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Gravity's Angels: 13 Stories

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Stories deal with dragons, space travel, black holes, future warfare, and mystical experiences

302 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1991

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Michael Swanwick

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5 stars
38 (30%)
4 stars
53 (42%)
3 stars
33 (26%)
2 stars
1 (<1%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Craig.
7,130 reviews212 followers
October 13, 2024
Gravity's Angels was Swanwick's first collection of short fiction. It was published by Arkham House in 1991. The Arkham name usually conjures up images of Lovecraft and Derleth (or Bruce Wayne, I guess), but back in the '80s and '90s they brought out some good science fiction titles before they faded out in the current century. The bakers' dozen stories here all first appeared in the '80s in a variety of original anthologies, Omni, Amazing, Interzone, etc.; surprisingly only a couple are from Asimov's, where Gardner Dozois almost seemed to have a corner on the Swanwick market for many years. It's a wide-ranging but very good collection, which shows off the early Swanwick's craft and imagination to good advantage. My favorites are The Transmigration of Philip K, The Edge of the World, and most especially The Feast of Saint Janis.
Profile Image for Stephen.
1,516 reviews12.6k followers
November 6, 2010
4.0 to 4.5 stars. I have not read all of the stories in this collection so this review is only for the storyies set forth below. I will update my rating and my review as I read further stories.

The Feast of Saint Janis (4.0 to 4.5 stars): Powerful novelette about an African diplomat visiting a post "Collapse" United States and becoming a part of a unique "tour" involving a Janis Joplin impersonator. A great ending and a powerful story.

Nominee: Nebula Award for Best Novelette.

"The Edge of the World" (4.0 stars): Alternative Earth story featuring three teenagers who travel to explore the "edge" of the flat Earth and find a way (used my ancient monks in the story) to gain wishes. All three gain their "hearts desire" unthinkingly with significant costs to themselves. Clever and poignant.

Nominee: Hugo, Locus and World Fantasy Award for Best Short Fiction. Winner: Sturgeon Award for Best Short Fiction.
Profile Image for scarlettraces.
3,287 reviews22 followers
June 3, 2026
The first Swanwick which I have not thoroughly enjoyed. I think it was all the joyless sex.

Also didn't realise the age of these stories until I saw the publishing info at the end, which might explain things.
Profile Image for Horza.
125 reviews
Read
April 28, 2024
Some 80s gems from Unca Mike. Lotta hits for me (midwinter’s tale, covenant of souls, the dragon line, snow angels, ginungagap, the edge of the world) and only a couple I skipped cos too high concept
Profile Image for Matt Warren.
61 reviews1 follower
May 3, 2026
This is a collection of unevenly written short stories. Some are better than others. Interesting enough.
Profile Image for JoAnna Redman-Smith.
6 reviews1 follower
July 2, 2026
Not for me.

Michael Swanwick is loved by many, and has all the accolades, but apparently he's just not for me. I had trouble getting into the stories, and the writing sometimes felt clumsy to me.
4 reviews2 followers
April 20, 2008
I am nearing the end of this collection of short stories. Although Swanwick is nominally considered a Science Fiction author and is widely published in science fiction magazines, I would consider this collection to be solidly in the "fantasy" camp. But no matter, it is all wonderful stuff. He creates truly original themes and worlds, and this is warmly recommended for anyone who enjoys what might be more accurately described as "speculative fiction." A particularly strong story is "The Man Who Met Picasso," which is truly magical in its exploration of the nature of art and life and death.
Profile Image for Michael.
317 reviews10 followers
October 13, 2015
Brilliant collection! All were worthy of serious appreciation. Swanwicks novel Vacuum Flowers has been a long time favorite of mine that gets reread frequently, each time with a larger understanding of the world he has created. I was thrilled to find a story in here, Trojan Horse, which seems to be set in the same world.
The overall tone of all these stories is really quite grim and existential; the consistent themes are of the nature of reality.
Profile Image for Printable Tire.
851 reviews88 followers
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December 7, 2008
There was some good stuff in here- I remember particularly liking the main story, the feast of st. janis, and the one about mummers. Some stories were complete BEM scifi crap though. A mixed bag, but I think the st. janis story is worth reading.
Profile Image for Patrick.
114 reviews1 follower
Read
July 22, 2013
Read around 1996.

10/13/11: "Trojan Horse" (re-read)
11/3/11: "Snow Angels" (re-read)
11/5/11: "Ginungagap" (re-read)
Profile Image for Andi.
235 reviews7 followers
June 5, 2018
Maybe the best collection of Swanwick's short fiction.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews