The Cat's Pajamas & Other Stories

by James Morrow

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A rollicking and audacious collection of stories featuring Martian invaders, time travel, voodoo queens, giant Hollywood monsters, Dr. Moreau-like mad scientists, and more Innbsp;The Cat's Pajamas, James Morrow--called "the most provocative satiric voice in science fiction" by thenbsp;Washington Post--takes the reader on thirteen wild and gleeful rides, each exploring a demented, dystopian, or provisionally desirable world. A tyrannical church wields terrifying power over people's sex lives show more in the name of protecting "the rights of the unconceived." The dead, raised by Caribbean magic, are put to benevolent use in a New Jersey suburb. A racist Supreme Court justice gets his karmic comeuppance. Columbus "discovers" a contemporary New York City. The island of Manhattan becomes a battlefield on which two alien races thrash out their philosophical disagreements. And in the remarkable title offering, a deranged doctor blesses his mutant creatures with ethical superiority, a simple matter of injecting them with a serum derived from the disembodied brain of the story's living--and understandably bewildered--protagonist. show less

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3 reviews
You can file his stuff under "science fiction" or "fantasy" or "speculative fiction" or even "humor," but, regardless of the genre you put him in, James Morrow can really write. The stories in "The Cat's Pajamas" all meditate on a central question, but Morrow's prose is almost unfailingly deft, light, and can be, by turns, funny and touching. While a lot of sci-fi writers' stories resemble arguments or mere plot diagrams, Morrow's seem more like good, clever jokes, or brilliantly constructed playthings. There's a live-wire intelligence on display here, but Morrow also know that most readers read for pleasure and proceeded accordingly.

There's a bit of modern fairytale ("The Eye that Never Blinks") here, little plays that inject some show more life into dusty science fiction tropes, and a lovely, poignant post-September 11th story, "Apilogue." It's all enjoyable, most of it is genuinely funny, and much of it is thought-provoking. That said, much of this volume seems like a good writer relaxing: these are skillfully done minor works. I've already read "City of Truth" and liked it, but something about the fact that he could do so much in so few pages kind of sold me on this author. Time to hunt up his other stuff. show less
½
A great collection of works by an exceptional author. The Cat's Pajamas is the name of the final piece, but nearly all of the stories in this collection feature cats both integral and peripheral. Beyond that, the major themes throughout these stories - as well as Morrow's body of work - involve faith of both the religious and political variety, apocalyptic visions of humanity, and, of course, mortality.

Personal favorites from this collection include two works of Creative Non-Fiction (or revisionist fiction, if you will), Martyrs of the Upshot Knothole, and Fucking Justice. The most disturbing of the bunch is probably Auspicious Eggs (dystopian fertility rites), the funniest, Isabella of Castille Answers Her Mail.
http://www.somefantastic.us/Issue_Archive/Issue_No_2.html

(Downloads the entire Winter, 2005 Issue of Some Fantastic, the 'zine in which the review appears.)

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68+ Works 7,964 Members

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Bisson, Terry (Introduction)

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Common Knowledge

People/Characters
John Wayne; Roger Brooke Taney
Important events
Dred Scott Decision
Related movies
Trinity and Beyond: The Atomic Bomb Movie (1995 | IMDb); The Conqueror (1956 | IMDb)
Dedication
to my cousin

Glenn Morrow,

the brother I never had

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Science Fiction
DDC/MDS
813Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English
LCC
PS3563 .O876 .C38Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

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English
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Paper, Ebook
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