Galaxy's Edge #9 | |||||
A review by Sandra Scholes
The fiction he has chosen in this issue is varied and just as good as the last.
"Totalled," by Kary English has a father going out in his car with his children, which should have been a great day, but after
an accident leaves only his children uninjured, he thinks there is the possibility that he could be dead. It is strange that if
he is dead, he is still deep in thought about the accident, concerned that he had signed a waiver on death that said his body
would be used for medical science. Kary has been a Writers of the Future two-time finalist and her stories have appeared in
the Grantville Gazette's Universe Annex and Daily Science Fiction. This
marks his debut in Galaxy's Edge and we hope to see
more of his work after seeing this one.
In "The Peacemaker," by Gardner Dozois, Ray has been taken under Uncle Abner's wing being told to stay pure and let the peace
of God into his heart. Ray is a pure boy just as he promised, but through the harder times, he becomes the enemy of the
village. Abner has several refugee kids working on his farm who get fed meagre rations while they watch Ray eating only the
best food kept back for him. The jealousy grows so bad, some families leave the farm, seeing him as an abomination, though
the outcome isn't one I had thought would happen.
"Honey, Plums and Cinnamon," by Andrea G. Stewart leads us through the life of Iyalah who had lost an eye to be given a god's
talent after her mother placed her on Belast's altar. Her talent it seems is to be able to smell beloved objects or the true
love in people, but instead she sells lamps and other trinkets to people for very little money. Her shape-changing pet,
Niyat thinks she should use her talent to make real money, but she thinks otherwise. Her moment comes when she meets Raj Mefit
purely by chance. He believes she can smell love and loyalty in people and wants to use her talent, though Mefit makes promises
to her to send doctors to her ill mother, Niyat can't be sure Mefit will keep his end of the bargain. He suspects he is not
being entirely honest with her about the attempts on his life. This story feels as though it's been plucked straight out of
Arabian Nights with the eastern setting and words of beauty and scented palaces from the past.
"Street of Dreams, Feet of Clay," by Robert Sheckley has the sort of humour you would come to expect from him in this, a science
fiction story about Carmody, an urbanite who sees an advertisement for a model city in New Jersey and decides to go there. Bellwether,
Carmody thinks is an okay city to look at, but once the city starts to speak to him, he sees it as strange that a city would
talk, and that all the people had left. Carmody thinks the place will be different from the New York he was used to and hopes to
settle in. However, once the city keeps talking to him, sooner or later he has to take action. As a big admirer of humorous
fiction whether it is fantasy or sci-fi, this tickled me enough to want to read more of his stories.
"The Wings, The Lungs, The Engine the Heart," by Laurie Tom has Karl, a surgeon who is assigned the task of performing a heart
transplant that could reanimate the infamous Baron von Richtofen. Most of us know him as the "Red Baron" who enjoyed his notoriety
from the red painted plane he took to the skies in, yet this, according to the story made him more of a target. Karl had been
reading about a doctor who had been working on a mechanical heart that would keep beating even after the patient's heart had
stopped. Richtofen's resurrection was believed to be essential to the Fatherland, so the story is told from the Germans
perspective during the war. For me this point of view would not be the first one to think of, but it serves its purpose as a
snippet of time that could have been different and works in many ways.
"Matial," by Lou J. Berger is one of the shortest stories in here and there is always one that gives us a glimpse of Matial
who is supposed to sacrifice a young woman on the Day of Plenty to ensure the sun will rise and they will have a plentiful
harvest. Chimalma doubts the validity of the sacrifice as the sun will rise anyway, with or without her blood sacrifice. Matial
tries to deny her reasons, but her doubts have the ability to prove him wrong. This might be short, but it is interesting.
"The Very Pulse of the Machine," by Michael Swanwick leaves Martha Kivelsen dragging Burton's dead body back to her ship. When
she hears Burton talk to her via the radio, she thinks she is losing her mind and that is the last thing she wants to do under
such dire circumstances. This story won the 1999 Hugo award and the author has already won four others for his work.
In "Hark" Listen to the Animals," by Lisa Tang Liu and Ken Liu, Todd has gone missing, presumed mauled and eaten by bears on a
hiking trip and Maggie needs Nifer's help to find out the truth about the bears -- whether they have a higher intelligence
than humans have come to believe. Did they plan to kill Todd, or was it accidental? They also believe he might still be alive,
but this will take a lot of investigating if they are to get to the bottom of it. In the wild of this story, animals have been
attacking humans; Massachusetts has wild turkey attacks every Thanksgiving, black bears have got more aggressive in New Jersey
while rats the size of cats roam the streets of Cambridge. Nifer and Maggie only have so much time before Todd is either
alive or dead, but later in the story this fact might not matter as there are worse events to deal with. I liked the story
being made up of emails, though I've never had them quite as long as these.
"The Book of Faces," by Kay Kenyon has a fifteen-year-old girl without a face who wants to select one from the Basal Facial
Types and Maxillofacial Outcomes -- the Face Book or Book of Faces, she calls it, but when she finds an old woman, Yaga at
the Mercy General Clinic, she tells her everything about the ones who work there. They both soon learn that the haves get
more unlike the have-nots who cope with waiting to get less from the surgeons who already look like they have had
nose-jobs. They both want a new face, but the likelihood of them getting the face they want is unlikely. Kay Kenyon is a
Philip K. Dick and John Campbell Memorial Award nominee who is the author of seven novels as well as the four-book
series The Entire and the Rose.
Each issue, Galaxy's Edge features a serialization. Here Lest Darkness Fall by L.Sprague de Camp is in its
third part. For readers of Mercedes Lackey and Larry Dixon there is an interview with the both of them conducted by
Joy Ward. Columns are from Gregory Benford with his How Space Was, and Barry Malzberg with his From the Heart's
Basement. Both have their own views on varying themes, and even if they might shock the reader, that is not their
intention (or is it?). Book reviews are by Paul Cook as always who runs his critical eye over some novels we might have
missed; Prophets of the Ghost Ants by Clark Thomas Carlton, Mars Inc: The Billionaire's Club by Ben
Bova, The Serene Invasion by Eric Brown, Burning Paradise by Robert Charles Wilson, Ancillary Justice
by Ann Leckie and Empress of the Sun by Ian McDonald. Issue nine is full of recognised authors where best work has been
included for the full benefit of the reader.
Sandra writes for several magazines and websites including; Love Romance Passion, Hellnotes, Albedo One, The British Fantasy Society and the London Vampyre Group's newsletter. |
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