Tachyon tidbits featuring Ann & Jeff VanderMeer, Michael Moorcock, Claude Lalumière, Joe R. Lansdale, and Richard Lupoff
The latest reviews and mentions of Tachyon titles and authors from around the web.
Ann & Jeff VanderMeer, Michael Moorcock, Claude Lalumière (photo: Alexandra Renwick), Joe R. Lansdale (Karen Lansdale), and Richard Lupoff
Mya Nunnally at BOOK RIOT offers A Beginner’s Guide
to the New Weird Genre.
After growing tired of the same archetypes, overdone plots, and types of characters, I found the antidote. New Weird exists to overturn cliches and twist the traditional. Robin Anne Reid once described it as fictions that “subvert cliches of the fantastic in order to put them to discomfiting, rather than consoling ends.”
THE NEW WEIRD ANTHOLOGY BY JEFF AND ANN VANDERMEER
This one is pretty self-explanatory. The Vandermeers offers many short stories that embody what they believe “The New Weird” to be. With amazing entries from M. John Harrison, K. K. Bishop, and Jay Lake, this is definitely a solid, encompassing introduction to the genre.
Also at BOOK RIOT, Vernieda Vergara recommends 14 Dark Fantasy Books to Read and Explore On Long, Cold Nights including Micheal Moorcock’s ELRIC: THE STEALER OF SOULS.
Quibbling aside, there are a few traits common to dark fantasy stories. They may have a gloomy and moody tone. They may portray humans grappling with supernatural forces. And, they may feature an anti-hero as the main character; in other words, the villains of traditional fantasies may be protagonists in dark fantasy books. Like moral ambiguity in your characters? Dark fantasy is the subgenre for you.
Given the loose definition of dark fantasy, I included a variety of novels on this list. There should be something for everyone. And while there are a few well-known classics of the subgenre listed here, I tried to veer away from the well-beaten path.
art: John Picacio
Moorcock’s drug-dependent albino sorcerer Elric of Melnibone has become one of the most recognizable anti-heroes in fantasy. The last emperor of a declining empire, Elric grapples with external threats, family members who want his throne, and a kind of existential malaise. And that’s not even touching the fact that his soul-stealing sword Stormbringer will inevitably bring doom to all he holds dear.
On Corey Redekop’s eponymous site, guest lister Claude Lalumière offers his Top 10 13 Creepy
Story Collections.
1. The Brains of Rats, by Michael Blumlein
2. Tales of Terror and Mystery, by Arthur Conan Doyle
3. Little Tales of Misogyny, by Patricia Highsmith
4. The Melancholy of Anatomy, by Shelley Jackson
5. The Songbirds of Pain, by Garry Kilworth
6. High Cotton: Selected Stories, by Joe Lansdale
7. Tamastara, or the Indian Nights, by Tanith Lee
8. The Collection, by Bentley Little
9. Claremont Tales, by Richard Lupoff
10. This Strange Way of Dying: Stories of Magic, Desire & the Fantastic, by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
11. Famous Monsters, by Kim Newman
12. The Ends of the Earth, by Lucius Shepard
13. The Cleft and Other Odd Tales, by Gahan Wilson
For more info about THE NEW WEIRD, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover by Ann Monn