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Fantasy. Short Stories. Young Adult Fiction. HTML: Fifteen top voices in speculative fiction explore the intersection of fear and love in a haunting, at times hilarious, darkly imaginative volume. Predatory kraken that sing with�and for�their kin; band members and betrayed friends who happen to be demonic; harpies as likely to attract as repel. Welcome to a world where humans live side by side with monsters, from vampires both nostalgic and bumbling to an eight-legged alien who makes tea. Here you'll find mercurial forms that burrow into warm fat, spectral boy toys, a Maori force of nature, a landform that claims lives, and an architect of hell on earth. Through these and a few monsters that defy categorization, some of today's top young-adult authors explore ambition and sacrifice, loneliness and rage, love requited and avenged, and the boundless potential for connection, even across extreme borders..… (more)
User reviews
MONSTROUS AFFECTIONS: AN ANTHOLOGY OF BEASTLY TALES was a mixed bag for me with some stories being pretty entertaining and spooky while others fell flat or just outright confused me. Each story involved a twist on a classic monster or monsters who inhabit
Some of the other stories were too bizarre, preachy, or confusing. There were a lot of messages pushed like abortion and suicide that after reading one story about a heavy topic in an anthology I get hit with yet another heavy one right away. Luckily there were enough light stories that didn’t make me want to go watch ‘My Little Ponies: Friendship is Magic’ to feel happiness again.
MONSTROUS AFFECTIONS is an interesting compilation of fairy tales with unique takes on classic monsters and tales. While some of them I couldn’t get into due to their topics or morbidity there were some that were entertaining and very creatively written stories.
*****Paolo
A dark and tragic fairytale of an evil stepfather, set on the shores and kraken-infested seas of a northern clime... This is a bit of a departure in style from Bacigalupi's previous work - but I love it just as much if not more, than anything else I've read by him. Powerful, timeless, and relevant.
*** Cassandra Clare—Old Souls
This is definitely written as an attempt to partially counterweight the influence of the 'Twilight' saga. I'm 100% in favor of the sentiment.
**** Holly Black—Ten Rules for Being an Intergalactic Smuggler (The Successful Kind)
A young girl stows away on her uncle's spaceship. But with his latest smuggling commission, he bites off more than he can chew... Space pirates and violent aliens come together in a cute but also exciting tale that's also about growing up, learning to shake off others' preconceptions, and choosing ones own path in life.
**** M. T. Anderson—Quick Hill
In an alternate, WWII-era America full of supernatural phenomena, one village has a tradition - the men of one family are 'married to the Hill' in an earth magic ritual believed to protect the community. Don Thwaite, a teen too young to join up with the Armed Forces, is the last heir of this family. But he's reluctant to take up what many see as his duty, as he's been falling in love with a local girl...
Told in an intentionally simple style which harks back to an era we might think of a simpler time, Anderson presents some very complex issues. Think the dark side of Archie Comics meets The Wicker Man.
**** Nathan Ballingrud—The Diabolist
Excellent horror story. When a girl's father, her sole guardian, dies, she ventures down into his laboratory, where he was known to conduct experiments in demonology. There, she encounters the imp which her father trapped while attempting to resurrect his deceased wife.
The fact that the imp simply behaves according to its nature does not make the way events unfold any less terrifying.
*** Patrick Ness—This Whole Demoning Thing
In this world, everyone has a 'demonic' aspect, and people shape-shift between a 'normal' appearance and having horns, tails, claws, etc constantly. However, society seems to be just the same... the story is really a fairly typical high school drama about a girl who deals with a bit of bullying and loves being in a band with her classmates. Designed for a teen (or younger) audience.
*** Sarah Rees Brennan—Wings in the Morning
The feel and setting of this one reminded me a bit of Garth Nix's 'Abhorsen' series. A group of young people defend the Border between earth and magical lands, come to terms with their identities, and sort themselves out romantically.
*** Nalo Hopkinson—Left Foot, Right
A young woman enters a store to buy a very specific pair of cheap shoes... Clearly, something dire has occurred, but we are not yet sure what... The gradual reveal is well-done, but this would have been rated higher, except for
** G. Carl Purcell—The Mercurials
Post-apocalypse meets horror in this weird tale of a bunch of mentally-handicapped people trying to survive in a wasteland infested with shapeshifting aliens.
*** Dylan Horrocks—Kitty Capulet and the Invention of Underwater Photography
A girl travels with her rock-star father to New Zealand, where a music festival is being staged in a rural location. Local Maori are protesting the environmental impact of the annual event. When the main character meets a water elemental whose home is threatened, she gets involved in the controversy. Not bad, but it verges on didactic.
*** Nik Houser—Son of Abyss
More teenagers who are demons, and their school/family/romantic dramas. Honestly, for a bit, I almost felt like the anthology should've included either this one OR Ness' 'Demoning Thing,' not both - however, this one works its way up to something much, much darker and more violent.
Kathleen Jennings—A Small Wild Magic
No rating; this graphic feature didn't translate well to the Kindle format. Hopefully it'll be remedied in the final version (this is an uncorrected ARC).
**** Kelly Link—The New Boyfriend
On the face of it, this story is a bit teenage-y - but Link's trademark weirdness suffuses it. Here we have a group of four high school friends. Ainslie's a bit more indulged by her mother than the rest of them, and has been given not just one but all THREE models of the hottest new 'toy' - realistic robot 'boyfriends.' The models are Vampire, Werewolf, and the latest, hard-to-get version, Ghost. Ainslie's best friend, Immy, is consumed with jealousy - she desperately wants a fake boyfriend of her own. Things get even more complicated when it seems that the 'ghost' boyfriend may be genuinely haunted.
**** Joshua Lewis—The Woods Hide in Plain Sight
Yes, it's a story of a teenage girl meeting a seductive vampire - but I really, really liked it. It made a done-to-death theme feel fresh. The scenario is surprisingly believable, the characters relatable (if, when you were a kid you longed to escape to something greater than the town you were stuck in), and the theme of caring and loyalty is nice (believe me, you want friends like these). On top of all that, it's got some really creepy moments, and a kick-ass ending.
**** Alice Sola Kim—Mothers, Lock Up Your Daughters Because They Are Terrifying
Hmm. No, the 'daughters' aren't what's terrifying here; at least not at first. A tight-knit group of girls, all Korean-American adoptees, decide to dabble in dark magic. At first, their late-night ritual doesn't seem to have any effect - but eventually, the fallout from that one night will tear them apart, in more ways than one. A scary story that works on more than one level, with complex insights into the feelings of adopted children - and teenage girls in general. Very, very good.
Many, many thanks to NetGalley for the opportunity to read an advance copy of this book. As always, my opinions are unaffected by the source.