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Sisters in Fantasy 2

by Susan M. Shwartz (Editor, Contributor), Martin Harry Greenberg (Editor)

Other authors: Lee Barwood (Contributor), Gael Baudino (Contributor), Susan Casper (Contributor), Pamela Dean (Contributor), Barbara Delaplace (Contributor)17 more, Ru Emerson (Contributor), Valerie J. Freireich (Contributor), Esther Friesner (Contributor), Ellen Guon (Contributor), Mercedes Lackey (Contributor), Patricia McKillip (Contributor), Beth Meacham (Contributor), Sharan Newman (Contributor), Mel Odom (Cover artist), Rebecca Ore (Contributor), Diana L. Paxson (Contributor), Janni Lee Simner (Contributor), Sherwood Smith (Contributor), Martha Soukup (Contributor), Nancy Springer (Contributor), Lois Tilton (Contributor), Jane Yolen (Contributor)

Series: Sisters in Fantasy anthologies (2)

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Showing 5 of 5
Oh dear. The first [b:Sisters in Fantasy|720683|Sisters in Fantasy 2|Martin H. Greenberg|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1243382956s/720683.jpg|706925] was a pretty solid collection. This is not: it has a few stand outs and a few truly awful stories, and then a load of completely forgettable tales. The truly weird thing about this collection is that there were a number with no fantastical elements: Nancy Springer's "The Way Your Life Is," Gael Baudino's "Bitterfoot" (a good piece about a woman fighter pilot dogfighting with the enemy), Martha Soukup's "Fuzz". There is a lot of physical, sexual, and emotional abuse in these stories, and a lot of the time it felt totally gratuitous.

My favorites:
"This Fair Gift" by Pamela Dean. Told from a secretary's point of view, the tale of a law office and magical garments. I really liked the magic in this book, which sometimes felt fantastic & inexplicable, and in other cases seemed almost mundane.

"Vashti and God" by Valerie Freireich. A cool retelling of Esther--the previous queen receives messages from God telling her how to gain equality for women, and in obeying God loses her place and enables Esther to become queen. I love the different facets to this tale.

"Volsi" by Diana Paxson. While the king tries to spread Christianity, one family holds out and continues using fertility magic. This felt like a window into another time and place.

"Stone Whorl, Flint Knife" by Rebecca Ore. In the strange area that is Bracken county, where magic works and logic doesn't, one woman seeks vengeance for her son's accidental death. The way people think about vengeance and consequences in this county fascinates me.

"The Witches of Junket" by Patricia McKillip. A dark magic that was banished thousands of years ago has returned, and old Granny Heather is the first to know about it. McKillip is fantastic at working magic with mundane items like fishing hooks: at one point the witches literally knit (using knitting needles!) a protective shield out of trash. McKillip is also the best at creating creepy fantasy moments:
"What she had caught turned to her.
She felt it as she had felt it looking out of the moon's eye. She went small, deep inside her, a little animal scurrying to find a hiding place. But there was no place; there was no world, even, just her, standing in a motionless, soundless dark with a ghostly fishing pole in her hands, its puny hook swallowed by something vast as fog and night, with the line dangling out of it like a piece of spaghetti."



My least favorites:
"Angel of the City" by Susan Shwartz. Uriel is on patrol in NYC, and he and the other angels grouse about God and humans. Tries to be funny but fails, then ends on a schmaltzy note.

"A Night at the J Street Bar" by Susan Casper. Three page story set in a rundown bar, where the denizens bemoan that it will shortly be shut down. At the end of the story, the bar owner shuts off the lights and then switches off the perpetual drunk who sits on the same stool every night. I have no idea what the point of this story was.

"The Way Your Life Is" by Nancy Springer. Five page story told entirely in the second person, about a guy who gets a snake to look cool and then throws a wild party. No magic and deeply annoying.

"Fuzz" by Martha Soukup. A young woman tries to be an actress, but then she gets drunk with her friends (the "amusing" drunk bit takes forever) and then a friend has sex with her against her will. No idea why this was a story, let alone included in this collection.


The worst of the worst:
"Wet Wings" by Mercedes Lackey. Sometimes a story is so self-indulgent that I actually feel embarrassed for the author. "Katherine" is one of the few true mages left in an age when Political Correctness destroys magic. My first clue that this would be terrible is when "Katherine" sadly says to her pet butterfly: "'We always knew that there would be repression and a burning time again,'" which is swiftly followed by such gems as
"They had decreed that everyone must be equal, and no one must be offended ever. And then they had begun the burning and the banning...She had known that her own work was doomed when a book that had been lauded for its portrayal of a young gay hero was banned because the young gay hero was unhappy and suicidal. She had not even bothered to argue. She simply announced her retirement and went into seclusion, pouring all her energies into the magic of her butterflies."
You hear that? If you don't like Vanyel then Mercedes Lackey will take her ball and go home, you book burners! Then the "Psi-cops" break down her door and "Katherine" thinks, "in a way, she had expected it. She had been a world-renowned fantasy writer; she had made no secret of her knowledge of real-world magics." So "Katherine" pours the last of her magic into her butterfly, and the story ends "And she turned, full of dignity and empty of all else, to face her enemies."
Damn those Politically Correct cops, who will arrest you if you call your cat a "pet" instead of an "Animal Companion" and who forbid nice white ladies from wearing Native American jewelry! The whole thing is so horribly obviously wish-fulfillment and wallowing in self-pity that I could hardly bear to read it. ( )
  wealhtheowwylfing | Feb 29, 2016 |
Urban fantasy does not always age well.The stories set in rural areas seem to be out of time while fantasy-historical works well nearly always, but "contemporary/modern" can age badly. One story in this collection, set in an office, fits only in the narrow range of years when a "word processor" was a fancy electric typewriter with memory cards. The tech is so outdated and so central to the story, that the story no longer works. My two favorites were both humor tales of vampires out of their expected surroundings: "Why is This Night Different" by Janni Lee Simner and "Moonlight in Vermont" by Esther Friesner. I didn't even like the depressing Mercedes Lackey story and she's one of my all time favorite authors. ( )
  SF_fan_mae | Jan 15, 2016 |
A marvelous collection of stories about and by women. As with any anthology, some are better than others, but overall this is a good collection. Similar to MZB Sword and Sorceress Series. If you enjoyed that, you will adore this. ( )
  empress8411 | Jan 20, 2014 |
Many short stories (and some of them very short) from many of the women writing in Fantasy. Interesting and pithy. Some of them I've seen elsewhere but worthwhile reading all the same. There were few mediocre ones and many very good reads here.

Will read this again. ( )
  wyvernfriend | Jun 21, 2007 |
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» Add other authors

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Shwartz, Susan M.Editor, Contributorprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Greenberg, Martin HarryEditormain authorall editionsconfirmed
Barwood, LeeContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Baudino, GaelContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Casper, SusanContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Dean, PamelaContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Delaplace, BarbaraContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Emerson, RuContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Freireich, Valerie J.Contributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Friesner, EstherContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Guon, EllenContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Lackey, MercedesContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
McKillip, PatriciaContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Meacham, BethContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Newman, SharanContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Odom, MelCover artistsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Ore, RebeccaContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Paxson, Diana L.Contributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Simner, Janni LeeContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Smith, SherwoodContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Soukup, MarthaContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Springer, NancyContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Tilton, LoisContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Yolen, JaneContributorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed

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Roc Fantasy (LE 5503)
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Contains:
  • Wonder land / Jane Yolen
  • Shahrezad / Ellen Guon
  • This fair gift / Pamela Dean
  • Dumping Ra / Sharon Newman
  • Kneeling at his side / Lois Tilton
  • Vashti and God / Valerie J. Freireich
  • Angel of the city / Susan Shwartz
  • Why is this night different / Janni Lee Simner
  • VoĢˆlsi / Diana L. Paxson
  • Stone Whorl, Flint Knife / Rebecca Ore
  • Horse tracks / Rebecca Ore
  • The witches of Junket / Patricia McKillip
  • Moonlight in Vermont / Esther Friesner
  • The way your life is / Nancy Springer
  • Bitterfoot / Gael Baudino
  • A night at the J Street bar / Susan Casper
  • Fuzz / Martha Soukup
  • Call him by name / Ru Emerson
  • Daria's window / Sherwood Smith
  • The found and lost shop / Barbara Delaplace
  • Pyre / Lee Barwood
  • Coyote / Beth Meacham
  • Wet wings / Mercedes Lackey
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