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Matthew Johnson (1)

Author of Irregular Verbs and Other Stories

For other authors named Matthew Johnson, see the disambiguation page.

15+ Works 78 Members 10 Reviews

Works by Matthew Johnson

Irregular Verbs and Other Stories (2014) 40 copies, 4 reviews
Fall From Earth (2008) 14 copies, 3 reviews
PUBLIC SAFETY 4 copies
Irregular Verbs (2014) 3 copies
Heroic Measures 2 copies
The Ninth Part of Desire 2 copies, 1 review
Another Country {short story} 2 copies, 1 review
Lagos 2 copies, 1 review
Holdfast 2 copies
The Afflicted 2 copies
Long Pig 1 copy

Associated Works

The Year's Best Science Fiction & Fantasy, 2011 Edition (2011) — Contributor — 107 copies, 1 review
Fantasy: The Best of the Year, 2007 Edition (2007) — Contributor — 74 copies, 2 reviews
Fantasy: The Best of the Year, 2008 Edition (2008) — Contributor — 68 copies, 2 reviews
Zombies: More Recent Dead (2014) — Contributor — 66 copies, 3 reviews
The Year's Best Military SF & Space Opera (2015) — Contributor — 58 copies, 2 reviews
Tesseracts Ten: A Celebration of New Canadian Speculative Fiction (2006) — Contributor — 25 copies, 2 reviews
Imaginarium 2013: The Best Canadian Speculative Writing (2013) — Contributor — 24 copies
Clarkesworld: Issue 073 (October 2012) (2012) — Contributor — 16 copies, 3 reviews
Clarkesworld: Issue 065 (February 2012) (2012) — Composer — 6 copies
At Year's End [Anthology 19-in-1] (2012) — Contributor — 2 copies, 1 review
Daily Science Fiction: September 2010 (2010) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male
Nationality
Canada
Places of residence
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Associated Place (for map)
Ontario, Canada

Members

Reviews

23 reviews
Rating:

The Publisher Says: keluarga: to move to a new village
lunak: to search for something without finding it
mencintai: to love for the last time

Meet a guilt-ridden nurse who atones for her sins by joining her zombified patients in exile; a lone soldier standing guard on a desolate Arctic island against an invasion that may be all in his mind; a folksinger who tries to unionize Hell; and a private eye who only takes your case after you die. Visit a resettlement centre for refugees from show more ancient Rome; a lost country recreated by its last citizen on the Internet; and a restaurant where the owner’s ghost lingers for one final party. Discover the inflationary effects of a dragon’s hoard, the secret connection between Mark Twain and Frankenstein, and the magic power of blackberry jam—all in this debut collection of strange, funny, and bittersweet tales by acclaimed writer Matthew Johnson.

My Review: The UK Book-A-Day meme, a book a day for August 2014, is the goad I'm using to get through my snit-based unwritten SF-book reviews. Today's prompt, the third in the meme, is an excellent collection of short stories.

Matthew Johnson's collection is assured and sublimely well-written. His ideas are very well matched to his genres, and his emotional barometer is calibrated beautifully to the story medium.

5 stars
"Irregular Verbs" tells the story of grief. When your closest companion dies, a language is lost. There are things you can never, ever say aloud again. I don't know how he knows this, but he does.

4.5 stars
"Another Country" presents the alienation of dislocation in a different way than we're accustomed to. Space and time require things of us, things we don't often think about. This is what happens when those things are lost.
"Public Safety" is a thing I've dreamt of for years, an alternative history story wherein the French Republic of 1792 never fell. I **loved** this tale of Reason gone mad. Half-star off for copy-editing infelicities. They worked my nerve hard. Pay special attention to the date of the story's action. Heh.

4 stars
"What You Couldn't Leave Behind" is set in Bardo City, features a skinny restaurateur named The Jackal, and concerns a recently dead man's murder. It's an Egypto-Buddhist Afterlife Noir, you see, complete with Sam Spade and a healthy admixture of Rick Blaine. There's The Femme Fatale, take your pick of Lauren Bacall or Ingrid Bergman, there's the Maltese Falcon/Canopic jars, there's the quest to reach Nirvana(ish) space with a heart as light as a feather. Like all stories here, it's best savored on multiple levels.

3.5 stars
"Beyond the Fields You Know" turns the Narnia/Peter Pan mythos into the same blender carafe as Alice and Beatrix Potter are lying in and sets the speed to frappé. From the screaming foam of your treasured childhood reads emerges a dark and dangerous war fought for unknown reasons by unknowable strangers, all served and supported by Lost Boys who're supervised by the White Rabbit and Mrs. Tiggy-Winkle's evil twins. Fun, but slight.

3 stars
"When We Have Time" did nothing for me to speak of; it has the virtue of brevity and makes a sneaky point about the role of money in modern life. Still, I've read it before and in more depth.


This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
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This was a solid collection of stories. The ideas were great, and I like his prose. There were a couple stories in there that I found really boring, but I just skipped them and the rest were really compelling! Nice little tastes of great sci fi concepts.
Pretty good SF think piece about a crew of criminals, shipped off to serve their sentences as colonists on an uninhabited planet. They are subjects of a Chinese-like interstellar empire and its Catholic-like religion, both of which condition their varied responses to the new environment. And then the aliens show up, and everyone needs a new strategy...

The ideas set in motion were quite interesting, and the characters on each side fairly believable. But the sentence-level writing and dialogue show more were somewhat flat, all sentences repeating the same pattern, too many present participles and unnecessary oh!s.

(I listened to the Iambik audio recording, narrated by Emma Newman, which was smoothly done, only occasionally a little affectless.)
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Clunky with a poor understanding of science, it slow improves a bit but the blocky characters never resolve themselves into anybody interesting. Not a bad concept but the execution needs a lot of work.There's a few basic grammatical/typing errors that really should have been caught, plus continutity world building faults, along with the afoorementioned poor characters and basic science fails.

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Works
15
Also by
16
Members
78
Popularity
#229,021
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
10
ISBNs
72
Languages
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