Such strong writing! If these stories don't touch your soul, you don't have one. This is one of the most compelling books I have EVER read. These stories make you think, make you appreciate what you have, see everything with new eyes, to See through the Dross to Find the Important. Recommended for everyone still looking for "more" AND those who think they're doing just fine where they are, thank you.
I will read everything this lady writes, gladly.
There are 11 stories. I've listed them separately below.
Lessons in Mortality - essay, introduction by Paul DI Filippo, ingesting essay on Death and facing (or living with) the guaranteed passing ("the one true prophecy") of each and every one of us. He says that Palwick deals with the question "How does one live boldly in the face of looming personal extinction?" "...none of us are in this fix alone." her stories bring us "inward, to confront the Minotaur of Desth, embrace him, and dance." Well done, Mr di Filippo!
The Fate of Mice - "You have taught me language, and my profit on it so I know how to fear." - Rodney the rodent. Wow. Wow. Such a simple story. Such a powerful story. We can let the fear of death be our cage, or escape and live our lives as full as possible. Wow. - I'm giving this one SIX stars out of five.
Gestella - I've read this one before and it's just as impressive on the second read. The story is from the view point of a female werewolf but it's not like ANY werewolf story you've ever read.its really about the trust between man and woman, the aging question (she ages 7 yrs for every one, so she grows older, faster), and him abandoning her for a younger woman. Still made me cry. Hard. Dog lovers will understand this one, all too well. - 5 stars
The Old World - An instant evolutionary change causes people to see how humans have been selfish and destroying the world and themselves. To do better. A BIG change. I wish this story were true. And yes, I think the author knows people like me well. ;) - 4 stars
Jo's Hair - A reselling of Jo's life, from Little Woman, in a nutshell, how adventurous Jo doesn't get to live her dreams. But it's also the story of the chestnut colored hair she had shorn for her father's sake, which gets much of the adventures Jo could have had or written about, all the world. Bittersweet. - 5 stars
Going After Bobo - A complicated story about a boy and his lost cat, his mother, brother, and dead father, the boxes people get put in, and how there's no real escape; and finally, maybe acceptance of one's fate or path in life. I'm still thinking of how to quantify this one. - 4.5 stars
Beautiful Stuff - Through the voice of a "revived" mass murder victim, we hear what's simply, very simply, the most important part of living. GREAT message, written 3 years after 9/11. - 5 stars
Elephant - A woman's doubts about motherhood, being pregnant, and having had an abusive childhood, whether to keep the child, and wondering if it's even real. Not a life affirming story. - 4 stars
Ever After - A version of the Cinderella story I've never heard, never thought of. In this one, the Godmother is known, teaches her young charge how to be charming, how to live looking for love at rich people's balls. The desired result is NOT marriage to a prince though. - 5 stars
Stormdusk - Another fairy tale type story, this one of a young girl who cares so much for her mother that she seeks a treatment for her mother's unusual illness: she almost dies in summers, yet is perfectly hale just after the first snow. A tale of need. - 4 stars
Sorrel's Heart - I'll never be able to hear the phrase "wears her heart on her sleeve" again without thinking of this tale. Fear has met Cruelty; they travel together, become lovers, cancel each other's vice out. She helps him immensely but at a great price. He learns to care for his own heart through her. - 5 stars
GI Jesus - GI in this case stands for "gastrointestinal". A young woman is shunned by her family and community when her pregnancy shows her sin. Because of their actions, she leaves it all without telling anyone where she has gone. Her sister and friend invent stories of the good lives they imagine for her, thereby salving their own guilt. In the meantime, their dreams for their own lives go into the trash; they become different people from who they were, harder, regretful. Guilt changes us; not for the better either. And how we treat others is important. Forgiveness is important. Speaking the forgiveness out loud and to whom it needs to be said, is important. - 5 stars