I first came across one of Pat Murphy's pieces in an annual best of SF collection, and followed up with this purchase. I’m glad I did, and I was also glad to see that a number of her books were recently brought back into print, because this is a wonderful collection of stories by a writer who deserves to be better known. I found myself wondering why she isn’t, given the accessible, original nature of her work, and the subtle humor that enlivens much of it. Perhaps it is due to her work not fitting easily into an established genre. It could also be because she hasn’t yet written a big, break-out novel, or something that has attracted the attention of Hollywood or a major comic book artist. Maybe that is yet to come.
Many of Murphy’s stories fit into the Twilight Zone-esque, ordinary reality with a twist paradigm. “In the Islands” concerns a group of people who live close to the ocean – so close that they are beginning to develop qualities usually unique to aquatic creatures. Another mysterious story set by the sea, “Sweetly the Waves Call to Me”, was probably my favorite of the bunch, and focuses on a woman, in the middle of a breakup with a boyfriend, who seems to be getting stalked by a silkie, a legendary sea creature – or something like that. Many of her pieces feature an ambiguous, possibly supernatural creature or force of some kind, which could also be interpreted as a product of a character’s emotional life. “A Falling Star is a Rock from Outer Space”, in which a woman has to come to terms with a poltergeist, is another example.
A number of her stories have virtually no supernatural elements, and a number of these are quite enjoyable as well. I got a big kick out of “In the Abode of the Snows”, in which a young man, who is trying to follow in his dead father’s footsteps by venturing alone into the Himalayan wilderness, ends up with an unexpectedly hilarious conclusion. “Rachel in Love”, a Nebula Award winner, seems to take place in the contemporary world, but features a fascinating protagonist, a chimpanzee with the intelligence of a human being. This contains one of the wackiest lovemaking scenes you are likely to read anywhere, as the precocious chimp falls for a drunken night watchman (don’t worry, they don’t end up together).
Other pieces fall into more standard SFF modes, but with a strong connection to the natural world – tales of bear spirits and the like. Those were a little less interesting to me. “Bones” is another good one – it is set in 18th or 19th century Ireland and London seemingly, and tells the story of a young Irish giant who believes his destiny is to lead his people back to the Irish countryside, but instead becomes an exploited curiosity on the streets of the metropolis.
I heartily recommend this one – fans of challenging and entertaining SF writing will not regret giving it a try.