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Our Fruiting Bodies

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Our Fruiting Bodies collects stories of old growth and fresh decay, of stubborn rebirth and the faint but nonimaginary paths connecting life and nonlife.

From the sharp, sweet confessional of their Peter Pan-inspired “Awfully Big Adventure,” through the melting ambitextualities of “Just Us” — from the early, dizzy-eyed quest at the heart of “Looking for Lilith” through the newly unfurling tendrils that pierce the grounds of “I Being Young and Foolish” — Nisi Shawl’s search for the power of fiction’s truth puts pure, precious gifts right here, right in your hands, ripe and ready for reading.

322 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 1, 2022

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About the author

Nisi Shawl

134 books584 followers
Nisi Shawl is a founder of the diversity-in-speculative-fiction nonprofit the Carl Brandon Society and serves on the Board of Directors of the Clarion West Writers’ Workshop. Their story collection Filter House was a winner of the 2009 Tiptree/Otherwise Award, and their debut novel, Everfair, was a 2016 Nebula finalist. Shawl edited Bloodchildren: Stories by the Octavia E. Butler Scholars (2013). They coedited Strange Matings: Science Fiction, Feminism, African American Voices, and Octavia E. Butler (2013).

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Dan Trefethen.
1,205 reviews75 followers
January 15, 2023
The author's biography says that Nisi Shawl is best known for fiction dealing with race, gender and colonialism. Those are often the topics of these stories. The protagonists are often women of color, sometimes practitioners of religion reminiscent of African or Caribbean ones.

One of the things to look for in a story is internal consistency: Is the language and style appropriate to the place, time and characters? (For instance, high fantasy uses a more elevated language and syntax, crime fiction a grittier one with slang). Shawl is very attentive to this, matching the tone and vocabulary to the story. In the Arthurian tale “I Being Young and Foolish” it feels Arthurian (“Three and twenty years had passed”), while the story centered on the Belgian King Leopold uses courtly language and vocabulary, interspersed with the casual racial slurs of that place and time. In this way, Shawl immerses the reader quickly into the milieu of the story.

Fantasy and magic are prevalent in these stories, always feeling personalized to the characters and themes. The Arthurian magic is quite different than the living doll magic of “Women of the Doll”.

While women of color are centered in most of these stories, as I mentioned, the most notable exception is the Peter Pan pastiche “She Tore”, with a kick-ass Wendy and Tiger Lily confronting an unrepentant Hook who offers a deal that Disney would be proud of.
Profile Image for Joshua Dysart.
Author 390 books96 followers
June 9, 2023
I had fun with this. The ideas are all fully tilted towards a wonderful anti-colonial, pro-African diaspora awareness, and a few of them are absolutely outstanding. I LOVED "Women of the Doll" and very much enjoyed, "The Tawny Bitch" (though that font - even with its in-story reasoning - drove me bonkers), and a handful of others really sang to me. I did feel like I encountered more stories that were admirable in spirit and tone than they were really interesting, formally or narratively, but I'd be down to read a novel by Nisi Shawl.
Profile Image for James.
3,958 reviews32 followers
February 2, 2023
A collection of gruesome tales with a few happy exceptions, the Peter Pan story was a riot. A decent collection of shorts from 2003 to 2022.
4 reviews2 followers
September 4, 2024
I love some magical realism in fiction, and this certainly delivers! Some of these are truly remarkable as they come (Women of the Doll and Luisah's Church stand out the most to me) and even the ones that drag a bit are still rather good.

If you like weird fiction, this is an excellent book to sink your mycelic roots in.
Profile Image for Cameron Frye.
15 reviews
August 8, 2023
the writing style wasn’t for me; it felt a little heavy handed at times and i honestly didn’t end up finishing it. i did quite like the story told in archival letters, but some others didn’t really stand out to me at all.
147 reviews
November 5, 2023
Normally I don't like short stories collections, because there's only a few that trully grab me. Well, this is the book that proves me wrong.
My favourites were the ones that gave a twist to well know stories, myths and other tales.
Profile Image for Elizabeth Barrett Sullivan.
196 reviews
February 16, 2025
So many good shorts! Ones that stand out for me, Women of the Doll, Cruel Sistah, the Street Worm trio, and I Being Young and Foolish because I’m on an Arthurian Legend kick at the moment.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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