
Camille Alexa
Author of Masked Mosaic: Canadian Super Stories
About the Author
Works by Camille Alexa
Flaming Marshmallow and Other Deaths 3 copies
Inclusions 1 copy
The Blackness Within 1 copy
His Sweet Truffle Of A Girl 1 copy
Because Reasons 1 copy
Associated Works
Machine of Death: A Collection of Stories About People Who Know How They Will Die (2010) — Contributor — 1,053 copies, 43 reviews
Subversion: Science Fiction & Fantasy Tales of Challenging the Norm (2011) — Contributor — 47 copies, 12 reviews
If This Goes On: The Science Fiction Future of Today's Politics (2019) — Contributor — 21 copies, 1 review
Shadows of the Emerald City: A Collection of Stories Based on the Writings of L. Frank Baum and The Wizard of Oz (2009) — Contributor — 14 copies
Butcher Knives and Body Counts: Essays on the Formula, Frights, and Fun of the Slasher Film (2011) — Contributor — 14 copies, 1 review
Asimov's Science Fiction: Vol. 42, No. 3 & 4 [March/April 2018] (2018) — Contributor — 12 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Renwick, Alexandra Camille
- Other names
- Renwick, Zandra
Renwick, Alexandra
Renwick, Alex C.
Renwick, A. Camille - Gender
- female
- Education
- University of Toronto
- Short biography
- Camille Alexa lives with fossils, dried branches, pressed flowers, and other dead things in ¼ of an Edwardian house in the Pacific Northwest. She’s fond of big dogs, warm bread, post-apocalyptic love stories, and the serial comma. Her short fiction collection, Push of the Sky, earned a starred review from Publishers Weekly and has been nominated for the Endeavour Award.
From http://machineofdeath.net/pod-flaming... - Places of residence
- Portland, Oregon, USA
Austin, Texas, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
I've had this signed copy buried in my to-read pile for an embarrassingly long time, for which I feel even more ashamed now because it's a really good collection of Alexa's work. They run a full speculative fiction gamut from science fiction to fantasy, with a smattering of poems mixed in with the stories as well. My favorite by far was "Flaming Marshmallow and Other Deaths," which utilizes a teenage girl's point of view in a stunning way.
This has been in my to-read pile for far too long, and I figured an anthology was a good way to wrap up the year. This hit the spot nicely. All 24 tales are about Canadian superheroes, written by Canadians, and span from the Yukon Gold Rush to present day, and coast to coast. There were a few that didn't resonate with me (as is the way with anthologies) but some of my favorites included "The Man in the Mask" by Emma Faraday, "Great Canadian Comics" by Patrick T. Goddard, and "Canadian Blood show more Diamonds" by Kristi Charish. So many were fun, pulpy, and just the right length to read here and there. show less
Camille Alex presents a wide range of imaginative and well-wrought tales in this collection. The few poems included in the collection are not nearly as strong as the stories. They don't quite have the same punch as the stories. But the awesome of the stories far outweighs the mediocrity of the poems.
I was especially fond of "The Clone Wrangler's Bride" and its sequel "Droidtown Blues," which are space western stories about a girl and her mandroid. The girl is spunky and awesome. I loved her show more quite a bit.
"The Butterfly Assassins" was a beautiful murder mystery. In it a young prince loves to create clockwork creatures, a talent that is looked down upon because the arts of alchemy are more highly prized within the kingdom.
"Shades of White and Road" was a lovely little tale about a girl who runs away from home and travels a spiraling road. Along the way she meets and assortment of stray furniture and objects, who pester her and wish to become her friends.
A story about the last surviving dragon in the world is contained in "Paperheart" and an plaster figurine shares his wit in “Observations of a Dimestore Figurine.”
There are many other stories in this collection that are also powerful and moving, sometimes funny and sometimes horrifying, but always beautifully told. show less
I was especially fond of "The Clone Wrangler's Bride" and its sequel "Droidtown Blues," which are space western stories about a girl and her mandroid. The girl is spunky and awesome. I loved her show more quite a bit.
"The Butterfly Assassins" was a beautiful murder mystery. In it a young prince loves to create clockwork creatures, a talent that is looked down upon because the arts of alchemy are more highly prized within the kingdom.
"Shades of White and Road" was a lovely little tale about a girl who runs away from home and travels a spiraling road. Along the way she meets and assortment of stray furniture and objects, who pester her and wish to become her friends.
A story about the last surviving dragon in the world is contained in "Paperheart" and an plaster figurine shares his wit in “Observations of a Dimestore Figurine.”
There are many other stories in this collection that are also powerful and moving, sometimes funny and sometimes horrifying, but always beautifully told. show less
*Book source ~ Many thanks to Untreed Reads for providing a review copy in exchange for an honest review.
In this combination Fantasy/Sci-Fi anthology there are 29 short stories that are creative and interesting. Some of the stories I completely enjoyed, some were ok and some I didn’t understand, but they were all well-written. If I had to pick a favorite out of them, it would be tough since there were many that I couldn’t stop reading, but I’d say I enjoyed Matty Johnson and Echo’s show more stories the best. Matty is a colorful Texan traveling to Mars and Echo is the android unit assigned by her father to protect her. But it goes so much farther than that. Wonderful and imaginative! show less
In this combination Fantasy/Sci-Fi anthology there are 29 short stories that are creative and interesting. Some of the stories I completely enjoyed, some were ok and some I didn’t understand, but they were all well-written. If I had to pick a favorite out of them, it would be tough since there were many that I couldn’t stop reading, but I’d say I enjoyed Matty Johnson and Echo’s show more stories the best. Matty is a colorful Texan traveling to Mars and Echo is the android unit assigned by her father to protect her. But it goes so much farther than that. Wonderful and imaginative! show less
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 8
- Also by
- 37
- Members
- 59
- Popularity
- #280,812
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
- 5


