| Between the Darkness and the Fire: Twenty-three Tales of Imaginative Fiction from the Internet | |||||
| edited by Jeffry Dwight | |||||
| The Wildside Press, 204 pages | |||||
| A review by Lisa DuMond
Whatever the reason, Dwight and his authors have put together
a multi-author reprint anthology that is a pure pleasure to read, and an excellent
introduction to some writers you may never have encountered before. While not
every story is a blue diamond, they are gems, nonetheless.
In selecting the stories, Dwight "gave precedence to stories
with strong characters facing real human conflicts." There is no question
he achieved his goal, then. Though I said the stories are a pleasure, it is
a decidedly bittersweet enjoyment; human conflict producing isolation,
grief, fear, and despair, in most cases.
Take the example of "Ebb Tide," the standout piece of the group. A mother
faces the wrenching choice of how she will lose her child. Mary Soon Lee's
near-future piece explores a horrifying situation without sinking to the
maudlin or degenerating into a tear-jerker. The woman's desperation rings
true, perhaps because it is a scenario we can all too easily imagine.
Deborah Coates' melancholy "The Queen of Mars" puts a new twist on an old
theme -- the loss of a parent. The father's method of dealing with the
absence is touchingly human, flawed but understandable. Unfortunately,
it is a problem faced by the tatters of families everyday.
Love and lives misused and lost are the focus of "Rift" by
Kurt Roth and "Keeping It Together" by Tim Waggoner. The characters have
made all the wrong decisions. Although the narrators obtained what they
bargained for, the end result is pain and ruin, for themselves and the
others they involve in their choices.
Are you seeing a recurring theme? Loss permeates the lives of
the characters in Between the Darkness and the Fire.
Loss of love, loss of hope, loss of a future, flow from one story to the
next. Isolation and resignation seem to be the end results of life ahead of us.
If it's such a somber atmosphere, where is the pleasure in
submerging ourselves in these broken lives? Aside from the obvious -- the
stories are beautifully written and enthralling -- there are the moments
of light. ("The Boys From Bethlehem" is a scandalous scream.) Unexpectedly,
the sun will burn through the haze, just for a moment, perhaps, but isn't
that how life is sometimes. And with Between the Darkness and the Fire
you don't have to take the bad with the good, because it's all good.
And the best news of all, Between the Darkness and the Fire is the
first of five such anthologies planned by Dwight. If each volume is as good
as the first, you'll want to save room in your own private collection.
Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. She co-authored the 45th anniversary issue cover of MAD Magazine. Previews of her latest, as yet unpublished, novel are available at Hades Online. |
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