Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Collected Stories

Rate this book
Containing forty-one stories and extensive author's notes, Collected Stories is the definitive compilation of Lewis Shiner's short work. Stories include Perfidia, Stuff of Dreams, The War at Home, Straws, Nine Hard Questions about the Nature of the Universe, White City, Primes, The Long Ride Out, Sitcom, The Death of Che Guevara, His Girlfriend's Dog, Deep without Pity, The Circle, Twilight Time, Jeff Beck, Wild for You, Till Human Voices Wake Us, Flagstaff, Tommy and the Talking Dog, Oz, Love in Vain, Steam Engine Time, Kings of the Afternoon, Sticks, The Tale of Mark the Bunny, The Killing Season, Scales, Snowbirds, and more.

Audio CD

First published November 30, 2009

4 people are currently reading
93 people want to read

About the author

Lewis Shiner

149 books74 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
13 (41%)
4 stars
14 (45%)
3 stars
3 (9%)
2 stars
1 (3%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Jim Cherry.
Author 12 books56 followers
April 14, 2010
The dangerous vision's of Lewis Shiner

I first discovered Lewis Shiner about 16 years ago. I was looking for nothing more than a nice escapist book I could read. Wandering through the library I some how ran across Glimpses; being a Doors fan and a Rock ‘n’ Roll fan in general I checked out the book (literally) and it was great! I found myself reading the book once a year for the next two years and discovered something new in it each time. As new books came out, Say Goodbye, Black & White, I haven’t been disappointed in a book written by Lewis Shiner yet.

Reading the stories in Collected Stories, I find myself thinking of it as something like Harlan Ellison’s, Dangerous Visions. It’s hard to say that comparison comes to mind, both books have a lot of science fiction stories in them. Both books have a paragraph or two written about the story; Shiner in an author’s notes section following the stories, and Ellison as a preface to each story. The books don’t feel similar in tone or content, all the stories in Collected Stories are Shiner’s; in Dangerous Vision’s Ellison acted as editor. So what makes me compare the two? Maybe, it’s the personalization infused in each book. In Dangerous Vision’s, Ellison had a preface of a paragraph or two on how the author came to write the story. In Shiner’s stories you can see how his life has influenced his writing without delving into gory autobiography; Shiner is able to illuminate the core themes without petty details or squabbles that may have come from a divorce or a disagreement with a parent.

The stories in Collected Stories are an assortment of genres from traditional literary fiction, heavy on science fiction, detective stories and westerns. No matter what genre the story is, Shiner keeps you hooked in, you want to see what happens in the next sentence, the next paragraph, the next page, you just want more, what comes next moves you almost involuntarily from page to page.

Shiner excellently exploits and executes that “what if” moment all writers use as a point of departure. What if, a highly imaginative kid who imagines aliens are invading the world is right? Twilight Time is Shiner’s answer. What if a circle of friends who gather every year at Halloween to scare each with ghost stories, and a mediocre writer they kicked out writes a story that truly traps them in a circle? 9 Hard Questions About The Nature of the Universe, posits an interesting idea of why aliens are visiting our world or any other world. Stuff of Dreams, is about addiction and what if that addiction could physically take you to different times and places (a favorite scenario of Shiner’s novels Deserted Cities of the Heart, and Glimpses). What if your girlfriend was one of the hottest rock stars around and she dumps you? Sticks will lets you know what that feels like.

Shiner doesn’t subscribe to the usual clichés of a story’s genre. In The Long Ride Out, which at first appears to be a standard pulp western, but then he throws in something like a farmer letting a snake slither across his boot instead of shooting it, and you realize something else is going on here and that it may be a signal that something different will happen. And it is something different, it has the usual gunfighter coming to town to right a wrong but he discovers everything isn’t as black and white as it appears.

If you’ve read any of Shiner’s other books you may have noticed some of his favorite themes, middle-aged men suffering ennui, psychic if not physical dislocation, or the physical dislocation caused by the psychic dislocation (Straws, Primes), marriages at the breaking point, fathers and sons who don’t understand each other, or Rock ‘n‘ Roll. They’re all in here, and each story has a quality that you’ll be tempted to and probably will want to ponder, digest, or savor what you just read before moving on to the next story.

I usually don’t comment on the book itself in reviews but Collected Stories is a beautiful book; tome is actually a more accurate description. It’s printed on high quality paper, creamy, it has a great tactile quality to it. It seems author and publisher have worked closely to provide a high quality edition.

Reading and buying a book by Lewis Shiner is an investment in great reading! If you’re looking for a book and a writer you’re tempted to come back to again and again, I recommend Lewis Shiner’s Collected Stories.
Profile Image for Rick.
Author 9 books54 followers
December 31, 2009
Fresh from his climactic return to novel-length fiction (last year's Black & White , Shiner's Collected Stories offers 41 of the finest short stories from his three decade career. Tackling a wide variety of subjects (serial killers, tennis, Kennedy assassination, Tesla, music, to name just a few), and genres (sf/f, mystery, horror, and dare I say it, even literary), the often-unheralded Shiner produced some of the best written and most interesting tales of his generation.
Profile Image for Robert Greenberger.
Author 226 books138 followers
April 27, 2018
Lewis is an old friend, I first met when Bob Wayne introduced us as we began work on the Time Masters miniseries. He then went on to write the underrated Hacker Files for me and I have read his prose sporadically ever since.

With that said, I want to express my admiration for the breadth of genre and depth of character he brought to this 2009 collection of stories. If there's a common thread running through the stories it is the solitary individual who is trying to get by, make sense of the world. No one in these stories has it easy and not everyone gets a happy ending.

If there's anything to knock about the stories here is that some end abruptly leaving me wondering what happens next. Others wrap up tidily and feel just right.

The book is packed with drama, plus a healthy dose of real world historical figures intertwined. Of those, my favorite may be the one about Elvis in the army (and I don't even like Elvis).

If you're looking for someone new to try, begin here.
17 reviews
August 5, 2020
It's hard to review a story collection, especially one with 41 stories in it. I'll just say that there are some stories here that are typical Lewis Shiner stories, and some that are not so typical but still feel like Lewis Shiner stories, and some that you wouldn't have guessed were by him. Some that are SF/fantasy, some detective stories, even a western of sorts, and some that are harder to characterize.
But they're all good. And of course, it includes "Lizard Men of Los Angeles", which would be considered one of the best classic pulp stories if it hadn't been written in 1999! (I remember reading that one when it was first published.)
Profile Image for Jason Lundberg.
Author 68 books165 followers
Read
January 17, 2010
An important and expansive collection from a vastly underrated writer. Shiner's fiction, interstitial (before the term was even coined) and exploratory, is stripped of any pretension, reveling in counterfactual numinosity. His characters exist in unfair worlds, trapped by circumstance yet always searching for Truth. Favorites include "Perfidia," "Primes," "Love in Vain" and "The Death of Che Guevara."
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.