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Among the Dead and Other Events Leading to the Apocalypse

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A marvelous collection of wickedly apocalyptic stories by a two-time Nebula Award winning author.

Three forlorn people huddle in a mausoleum of the frozen dead; they are the sole survivors of a germ-warfare attack that has wiped out the western United States. Their only food supply--the frozen corpses around them. Then, without warning, the refrigerators lose their electricity, and the dead begin to thaw...

Rumors spread that occupants of abandoned cars along a desert highway have been abducted by mammoth birds who hunt people as smaller birds hunt worms for their young. But a college professor decides that might not be such a bad fate...

A little old man in New York's East Village breeds strange animals to feed an overpopulated, food-short world...

In a temple of hallucination, promiscuous love leads to manacled torture and a plaster-bound groin...

The ultimate shark story...

Supposedly the next best thing to a woman is a sheep, but there may be consequences...

A psychopathic hangman discourses with his captive human pendulum...

These stories by Edward Bryant, reminiscent of Ballard's Vermillion Sands, envision a bleak and forbidding future for man--one in which unheeded warnings have been fatefully too many people, not enough food, not enough work, useless leisure, and the fear--or memory--of cataclysmic war.

His characters live in a chilling world where human values have been either smothered or violently destroyed--a world that is, even now, terrifyingly possible. "Whether our ultimate destination is utopia, dystopia, or Armageddon, we know the curve is headed somewhere. That's a truism. I suspect the curve is directed downward--perhaps completely off the graph. Consider this book a chart; these stories, coordinates."

"Even in a genre where the 'flash-in-the-pan' writer carries a high profile for twenty years before vanishing, there are occasional heat-blasts of talent that presage a long and brilliant career to follow. From the publication of his first story of speculative fiction... it was obvious that Edward Bryant is a writer of depth and compassion, at once au courant and concerned with the timeless study of the human condition...

"In this marvelous collection... he makes an opening statement that will certainly remind readers of fiction-that-stands-the-test-of-time, of Nathanael West, Donald Barthelme, and Louis-Ferdinand Celine.

"He is a fine writer who works with clean hands, composure, and an indefatigable imagination. I recommend his work unequivocally."
--HARLAN ELLISON

Because of Ed's financial needs, his books are being sold as pre-orders so we can get the cash flow to him sooner. Almost all the profits from this book go directly to Ed. Donations to help with Ed's medical and other financial needs are also most appreciated via www.FriendsOfEd.org. Thank you!

266 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1973

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About the author

Edward Bryant

228 books32 followers
Edward Winslow Bryant, Jr. was born August 27, 1945 in White Plains NY and was raised on a cattle ranch in Wyoming. He attended the University of Wyoming, where he earned a Master’s in English in 1968 and ’69. He went to the Clarion Writers’ Workshop in 1968. In 1972 he moved to Denver CO, where he founded the Northern Colorado Writers Workshop. He helped found and run many other workshops and classes as well, including the Colorado Springs Writers Workshop.

Bryant was an accomplished science-fiction writer, mostly of short stories. He began publishing SF work with “They Come Only in Dreams” and “Sending the Very Best”, both in January 1970. For the next two decades he was a frequent contributor to magazines and anthologies, and though his fictional output slowed in the ’90s, he was still active as a critic. He was a familiar figure at conventions, especially in Colorado fandom. He was a frequent guest at the World Horror Convention, and chaired the 2000 convention in Denver.

With Harlan Ellison he wrote Phoenix without Ashes (1978), and solo short novel Fetish appeared in 1991. He also edited 2076: The American Tricentennial (1977), and was an editor for Wormhole Books. He wrote screenplays and occasionally appeared in films.

--excerpted from Locus Publications

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Craig.
6,532 reviews185 followers
November 24, 2025
This was Bryant's first collection of short fiction. It includes seventeen short stories, all dating from 1970 - '73, and includes science fiction, fantasy, and horror, all mixed together in a sometimes-aggressive New Wave style. I find it notable that none of the stories were first published in any of the science fiction magazines of the time; a couple of them are original to the collection, but the majority are reprinted from the original speculative anthology series that were extant then, including Robert Silverberg's New Dimensions, Samuel R. Delany's Quark, Terry Carr's Universe, Robin Scott Wilson's Clarion, Hartry Harrison's Nova, and Damon Knight's Orbit. I'm not sure, but I'll bet this is one-of-a-kind in that regard. I thought he was a little obscure or oblique once in a while, but very thought-provoking and challenging for the most part. My favorites include Shark, Their Thousandth Season, the title story, and the charmingly titled The Soft Blue Bunny Rabbit Story.
1 review
September 4, 2019
An amazing book, it really triggers my imagination and each story is filled with creativity.
Profile Image for Charles.
Author 41 books292 followers
June 7, 2009
It's sometimes hard to categorize Bryant's work. There are horror elements and SF elements, and sometimes fantasy. Although I don't like every story he's written, his work always gives me some food for thought and his imagination is highly inventive.
305 reviews
January 1, 2014
Not quite Cinnabar & looking forward to Particle Theory.
Profile Image for Mihail Kostov.
79 reviews12 followers
February 4, 2014
Чете се бързо, заради постоянно сменящите се сцени, но историята не е много интересна, нито пък оригинална.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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