Brunner - The Man Whose Eyes Beheld the Glory
Robert Bloch - The Rubber Room
Giles Gordon - Drama In Five Acts
Jack Sullivan - The Initiation
John Burke - Lucille Would Have Known
Rosalind Ashe - Teething Troubles
R. A. Lafferty - The Funny Face Murders
Marianne Leconte - Femme Fatale
Stephen King - Big Wheels: A Tale of the Laundry Game
Greg Bear - Richie by the Sea
Margaret Dickson - Can You Still See Me?
Dorothy K. Haynes - A Song at the Party
Felice Picano - One Way Out
M. John Harrison - The Ice Monkey
andrew j. offutt - Symbiote
Charles L. Grant - Across the Water to Skye
Kathleen Resch - The Dark
Priest's story reads more as an alternative universe tale, with its background of an archipelago of islands, and one particular island near the mainland former capital city, a capital largely deserted since the onset of the 'war' against unspecified enemies. The narrator has to revisit the island for the first time in years, having been a childhood visitor to an uncle, bedridden aunt and girl cousin of much the same age. The uncle and aunt now having died and the cousin moved away, it falls to the narrator to clear out the uncle's remaining effects, at the seminary where they lived, a place similar to a Catholic seminary although it isn't clear if the religion is Christianity as we know it. I won't give away the big twist, but it is a story about sexual dysfunction and the unreliability of memory. I realised afterwards that it is one of the author's stories about this alternative world, and was included in his 'The Dream Archipelego' collection.
John Brunner's story is also part of a larger collection apparently: the character called Secrett who meets the protagonist for a chat in a pub and fills in more details about a Greek island the protagonist recently visited, is a recurring character in other stories by Brunner. Here, Secrett visited the island in the late 1940s and was befriended by a Greek Orthodox priest, Costos. They both became too interested in a ruined shrine near the extinct volcano, and started transcribing rock carvings there, bringing Costos too close to the secret of the supposed saint who had used that cave as her hermitage.
Some of the stories are self consciously experimental such as Giles Gordon's and R A Lafferty (having read Lafferty in the past, its standard Lafferty) and don't really appeal to me. Femme Fatale is translated from the French so I don't know whether the original is the same, but comes over as an excuse for sexual sadism. Some are fairly average including the Stephen King which hints at something - the presence of the chrome ornament and the customised car seems to be hinting possibly that someone was responsible for a long ago crime - but doesn't deliver, or ramble on too long such as the final vampires in New Orleans story. 'One Way Out' has an interesting build up but the resolution doesn't work for me.
The best stories in the collection are more along the lines of traditional ghost stories: 'Lucille Would Have Known' is about the emerging tensions between a group of middle aged people who go on touring holidays together, after the death of their leader who is gradually revealed to be a bit of a bully; 'A Song at the Party' has a nicely macabre recursive theme where each increasingly older woman tells the young girl protagonist to go and ask her (old woman's) mother; and 'Teething Troubles' is quite an interesting update on the M R James idea of a tale told after dinner by a group of university academics, only spoiled slightly by its weak ending.
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