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Loading... Magic for Beginnersby Kelly Link
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Without recalling too much of the book, many of these stories blurred together for me. Perhaps I was disappointed with them because I was so looking forward to reading it? I found it unworthy of the hype. ( )At first, I thought "I love this book! I'm going to recommend this book to all of those friends I have who want more fairytale fantasy but are tired of reading YA lit!" And then the stories just got creepier and creepier. Eventually turning to a new story required pushing through deepening levels of mental resistance. Apprehension. Queasiness. These stories are weird, all right, but also beautifully written and captivating, and not for the faint of heart. I didn't end up recommending the book to a lot of people, but I would definitely read more of her work. Not quite like anything I've ever read. There's a definite dream-like, nightmarish quality here, but Link also plays with the deceptive straightforwardness of fairytales, as well as mixing a streak of tongue-in-cheek genre humour in there. It's quite disturbing and eerie and leave tons of open ends and strange questions hanging. Me like. The stories are surreal but compelling. Not all of them are winners, but the title story is worth the price of the book alone. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0156031876, Paperback)Magic for Beginners is Kelly Link’s eagerly anticipated and critically acclaimed follow-up to her beloved debut, Stranger Things Happen. “Cumulatively weirder and wiser” (The Believer), this new story collection riffs on zombies, marriage, witches, superheroes, haunted convenience stores, and weekly apocalyptic poker parties, among other things. Link’s work is truly unique. Time Out New York called her stories “cross-genre gems,” and her admirers in the literary community—from Peter Straub and Karen Joy Fowler to Alice Sebold and Michael Chabon—reflect the amazing range that makes her style so special. Call it kitchen sink magical realism: Fantastic and bizarre but funny and down to earth, there is something for everyone in Magic for Beginners. . (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:17 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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