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Fantasy Gone Wrong

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Everyone knows that heroes should triumph, dragons should be slain, and maidens should be rescued. But what if things don't go according to plan?
Here are 16 fun tales of magic gone awry - from an author whose unicorn protagonist takes control of the story to a person who can hear food talking with strange events and surprising consequences in between.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 10, 2006
      In this delightful anthology, 16 authors take traditional fantasy premises and color them ironic. The only criteria for inclusion is a whimsical sense of humor and a keen appreciation for the fantasy genre, giving the writers—among them veterans like Alan Dean Foster, as well as virtual unknowns—plenty of room to make their unique voices heard. Almost without fail, the results are entertaining, amusing and original, and remarkably self-contained. Expanding the genre beyond the usual "wizards and dragons" limitations, authors bring to bear such modern phenomena as psychoanalysis, online video gaming, criminology and management techniques. Of particular note are "Food Fight" by Foster, an intensely funny tale of a man whose food speaks to him; Christina F. York's cheeky "A Day at the Unicorn Races"; and "The Murder of Mr. Wolf" by Josepha Sherman, a police procedural that skewers nursery rhyme and fairy tale staples like Hickory Dickory Doc and Little Red Riding Hood. Though not always as clever as it thinks it is, Greenberg and Koren's refreshing collection should strike fantasy fans just right.

    • Booklist

      September 1, 2006
      Humor and irony abound in these 16 new stories in which the "path isn't always the right one," and the unexpected prevails. Although the collection is uneven, it contains quite a few gems. Chips off the old, well-known fairy-tale block include Josepha Sherman's "The Murder of Mr. Wolf," in which Detective Beau Peep and his partner, Marie Gobeur (sheep in French), investigate the crime and prime suspect Little Red, and also Esther M. Friesner's "Crumbs," in which Hansel's son, Sir Hanson the Hawk-eyed, rides reluctantly into the Dark Woods and finds a very different sort of witch. Brian Stableford, Mickey Zucker Reichert, Alan Dean Foster, and Janny Wurts, among others, offer various takes on unicorns, elves, faery-hounds, goblins, a bored house pixie, hobbitlike beings, computer fantasy gaming, and more. Something for most every taste.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2006, American Library Association.)

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  • OverDrive Read
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Languages

  • English

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