Jane Yolen
There Is a T
Booksellers, librarians, bloggers, and reviewers get the beloved Nebula Award winner Jane Yolen’s THE MIDNIGHT CIRCUS
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Review copies of THE MIDNIGHT CIRCUS by Grandmaster Jane Yolen are now available via EDELWEISS and NETGALLEY.
“Look this way, look that; blazing her consummate imagination against the shadows of human sorrow, Jane Yolen has done it again. She has produced a set of spectacles designed to keep us awake in the darkness. THE MIDNIGHT CIRCUS delights, confounds, and challenges. We read all the night long; we are not the same come dawn.”
—Gregory Maguire, author of Wicked and A Wild Winter Swan
Welcome to the Midnight Circus—and watch your step. The dark imaginings of fantasy icon Jane Yolen are not for the faint of heart. In these sixteen brilliantly unnerving tales and poems, Central Park becomes a carnival where you can—but probably shouldn’t—transform into a wild beast. The Red Sea will be deadly to cross due to a plague of voracious angels. Meanwhile, the South Pole is no place for even a good man, regardless of whether he is living or dead.
Wicked, solemn, and chilling, the circus is ready for your visit— just don’t arrive late.
***
Introduction by Theodora Goss
Afterword by Alethea Kontis
“Jane Yolen’s stories are pure magic! They draw you in, beguile your senses, and paint the world in richer hues than you’ve ever seen. Her tales will haunt you in the very best way. I loved every word!”
—Sarah Beth Durst, author of Race the Sands
Continue on to page 2 for Table of Contents
Tachyon tidbits featuring Jane Yolen, Adam Stemple, Nancy Kress, Bruce Sterling, and Jaymee Goh
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The latest reviews and mentions of Tachyon titles and authors from around the web.
Adam Stemple & Jane Yolen Nancy Kress
Photo by Liza TrombiBruce Sterling Jaymee Goh
Photo by Francesca Myman
GREEN MAN REVIEW runs the first several chapters of THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS by Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple.
Your revolution is a lie.
There were no heroes, no great causes. Just slaughter, suffering, death.
And dragons.
Oh, you thought those a myth? Tales your grandfather told you?
No, the dragons were real. Bolvan, the dragons are why you won! The only reason there aren’t dragons today is that Uncle Joe slaughtered the reds during the Great Purge, and in ’23 a pack of larcenous Chinese eunuchs blew up the dragon barns in the Forbidden Citywhile trying to destroy evidence of their embezzlement.
I see you smiling, you indoctrinated young fool. You see a man who has turned against the revolution that employed him for nearly thirty years. A man convicted of corruption and treason and worse, and you think I would say anything to avoid the firing squad. But in truth, I am old and weary and no longer afraid to die. I just want someone to know the truth.
So it falls on you, young man, to hear the true tale of the revolution, dragons and all.
Design by Elizabeth Story
Paul Semel, on his eponymous site, interviews Nancy Kress about her new book SEA CHANGE.
To begin, what is Sea Change about and when and where is it set?
Sea Change spans a few decades beginning in 2005 and ending in 2033. Most of it takes place in Seattle. It’s about a lot of things, but the primary concern is genetically-modified crops. This is, I know, a spectacularly controversial subject. And, I believe, a necessary one. Usually people come down hard on one side or the other, without nuance. “Frankenfoods!” “Luddite!” I wanted to depict a near future that takes into account the genuine complexity of GMOs.
Sea Change is also “about” ocean algae blooms, government control, and chess. But since all stories are primarily about the characters who inhabit them, this is a story about Renata and Jake. In fact, if I were titling my novella now, I would call it Sea Change: A Love Story. Unfortunately, I didn’t think of this in time and Tachyon would not be happy to change the title at this late date.
In celebration of Bruce Sterling’s birthday, Rich Horton offers a collection of his Sterling short fiction reviews, many of which will be included in the forthcoming collection ROBOT ARTISTS AND BLACK SWANS.
Locus, June 2009
The March-April Interzone features a Bruce Sterling story – not that he was ever gone, but Sterling seems “back” this year, with a new novel and now “Black Swan”, gritty and savvy, with a journalist lured across multiple timelines, chasing wild tech not to mention a revolutionary version of Nicolas Sarkozy.
Locus, September 2009
And Bruce Sterling offers a clever fantasy about an Italian auto executive encountering the devil – or something like him – in “Esoteric City” (F&SF, August-September). The story is fun, original – certainly worth reading, but at some level it struck me as insubstantial.
Review of Subterranean 2: Tales of Dark Fantasy (Locus, May 2011)
Another story I particularly enjoyed comes from Bruce Sterling. “The Parthenopean Scalpel” concerns an assassin who has to flee the Papal States after the too clumsy success of one of his assignments. In exile he falls in love – but a certain Transylvanian intervenes. The story rides on the well-maintained voice of the main character, and the backstory of Europe in the turbulent middle of the 19th Century.
CURIOUS FICTIONS published Tachyon editor Jaymee Goh’s new story “The Doll in the Museum.”
Little doll, buried under dust and sand,
Little doll, what do you have in your hands?
“It’s obviously a sacred figurine,” my date said. “And you can tell it was from a matriarchy, given how many female shapes there are.”
“Uh-huh,” I said, non-committedly.
“It was obviously a fertility cult, too, you see how big the hips are.”
I stifled a yawn. In my head I could see the hands, my hands, folded across my belly. I tried not to think about it; I hate my stomach. It bulges too much.
This museum display made me feel comfortable, though. There was just one in this case, with a sign next to her full of words about who had found her, where, and what she possibly represented. She pressed her hands on her belly, too. It was found somewhere in Mesopotamia, one of the earliest ever figurines. Clay.
My date was trying to hustle me on. He majored in History, although I was unclear how that mattered when he’d never taken a class on the ancients. Still, he seemed so sure that I found myself nodding along. As he droned on, I pressed my palm against the glass, staring at the figurine.
Something in my hand—a piece of cloth, with scribblings on it. I knew what those marks were. I felt the insides of my cheeks pressed against my teeth in a smile, the crinkling of my eyes in pleasure, the deep breath containing the surge of triumph.
Tachyon tidbits featuring Peter Watts, Philip K. Dick, Jane Yolen, and Jeff VanderMeer
Rick Klaw blog anne r dick, authority, c, eek you reek!, electric lit, Jane Yolen, jeff vandermeer, libros prohibidos, massachusetts book award, massachusetts center for the book, nino cipri, Peter Watts, peter watts is an angry sentient tumor: revenge fantasies and essays, philip k dick, review, the search for philip k dick, the third bear, thiersten.net 0
The latest reviews and mentions of Tachyon titles from around the web.
Peter Watts Anne R. Dick and Philip K. Dick in 1958
Courtesy of Rubenstein Archives/The New York TimesJane Yolen
Photo by Jason StempleJeff VanderMeer
Photo by Kyle Cassidy
THIERSTEIN.NET recommends PETER WATTS IS AN ANGRY SENTIENT TUMOR.
Not an easy book to read quickly – for all Peter Watts being an erudite and fun-to-read writer. Both the structure and a lot of the subject matter and topics make skimming hard, I found.
But full of intelligent, and frequently original discourse and though, very much worth reading and getting entertained (and challenged) by. Go get yours, now!
Spanish sites LIBROS PROHIBIDOS and C review THE SEARCH FOR PHILIP K. DICK by Anne R. Dick.
In conclusion, In Search of Philip K. Dick is a text that will interest fans of the author of Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? But it is also an excellent memoir written by an intelligent and interesting woman in her own right who has lived in the shadow of her ex-husband. Anne R. Dick’s fluid, detailed and evocative prose, enhanced by extraordinary translation work, deserves a place on our shelves regardless of who was the subject of her memoirs.
LIBROS PROHIBIDOS “Anne R. Dick: En busca de Philip K. Dick” review by Ana Casanova
Translation from Spanish, courtesy of Google
In Search of Philip K. Dick is a book for Dick enthusiasts, for the 1960s enthusiasts, and for anyone who wants to get close to Dick and not quite know where to start.
C “En busca de Philip K. Dick, de Anne R. Dick” review by Mario Amadas
Translation from Spanish, courtesy of Google
Massachusetts Center for the Book announced the Must Reads (long lists) in the 20th Annual Massachusetts Book Awards. Among the honorees was Eek, You Reek! by Jane Yolen and Heidi E. Y. Stemple.
At ELECTRIC LIT, Nino Cipri includes Jeff VanderMeer’s Authority among 7 Terrifying Horror Stories About Class.
The second book in VanderMeer’s Southern Reach Trilogy sees the weirdness of Area X permeate the facility tasked with controlling it. Authority mixes mundane office drama with spy-vs-spy paranoia and VanderMeer’s particular brand of the Weird. The novel thrums with a strain of dark humor and the surreal, familiar to anyone who’s been trapped in a job with a dysfunctional organization. For a shorter and stranger take on surreal office horror, read “The Situation” in his collection THE THIRD BEAR, or a comic adaptation of it at Tor.com.
Cover by Jacob McMurray
Jane Yolen is a freaking treasure
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ASIANA CIRCUS includes THE EMERALD CIRCUS as one of the 26 Best Carnival & Circus Books From Around The World.
Jane Yolen re-imagined a number of good old classics and gave them a really entertaining and contemporary spin. The Emerald Circus will serve as a great piece to help understand some current issues.
This collection of short stories based on some of the most remarkable classics is a great read for young adults.
CHARLESTON COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY celebrates Women’s History Month with THE EMERALD CIRCUS.
Wednesdays, March 25
Adult Storytime: “The Emerald Circus” by Jane Yolen
Main Library from 2-3 p.m.
Join us for the March edition of Adult Storytime with a reading of whimsical short stories from “The Emerald Circus” by Jane Yolen
Cover by Elizabeth Story Cover art by Anabelle Gerardy
Design by Elizabeth Story
HERE THERE BE BOOKS is happy to get THE EMERALD CIRCUS from their local library.
A short story collection featuring famous and beloved fictional characters and fictionalized authors. I’ve enjoyed her children’s books before, and this one has an AMAZING cover, so I grabbed it.
SILVER BUTTON BOOKS is very excited about THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS.
Finally, I couldn’t resist Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple’s THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS because Jane Yolen is a freaking treasure.
In her newest short fiction collection MIDNIGHT CIRCUS, beloved fantasy author Jane Yolen’s dark side has fully emerged
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“Jane Yolen is the Hans Christian Andersen of America” —The New York Times
Welcome to the MIDNIGHT CIRCUS—and watch your step. The dark imaginings of fantasy icon Jane Yolen are not for the faint of heart. In these sixteen brilliantly unnerving tales and poems, Central Park becomes a carnival where you can—but probably should not—transform into a wild beast. The Red Sea will be deadly to cross due to a plague of voracious angels. Meanwhile, the South Pole is no place for even a good man, regardless of whether he is living or dead.
Wicked, solemn, chilling, and droll, the circus is ready for your visit—you just really won’t want to arrive late.
The Midnight Circus
by Jane Yolen
ISBN: Book ISBN: 9781616963408; Digital ISBN: 9781616963415
Published: October 2020
Available Format(s): Trade Paperbacks and Digital
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Introduction by Theodora Goss
- The Weaver of Tomorrow
- The White Seal Maid
- Snatchers
- Wilding
- Requiem Antarctica (with Robert J. Harris)
- Nightwolves
- The House of the Seven Angels
- Great Gray
- Little Red (with Adam Stemple)
- Winter’s King
- Inscription
- Dog Boy Remembers
- The Fisherman’s Wife
- Become a Warrior
- An Infestation of Angels
- Names
- NOTES and POEMS
Happy birthday to the iconic grandmaster Jane Yolen
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Hailed as both the Hans Christian Andersen of America and the Aesop of the twentieth century, Jane Yolen, with her first publication, the non-fiction book about women pirates Pirates In Petticoats (1963), embarked on amazing career of over three hundred and seventy books (and counting). Her impressive and acclaimed output includes children’s fiction, poetry, short stories, graphic novels, nonfiction, fantasy, and science fiction.
Among her many honors are the Christopher Medal (The Seeing Stick [1977], How Do Dinosaurs Say Goodnight? [2000]), Nebula (“Sister Emily’s Lightship” [1998], Lost Girls [1999]), World Fantasy (Favorite Folktales From Around The World [1987], THE EMERALD CIRCUS [2018]), Mythopoeic (Cards Of Grief [1985], Briar Rose [1993], The Young Merlin Trilogy [1998, Passager, Hobby, and Merlin]), Golden Kite (The Girl Who Cried Flowers & Other Tales [1974]), and National Jewish Book Award (The Devil’s Arithmetic [1989]). Yolen received the World Fantasy Association’s Lifetime Achievement Award, the Rhysling Science Fiction Poetry Grand Master Award, the Damon Knight Memorial Grand Master Award, and Jeremiah Ludington Memorial Award.
Cover by Elizabeth Story Cover by Elizabeth Story
Many of Yolen’s shorter works have been collected in numerous works including The Girl Who Cried Flowers and Other Tales (1974), The Hundredth Dove and Other Tales (1977), Dream Weaver (1979), The Whitethorn Wood and Other Magicks (1984), Storyteller (1992), Twelve Impossible Things Before Breakfast (1997), Sister Emily’s Lightship and Other Stories (2000), Once Upon A Time (She Said) (2005), The Last Selchie Child (2012), THE EMERALD CIRCUS (2017), HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY TALE (2018), and the forthcoming MIDNIGHT CIRCUS. Several volumes of her poetry exist including The Three Bears Rhyme Book (1987), The Originals: Animals that Time Forgot (1998), Least Things: Poems about Small Natures (2003), Before the Vote After (2017), On Gull Beach (2018), Fly with Me: A Celebration of Birds Through Pictures, Poems, and Stories (2018, with Heidi E.Y. Stemple, Adam Stemple, and Jason Stemple).
Her editorial endeavors include the anthologies Zoo 2000 (1973), Favorite Folktales from Around the World (1986), Werewolves: A Collection of Original Stories (1988 with Martin H. Greenberg), 2041: Twelve Short Stories About the Future by Top Science Fiction Writers (1991), Xanadu (1993), The Haunted House: A Collection of Original Stories (1995 with Martin H. Greenberg), Fearless Girls, Wise Women, and Beloved Sisters: Heroines in Folktales from Around The World (1998 with Kathleen Ragan), Gray Heroes: Elder Tales from Around the World (1999), and Mightier Than the Sword: World Folktales for Strong Boys (2003).
The prolific Yolen continues to produce acclaimed, award winning work at a prodigious pace. In 2019 alone she published 7 books: Eek, You Reek!: Poems about Animals That Stink, Stank, Stunk, A Kite for Moon, THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS (with Adam Stemple), Merbaby’s Baby, the first book in the six book School of Fish series, and What to Do with a String. Her first books for 2020, Emily Writes and Miriam at the River, came out on February 4. Her newest collection of short stories, MIDNIGHT CIRCUS, comes out in the fall.
Because she apparently never sleeps, Yolen is also a teacher of writing and a book reviewer. She lives in Western Massachusetts and St. Andrew, Scotland.
All of us at Tachyon, wish the incredible Jane a happy birthday. May your mythic journeys never end.
Tachyon tidbits featuring Caitlín R. Kiernan, Peter Watts, Jane Yolen, Peter S. Beagle, and Brian Aldiss
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The latest reviews and mentions of Tachyon titles and authors from around the web.
Caitlín Kiernan
Photo by Kyle CassidyPeter Watts Jane Yolen
Photo by Jason StemplePeter S. Beagle
Photo by Rina WeismanBrian Aldiss with daughter Wendy Aldiss
Source: Oxford Mail
Micah Castle, on his eponymous site, praises THE VERY BEST OF CAITLÍN R. KIERNAN.
Kerinan’s prose is provocative, mysterious, soothing, decadent, flowery without being flowery. It’s seeing a master at her best. It’s inspiring, mystifying, indescribable. I could try to describe how much I enjoy her prose, but it would only come out wrong. It would be like a child trying to describe the vastness and mystery of the cosmos.
Cover by Hannes Hummel
Design by Elizabeth StoryCover design by Elizabeth Story
For SHELF AWARENESS, Jennifer Oleinik reviews the unflinchingly honest PETER WATTS IS AN ANGRY SENTIENT TUMOR.
Those seeking peace of mind and a sunny outlook on life will not find much of them here, but Watts still manages to appreciate moments of good mixed in with the bad. As he says, “Even my most bitter diatribes might not be totally fatalistic.” Watts’s unflinching honesty, both brave and harsh, is what drives the collection, and whether readers agree with him or not, he certainly knows how to start a conversation.
Cover design by Elizabeth Story Cover design by Elizabeth Story
Happy birthday to the fantastic Elizabeth Story
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The aptly named Elizabeth Story, Tachyon’s lead designer, is that rare and wondrous unicorn who combines artistic, technical, and verbal skills.
She came to Tachyon in 2009 as an editorial intern, having graduated with honors from the Creative Writing department at UC Santa Cruz. Her prior experience included creating motivational posters, newsletters, and comic strips for a children’s tutoring center; editing a campus literary magazine; and assisting in a perfumery.
Once Story dashed off some impromptu promotional materials in Photoshop, it became clear that she was destined to work as Tachyon as an artist instead of an editor. Since that time, Story has designed many of Tachyon’s most creative book covers and interiors, press kits, holiday cards, and catalogs.
Cover by Elizabeth Story Cover by Carl Sutton Design by Elizabeth Story Cover by Elizabeth Story Cover by Elizabeth Story
Even after earning her M.F.A., Story still sleeps very little while remaining wittier than most people you know. It is said that she locked her first novel, which may or may not have been illustrated, in a drawer because it tried to bite her.
Tachyon wishes the incredible Elizabeth a very happy birthday, and hopes that she doesn’t get cheated of Christmas presents just because she was born on the wrong day.
The Perfect Gifts and a Very Special Offer
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized adam stemple, black friday, Caitlín R. Kiernan, daryl gregory, Ellen Datlow, hannu rajaniemi, jacob weisman, Jane Yolen, Joe R. Lansdale, peter s beagle, Peter Watts, sale
From Black Friday through the end of the year, Tachyon wants to make your holidays easier, so here’s how we’re doing it:
- 10% off on all orders of $25 or more (use the coupon code HAPPY10)*
- Free Media Mail shipping on all orders for U.S. customers
Our entire award-winning catalog is on sale. Here are some suggestions for your holiday shopping list:
- The perfect gift for any fantasy lover (and most of our copies are signed): Fiction by Peter S. Beagle
- That younger cousin that devours books like candy: Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple’s THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS
- The uber-intelligent in-law with a unique view of things, who is notoriously difficult to shop for: PETER WATTS IS AN ANGRY SENTIENT TUMOR
- A crime fiction lover that’s always looking for something a little different: Joe R. Lansdale’s thrillers and mysteries
- The science fiction fan who is always looking for that next big thing: Hannu Rajaniemi and Jacob Weisman‘s THE NEW VOICES OF SCIENCE FICTION
- The mostly-harmless neighbor who loves things that go bump in the night, our horror anthologies by Ellen Datlow, Daryl Gregory’s WE ARE ALL COMPLETELY FINE, THE VERY BEST OF CAITLÍN R. KIERNAN, and others.
- Plus our acclaimed original science fiction and fantasy, anthologies, e-books, and more.
*excluding all limited editions
10% off only applies to orders of $25.00 or more
Sale ends Tuesday, December 31, at 11:59PM PST.
Free shipping via USPS Media Mail within the United States (except Alaska and Hawaii). No minimum purchase required.
Please email for other shipping option