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Unstuck #2

Unstuck Vol. 2

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New literature of the fantastic, the futuristic, the surreal, and the strange.

575 pages, Paperback

First published December 18, 2012

6 people are currently reading
108 people want to read

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Matt Williamson

17 books6 followers

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5 stars
15 (60%)
4 stars
4 (16%)
3 stars
4 (16%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
2 (8%)
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Kalin.
Author 74 books283 followers
April 12, 2019
The pieces that really struck a chord with me here were Charles Antin's "Maria and the Mice", for the beauty of its irony, and Miles Klee's "Everybody's Bluffing", for the color of its language (though the horror of its ending struck me too, in a rather less titillating way).

I also liked Daniel Hornsby's "Asterius", Gabriel Blackwell's "A Model Made out of Card", Erik Anderson's "The Language of Nim", Caitlin Horrocks's "The Untranslatables", and Elizabeth McCracken's "Foundling".
Profile Image for Justin Lakey.
37 reviews3 followers
June 24, 2013
Hard to give this collection a star rating because it's, well, a collection. Some of the stories deserve five stars, while others are just bad. I enjoyed the collection as a whole. I guess the genre would be kind of experimental fiction, with some poems thrown in. The stories I enjoyed are:

The Screw That Holds the World Together by Collin Blair Grabarek
Difficult at Parties by Carmen Maria Machado
Lurky Seven by Leila Mansouri
Three Tales of a Very Windy Town by Lyubomir P. Nikolov
The Great Loneliness by Maria Romasco Moore
The Season for Cranes by Genevieve DuBois
The Untranslatables by Caitlin Horrocks
Profile Image for Dan.
16 reviews3 followers
October 10, 2013
First off, hardly a story in here was weak or was a miss. I rarely read a collection so tightly packed with intriguing, wildly creative and important stories. Most impressive is their tendency to select stories that go way beyond genre. It may look like a zombie story at first, but it will turn out to have a weirdness and thoughtfulness that goes far beyond this genre. I honestly think they are ahead of their time in highlighting stories that make the very idea of genres obsolete.
Profile Image for Sean.
154 reviews8 followers
Read
May 13, 2013
Like a holiday in a strange and beautiful, and sometimes scary, country. So sad to leave.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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