Coming to the end of my reading of the Zelazny canon, this is the fourth (and penultimate) of the posthumous publications of Zelazny's works. This is a bit of an odd collection - it collects many of Zelazny's later short stories, published in the '90s shortly before his death, and it's really good to see that he was still writing short stories at that time. It also collects some earlier stories, mostly from the '60s, many previously uncollected, though at least two ("The Furies" and "Mana From Heaven," the pseudo-title story) appeared in earlier collections. Probably the big selling point of this collection is that it includes the five Amber short stories that Zelazny wrote after the "conclusion" of the Amber series, as well as a "Prolog From The Trumps of Doom," which was written and included in a special limited edition of that novel, and not published in the hardcover or softcover versions. [There is one other Amber fragment, a collaboration between Zelazny and Ed Greenwood that was written before Zelazny wrote the five short stories, that's not included here.] I love these six Amber pieces, and it was very bittersweet reading them, enjoying the return to the world of Amber, but knowing this was really the end. The "Prolog" reveals the origins of Merlin's semi-sentient invisible strangling cord, Frakir, which appears in the Amber Chronicles but is never explained and I've always wondered about it. Of the remaining five stories, one is narrated by Frakir himself (itself?) and one by Luke/Rinaldo - these two stories touch on events in the latter Amber books and resolve some minor plot points, but also contribute to the longer story hinted at (at least) in the other three stories collected here. Those stories - one by Merlin, two by Corwin - form an ongoing narrative, a sequel if you will to the last Amber books, and set up a further story that we sadly didn't get due to Zelazny's early death. The big problem with this collection is that these stories are printed OUT OF ORDER, both of their publication dates and the order in which Zelazny intended them to be read (which is close to, but not quite the same as, the publication dates). To clarify: the way they are presented in this book: #1, #3, #2, #5, #6, #4. I read them in the correct order, and the way they're printed in this book would be really confusing. The book is kind of poorly put together - the printing looks a bit less than professional, and I noticed a good half dozen typos, missing punctuation marks, etc. And the binding on my copy is not the greatest, either. A bit of a sad legacy for the master.