Short Stories Books


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Short Stories Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Short Stories
Tales from the White Hart
Published in Paperback by Del Rey (1998-10-06)
Author: Arthur C. Clarke
List price: $10.00
Used price: $12.34

Average review score:

Not Free SF Reader
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-29
In a similar setup to the Gavagan's Bar stories, but, as Clarke says, set in the UK, not the USA.

His bar actually features John Christopher, John Wyndham and 'George Whitley' in small cameos in the tall tales recounted by Harry Purvis. So a haunt of the literary types someone under a newspaper building or thereabouts, is what he says, so maybe pointing out a real pub somewhere he liked?

Anyway, all from around the 1950 mark, these. All they are intended to be is fun stories, and the author pretty much succeeds at that, in general.


Tales from the White Hart : Silence Please! - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : Big Game Hunt - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : Patent Pending - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : Armaments Race - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : Critical Mass - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : The Ultimate Melody - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : The Pacifist - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : The Next Tenants - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : Moving Spirit - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : The Man Who Ploughed the Sea - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : The Reluctant Orchid - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : Cold War - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : What Goes Up - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : Sleeping Beauty - Arthur C. Clarke
Tales from the White Hart : The Defenestration of Ermintrude Inch - Arthur C. Clarke


Negative feedback showstopping blowup.

3.5 out of 5


Giant Squid control lacking.

3 out of 5


Sensation register commerce.

2.5 out of 5


Captain Zoom gun prop death ray.

3.5 out of 5


Bee ooze.

3.5 out of 5


Stuck in a hit pattern.

3 out of 5


War program insults.

3.5 out of 5


The number of mad scientists who wish to conquer the world, said Harry Purvis, looking thoughtfully at his beer, has been grossly exaggerated.

3 out of 5


Whiskey making case a bomb.

3 out of 5


Submarine getaway extraction.

3.5 out of 5


Wellsian hothouse epic coward.

4 out of 5


Iceberg towing bet interruption.

3 out of 5


Antigravity flameout.

3 out of 5


Snoring cure insomnia reversal.

3.5 out of 5


Word count loop cheat pushover.

3.5 out of 5





3.5 out of 5

Needs About 40 Stars for a fair rating
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-18
Absolutely Hilarious. A must have. I shouted for Joy when I saw it was in print again.

I Still Have My Copy From '69!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-07
I wouldn't throw it away! This is one of the most entertaining collections of stories in the sci-fi genre. At the White Hart, a British pub, are an odd assortment of patrons from the literary and scientific fields, as well as laymen interested in the discussions going on around them. One Harry Purvis inevitably manages to dominate the talk with his incredible tales of wondrous scientific romance, which he insists are true. He will often find a good reason for leaving just as a flaw in his story starts to become obvious to one or more of his listeners, and they wax suspicious that the tale truly is incredible. The way Clarke weaves real science with interesting and hilarious short fiction makes this one of my favorites of all his works. I would especially recommend it to readers who are new to science-fiction. Unlike a lot of such works, this one only gets better with age.

Great Short Stories!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-05
I couldn't put this down. I'm a new comer to science fiction, but if all the sci-fi writers can do what A.C. Clark does in this book, I am really looking forward to reading them. Each short story in the book relate to one another. They basically build up to a climax and then you're left wondering, "Is that it??? I want more!". Even though this book was written circa 1957, it is a "way out" read and very enjoyable!

Stars and bars
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-21
If you can think of one set of SF short stories involving tall tales told in bars, it's probably Spider Robinson's "Callahan's' series. But if you can think of two, this is probably the second.

Although never as big a Clarke fan as I've been of Asimov and Heinlein, I still have fond memories of several of Clarke's books. _Rendezvous with Rama_ is probably his best novel and it's been one of my favorites of his since it was first published. His short stories, too, are generally of high quality (remember e.g. 'The Nine Billion Names of God'?).

The series of tales collected herein is a bit different (for Clarke). For one thing, they're _funny_ -- Arthur C. Clarke funny, that is, not Douglas Adams funny, but funny all the same.

They're on the light side and they're deftly executed. But don't expect guffaws; in order to appreciate Harry Purvis and his stories, you pretty much have to be the sort of person who thinks 'The Defenestration of Ermintrude Inch' is a funny title.

If you've read Clarke but you haven't read this book, grab a copy and see what you think. The 'White Hart' isn't Callahan's, but it's a pleasant place to hang out and listen to some tall tales.

Short Stories
Whiskey Nipple
Published in Paperback by Press 53 (2005-10-10)
Author: Doug Frelke
List price: $14.00
New price: $8.12
Used price: $8.11
Collectible price: $14.00

Average review score:

Another whiskey please, make it a double..
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-03
I've just completed reading Whiskey Nipple, ( I'm familiar with that old practice). It is a delicious easy read. A bit deceptive in its easyness, enticing you to read and reread passages to savor the full flavor. Emotions simmering raw barely beneath the surface of "every-dayness" are cleverly and vividly sculpted by this talented wordsmith. They stay with you long after the whiskey is gone. I'll have another, thanks..

Believable characters, stunning stories, well told.....
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-18
Stunning cover art by Wolff is the ideal adjunct to Doug Frelke's short stories. His style is haunting and wrenching, his words whittled precisely to reveal humanity's frayed nerve endings, shattered synapses, and raw imperfections. Forget all preconceived notions of life, death, love, and human
interaction while reading Whiskey Nipple. Frelke's voice as story teller stuns, soothes, surprises, and shocks. His characters are skillfully crafted and unforgettable. Another excellent book of short stories from Press 53.

Stories That Will Draw You In and Keep Pulling You Back
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-14
I found these eight stories extraordinary in their ability to stay with me long after I'd put the book down. Like other great storytellers, Frelke manages to take universal themes-most often, the need we all share to love and be loved-and thread it through stories that manage, in turn, to shock, to inspire, to make you laugh, and to make you cry. But in the end, Frelke seems to be telling us that despite the vagaries of life and love, there is hope, no matter what. I have come back to read several of these stories over and over. I think anyone who reads will do the same.

Whiskey Nipple brings the emergence of a great new author
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-20
As I finished reading Doug Frelke's "Whiskey Nipple" I felt two distinct emotions. First a sadness, the kind that you feel when a great summer vacation comes to an end. And second appreciation, the kind you feel for having experienced it in the first place. This collection of short stories has left me stealing moments of introspection throughout my days since I turned the last page. Although the book itself is slight, Frelke's cast of characters certainly is not. From a young naval officer's unenviable tasks of delivering folded flags to next of kin; to a teenage girl faced with caring for her dying father's every need; one can't help but find themselves doing a little soul-searching in the process. Frelke's characters are honest and unflinching as if I were catching glimpses of their diaries. I can say with equal honesty that I will look forward to reading future works by this sharp young author. And in the meantime, read "Whiskey Nipple" again as should any of you. A great read indeed.

Being there at the beginning
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-09
When I was in college, the Dave Matthews Band was just starting out, playing at private parties, fraternity houses, and small clubs around Virginia. There was an electricity in the air--the sense of being there at the beginning, getting the chance to watch the birth of something astounding and grand. Reading Frelke's first collection of stories is like that, watching as a new, extremely talented writer wrestles with grief, sex, faith, and comedy in a stunningly original style that echoes Ford, DeLillo, and O'Connor. Don't miss this rare chance to watch the birth of an important voice.

Short Stories
Woodcuts of Women
Published in Hardcover by Grove Press (2000-12)
Author: Dagoberto Gilb
List price: $23.00
New price: $3.49
Used price: $0.62
Collectible price: $23.00

Average review score:

A Sexy Volume
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-22
Dagoberto Gilb is too sexy and handsome and the book's drawings are very sexy as well. I bought the book several months ago and when I got home I didn't read it. I thoght I bought it as an impulse buy, because wanted to have him sign it to me at a lecture he gave. Now that I read it I'm only disappointed that there aren't more stories and it all had to end. I have been reading Latinas almost exclusively before, and as much as I love my comadres, this one is by far my favorite (joking, he says he is a Chicana writer) and I, like Columbus, feel like I've discovered a new writer.

Don't miss it.
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-10
I've become bored with much of our contemporary fiction in the past few years. When I picked up Woodcuts of Women, I took it for a light read about sexual prowess and conquests by clichéd Latin-lovers. Neither did I particularly like the writers who had blurbed this author - Cisneros, Alvarez - and Proulx is too much research for my tastes. However, since I did love Jayne Anne Philips's Black Tickets, I pushed forward on the basis of her rave.

I had to make sure, but once I read all these wonderful stories a second time I thought I should speak up and say that I found this was one of the best books I've read in many years. What marked it for me was not only the originality of the stories (read "About Tere in Palomas", "Brisa", or "Mayala One Day in 1989"), smart ("A Painting in Santa Fe", "The Pillows"), out loud funny ("Maria De Covina", "Hueco", "Bottoms"), and dramatic ("Shout", "Snow"), but they have......let me call it "huge guts" instead of what I could say. Here's an author, who seems very much a man, who is writing about women, and he's doing so honestly and energetically. Here are stories intellectually charged and entertaining, both.

If any awards are left (that the Jonathan Franzen didn't already win), I nominate this book. I hope people don't miss it like I almost did. Kudos to the author!

Silvia's Review
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-22
WOODCUTS OF WOMAN took me a long time to have time to read it (ok ok) but it is sooooo good!!! Really I didnt know books like this could be printed unless it was like for penthouse (joking, its not like penthouse tho the book is a lot about sex). I read the stories in bed and thought of him!! He came to UCSB and we saw him and all my girls were oohmygod. No really this is a great book to read and I recommend it to everybody. The best and funnest story is the one Hueco and the one Bottoms about the amazon woman was my second favorite. There is this one about El Paso called Mayela One Day in 1989 that is so good I read it again right after I read it the first time. I agree that it is like reading a novel. I know the book it is a collection of stories but for me each story was more like chapter. For me I don't always like to read but I couldnt wait to read it at night. Its my favorite book now by a Chicano writer. So much of what people read by Latinos is only about our identity and only being different and some times that is boring. Its about time!! Maybe it is suppose to be about women but the author writes about being a male and not just a Latino. I felt like he was being honest. I am proud that I own the book and I would tell everybody to buy it.

Simply divine
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-12
Gilb wins me over every time:
"Night was not the synthetic black of the vinyl seating in the backseat of a taxi, not a gray of shade in a hot desert, but the pale fuzz of shadow, of whispered deals, of squinting visions he couln't attach words to, and sneaking into fantasy places he didn't have the ability to imagine." --'Snow'
His short stories are a fast read and quite the marvel.

a new fan
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-26
i am a new fan of this author. i just finished the stories in woodcuts of women and loved them even more than the ones in magic of blood. the person (a guy and probably not a latino) who wrote the review below is right about how good this book is but he is not about sandra cisneros or julia alvarez who we all have loved very much too, just like i do this new book of dagoberto gilb.

Short Stories
7 Gothic Tales
Published in Hardcover by Modern Library (1980-05-12)
Author: Isak Dinesen
List price: $9.95
Used price: $4.00
Collectible price: $15.00

Average review score:

The best book of short stoies in the world
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
To pick up Isak Dinesen's Seven Gothic Tales is to pick up one of the world's greatest literary masterpieces. Here in these seven stories we are presented with a universe that's compelling, beautiful and strange in a way that no other author has (in my opinion) ever equalled. If I was ever on a desert island and had one book I would hope it was this one.

If you enjoy stories by J. Sheridan Lefanu, Ray Bradbury, Hans Christian Anderson or Susanna Clarke, here you'll find similar ethereal qualities, but brought to a level of artistic beauty that surpasses everything that has been written before or since.

It is a mystery to me why this author is as little-known as she is - these tales represent, for me, the quintessential short fiction of the 20th Century.

Scheherazade-orama
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-08
dinesen/blixen was a true, living Scheherazade. this is an astounding collection of stories within stories within stories within stories. beautifully, elegantly written and set in various european locales, starring wonderfully alive characters straight out of fairytales, dreams and myth. these are strange, magical narratives (novellas, to be a stickler) with a modern sensibility. brimming with metaphors that will make you pause. kind of a cross between e.t.a. hoffman and a.s. byatt. definitely going to read more of her stuff.

Many layered tales
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 28 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-16
This is a demanding work of seven multilayered and esoteric stories in this, Dinesen's first book.

We know of Dinesen more commonly by way of Meryl Streep, who played Dinesen, or the Baroness Karen Blixen, in "Out of Africa." But the woman we find here as the author of these stories is no easily-understood, Hollywood character. Her stories within stories are rich in symbolism, imagination, and a "long ago and far away" feeling that is carefully, carefully, controlled by the author. Dinesen wrote some of these tales in Africa, and finished others along with ordering the book back home in Denmark, after her farm had failed. She wrote, interestingly, in English (and did her own translations back into Danish later on). Many books follow this one, including LAST TALES and, of course, OUT OF AFRICA. Dinesen, while the heroic, strong, individualist of Streep's portrayal, is also kind of strange, introspective, and fabulously bizarre. She uses her stories' plot lines as a means, one feels, to work out her life philosophies, reshape and recast ideas and symbolic imagery, and impart creative insights. After getting to about the fourth or fifth story, one can see that she uses the same imagery repeatedly and even the same turns of phrase.

I have read this volume at least once before, and wanted to go through it again knowing just that much more literature and biblical references. (It helps to be well read in the classics when reading Dinesen.) Anything is up for her use, and if you don't see it, something will be lost to you as you interpret the stories and what they meant, or even, what happened. She loves Shakespeare (OUT OF AFRICA was written in five sections, after the five-act structure of Shakespearian drama), and Don Giovanni, she has interesting ideas about femininity and independent women, and symbolizes these issues with women who are doll-like, women who seem as if they can fly, women who are witches in some way or another, etc. She likes to toy with the mind of God, as well, having characters pronounce his proclivities, likes and dislikes, etc., quite often. I found these to be some of the most interesting passages, after some of the gender-defining ones, that is. (She chose her pseudonym, "Isak," as it is Hebrew for "He who laughs" and she definitely plays with many ideas here, many humorously.)

Of the seven tales (The Old Chevalier, The Roads Round Pisa, The Monkey, The Supper at Elsinore, The Dreamers, The Poet, and The Deluge at Norderney), The Roads Round Pisa is my favorite, and I have studied it for a graduate class. In the book, a mistake is the central event, and we learn of it only at the end. Our main character, Count Augustus Von Schimmelmann, is writing a letter to a friend, when a carriage accident occurs in front of him. An old woman, who seemed at first to him to be a man, is injured and asks that he go and seek out her granddaughter so that she may forgive her for an estrangement before she dies, as she believes she will do shortly. Augustus sets out for Pisa and in an inn meets a young man, with whom he engages in an interesting conversation. Soon, however, he finds out that this man is a woman, and whereas before he had been asking "him" for help in finding his way into the city, now he offers her his assistance as a gentleman. Their subsequent conversation holds a particularly compelling passage I have never forgotten. In it, Dinesen explicates a concept of women's differences, physically, psychologically and societally, from men through the artful use of the host and guest metaphor.

This passage is a key to the story's mood when toward the end the mistake around which the characters swirl is revealed. But the passage is also an interesting philosophical and societal analogy that provokes thought and discussion. This is, then, quintessential Dinesen.

The other stories deal with identity and loss (The Dreamers), a ghost who is allowed to rise up from hell whenever the sound between Denmark and Sweden freezes over (Supper at Elsinore), the mirage of lost love (The Old Chevalier), poetry and power (The Poet), the societal roles of women (The Monkey), and identity (The Deluge at Norderney), but these are very brief and basic categorizations. One could safely say that all the stories deal with many of the others' main themes. The book as a whole is an excellent study of the power of fiction to suggest and manipulate, with beautiful, evocative writing and deep and stirring underlying meanings. I recommend it.

"Like an Echo in the Engulfing Darkness"
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-31

These are strangely compelling stories, all of which evoke a sense of mystery and poetry. Floods and monkeys, skulls and puppet shows, vie with each other and figure here in short works that are too realistic for fables but too bizarre to be mistaken for reality.

Gothic surrealism might be the best way to describe the tone achieved by the author, whose real name was Karen Blixen (made familiar to modern audiences by the film "Out of Africa"). This is a reissue of a volume that first appeared in 1934.

Borrowing the author's phrase, each story is "like an echo in the engulfing darkness." Atmospheric and brooding, these tales are part Poe and part Brothers Grimm. Exotic in characterization as well as setting, we are introduced to a polyglot collection of virgin nuns and wandering n'er do wells, who cling to rooftops and journey on rhino-horn laden dhows.

Escape from the ordinary world is promised and delivered, but somehow, the people in these stories also remind us of people we know and situations that might not be as straightforward as we have assumed. A scarf may not be a scarf. The wind may be more than the wind. A scarf blown in the wind recalls to one character the memory of a little white snake -- madness is hinted at, at every turn.

They are seven distinctive tales. Yet, the evocation of place, the depiction of eccentricity, the precariousness of life, suffuse them all. They are magnetic and memorable. Even so, some readers may find the tales a bit too weird for their tastes.

If you find this review helpful you might want to read some of my other reviews, including those on subjects ranging from biography to architecture, as well as religion and fiction.

Fired out of the canon?
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-21
Why isn't I. Dinesen's work more widely known and accepted in the modernist pantheon? Her reputation seems to have settled into that of oddball literary personality and vehicle for Meryl Streep, however the work itself would have eluded me, despite a decent education in high school and university (for example, I was given Hesse and Camus to read in 10th grade, why not Isak?)had I not been attracted to this title in a dusty library. The work is about as anti-Hollywood as I could possibly imagine. Perhaps the answer is, she is not really a modernist but some sort of high baroque romanticist belonging more in the 19th century world of German prose; the "layering of stories" effect, especially in "Roads to Pisa", reads like she is channeling the world of Jan Potocki, enigmatic author of "The Saragossa Manuscript," who like Casanova moved in that incredible world of the international bohemian intellectual elite that Rexroth describes so well somewhere in one of his essays; that world of post-chaises and midnight rendezvous and military officers with seemingly endless resources of money, brains, education and cunning ... in fact "Saragossa" and Casanova's "Memoirs" were the books that came to my mind as I read her...reading this stuff is like eating a chocolate eclair with a brain more powerful than yours will ever be...why aren't there writers like this anymore? Was it all only a dream?

Short Stories
Alone with the Horrors: The Great Short Fiction of Ramsey Campbell 1961-1991
Published in Hardcover by Tor Books (2004-05-01)
Author: Ramsey Campbell
List price: $27.95
New price: $15.40
Used price: $9.54

Average review score:

Not Free SF Reader
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-22
A lot of stories in here for a collection, 39 all told. When it says it is a collection of his short fiction, they really mean it. Most of the tales here are of around the ten page variety. The majority are done in a similar style and structure, barring his Mythos story to start.

He definitely goes in for succinct titles.

A lot of school stories and book industry related, as well, so obviously that is on his mind a lot. Apparently we can thank the horrors of those toffy pommie schools for some of this stuff.

Alone with the Horrors : The Room In the Castle - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Cold Print - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Scar - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Interloper - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Guy - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The End of a Summer's Day - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Man in the Underpass - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Companion - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Call First - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Heading Home - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : In the Bag - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Baby - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Chimney - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Stages - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Brood - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Loveman's Comeback - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Gap - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Voice of the Beach - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Out of Copyright - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Above the World - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Mackintosh Willy - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Show Goes On - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Ferries - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Midnight Hobo - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Depths - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Down There - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Fit - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Hearing Is Believing - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Hands - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Again - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Just Waiting - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Seeing the World - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Old Clothes - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Apples - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : The Other Side - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Where the Heart Is - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Boiled Alive - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : Another World - Ramsey Campbell
Alone with the Horrors : End of the Line - Ramsey Campbell


Byatis is bloody big.

3.5 out of 5


Whacker Revelations.

4 out of 5


Bricked.

3 out of 5


Poetry boy punishment.

3.5 out of 5


That's no dummy?

4 out of 5


Lost hubbie.

3.5 out of 5


Mouse sacrifice.

3.5 out of 5


Ghost train surprise.

3.5 out of 5


Skeletal nailer woman.

3 out of 5


Where's me noggin, then?

4 out of 5


Plastic stranger.

3.5 out of 5


Pram devil.

3 out of 5


Santa scare.

3.5 out of 5


It's a trip to not do it by myself.

3.5 out of 5


Moth problem.

3.5 out of 5


S3xual summoning.

4 out of 5


Blind alley.

3 out of 5


Transformation not looked forward to.

3.5 out of 5


Editorial summoning.

4 out of 5


Prefer indoors.

3 out of 5


No shelter left.

3.5 out of 5


Own advice no use.

3.5 out of 5


Very wet message in a bottle.

4 out of 5


Radio echo.

3 out of 5


True crime.

3 out of 5


Rattypuffs.

3.5 out of 5


Nekkid aunt will put you off for life.

3.5 out of 5


Greek daydream scare.

2.5 out of 5


Nun not handy.

3 out of 5


Flyblown Bungalow punishment.

4 out of 5


Wish the olds were gone.

3.5 out of 5


Sunken entertainment.

3 out of 5


Get jewellery with no appendages.

3.5 out of 5


Bobbing with the wrong crowd.

3.5 out of 5


Clown double axed.

4 out of 5


Home memories.

3 out of 5


Movie phone number pain.

3 out of 5


No Kingdom of God.

3 out of 5


Many voices.

2.5 out of 5




3.5 out of 5

Best Horror Anthology Ever!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-18
This is my all time favorite book. It is an anthology of several stories written by Ramsey Campbell from the sixties up to 1991. All of the stories are good but ones like Down There, Just Waiting, The Voice of the Beach, The Scar, and The Brood are truly brilliant. Mr. Campbell writes with a very surrealistic dream-like quality that is unique and compelling. There are Lovecraftian tales, ghost stories, and many that can't be put into any category but there own. Ramsey Campbell should be considered amoung the all time greats in horror fiction history, along with the likes of M.R. James, H.P. Lovecraft and Algernon Blackwood. You can't go wrong with this book if you like horror.

Some of the best ever
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-09
Ramsey Campbell has produced some of the greatest short horror stories ever written. Most of them are in this volumn.
Mostly Campbell is influenced by H P Lovecraft rather than explicit gore or gratuitous violence - although there are always exceptions! So his writing style is completely different from say Stephen King, but both are masters of short horror fiction in their different ways.

The stories within are as scary as horror fiction can get. Amongst my favourites are "In the Bag", and perhaps best of all "The Companion". You know how with some novels (King on occasions is an example) after reading through hundreds of pages you get to the end and think - is that it? I.e. the ending never quite leaves you satisfied despite the brilliance of the story telling before (again King). Well you won't get this with Campbell's short stories, his end with a punch, metaphorically a knock-out one to your head...

Another splendid volumn to get if this one becomes unavailable is Dark Companions which contains many of the same stories. You'll probably only get this 2nd hand but its worth searching out.

vVERY CREEPY
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-12
I love these types of horrors, this book is wonderfully written and provides page after page of chilling accounts. a horror I could really get into from first page to the last. I found to be very chilling and creepy and in likness to "12345 Are You Dead Or Still Alive?"

Campbell outdoes even King & Barker in my opinion!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-07
I bought this book on a whim, never having read anything by Ramsey Campbell before, and I was absolutely BLOWN AWAY with his writing style.

Campbell has a way of penning each of his stories in such a way that you literally feel like you're trapped in the story--trapped in a terrible nightmare that you can't wake up from! There is not a bad story in this book, and I soon found that I preferred Campbell over King and other hack-and-slash writers for two reasons: 1) There is not a lot of blood-and-guts gore in any of these stories, in most cases none at all, and 2) Campbell does not use a lot of four-letter words in his writings, something I found very appealing and refreshing. And yet every story is absolutely terrifying!

This collection is an absolute must for any serious horror fan. I highly recommend it to anyone who has never read Campbell before.

Short Stories
At Last There Is Nothing Left To Say
Published in Paperback by Insomniac Press (2000-09-01)
Author: Matthew Good
List price: $15.95
New price: $15.15
Used price: $15.15

Average review score:

EXCELLENT
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-24
man.. matt good is the best.. i already can't get enough of his music and now his writing is just... excellent... very enjoyable... go buy this book now!

at last
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-10
FINALLY AFTER ALL THIS TIME OF WONDERING WHY MATT SINGS ABOUT JENNI, MY QUESTIONS HAVE BEEN ASNWERED!

tHIS BOOK IS ABSOLUTLEY AMAZING, BUT HARRD FOR ME TO FIND WHERE I LIVE. IT SEEMED LIKE IT WAS CONSTANTLY SOLD OUT AT CHAPTERS SO I HAD NO CHOICE BUT TO ORDER IT. WELL WORTH IT FOR ANYONE WHO READS. EVEN BETTER FOR THE PEOPLE THAT DON'T LIKE READING CAUSE YOU ILL FINALLY BE INTERESTED

Brilliance on the Brink Of Insanity
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-25
A masterpiece for anyone who is a twisted as I am. What he says makes alot of unexpected sense and makes you think. Which I think is what he is always trying to do. We live in a "What's in it for me?" So Invest in this book if you know you're a little stranger than everyone else and enjoy it. For me it was worth every penny and the two months it took me to find it.

(Just a Note...the reviews that are on the back of the book were written by Matt himself.)

Pretty damned amazing
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-17
I've been a fan of Matthew Good for a little over a year now, ever since a friend introduced me to his music. Matthew Good Band broke up a while ago, but Mr. Good has pursued a 'solo' career, with a new band, but somewhat similar style. I can honestly say that I don't believe that Mr. Good has done a bad piece of work, written or otherwise

As mentioned in a few other reviews, various lyrics from Matthew Good/Band songs are mentioned in various places during the book, and there are even whole stories which relate to certain songs. It's very impressive. A casual reader would definitely be very confused with the book, but a fan like myself would most definitely enjoy it immensely. Not only are the stories well-written, but there are sporadic and seemingly random pictures which actually relate to certain parts of the story, or a comment on society.

Also, the book is not your conventional book. It's pretty much a paperback square shape, with large pages and medium-sized font. Anyway, that's enough. If you're a fan of Matthew Good, I'd advise you to order the book and enjoy it; if you're not, then start listening to the music.

the literature of being
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-28
At Last There is Nothing Left to Say is Matthew Good's (of The Matthew Good Band fame) first, and perhaps last, foray into the world of the written word. At Last There is Nothing Left to Say is not a complete novel, nor a series of novella, but rather, a collection of short 1-10 page stories of fictious accounts of Matthew's life and narratives of events in the lives of a host of characters. The novel is layed out in an interesting, dual-story fashion, where one will find major stories taking up 3/4 of the page, and smaller stories taking up 1/4 of the page. The smaller stories are more like manifestoes than short works of fiction, which give some insight into Matthew's delightfully twisted and cynical world view.

At Last There is Nothing Left to Say is not one solid, cohesive work, and it doesn't have a unifying central theme. Instead it makes a few statements on society, on the environment of the mind, and the dysfunctions of people. At Last There is Nothing Left to Say is an entertaining read that offers morbid and twisted insight into the minds of teenagers, rock stars, and sociopaths. And while it doesn't have all that much to say, it still manages to say alot.

Short Stories
Beanie Invasion
Published in Paperback by J.E.D. Universal Publishing, LLC (1997-09)
Author: Janie E. Daniels
List price: $15.00
Used price: $1.47

Average review score:

The best about beanies
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-17
A wonderful book. Helpful information for both newbies and experts alike. Written with a lot of humor and flair. And the pictures are lovely as well. Highly recommended!

GREAT TRIBUTE TO TY,INC
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-19
I LOVED THE BEANIE INVASION. Your online reviews made me decide to purchase it, and I've never regreted it! This book is fun, informative and an easy read! I did not put it down until I read the whole thing! Mrs. Daniels stories are unique, and cleverly written. The poem on the back cover was a great tribute to TY. I hope she writes another book soon. I strongly encourage everyone to purchase this title. It's NOT a pricing guide, it's not negative, it's not boring or hard to read, it's WONDERFUL! It's a book full of stories which all of us can relate too that includes humor, love and passion. I could only give this title 5 stars but it deserves 10. When I received my copy it came signed. I felt so special and then learned that she signs all of her copies, something else that proves she is a people person who cares about us the collectors. Mrs. Daniels - YOU GO GIRL!

A Delightful Piece of Writing.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-27
Ms. Janie has written the Beanie Invasion to inculde all of the collectors. Read this information packed book and laugh along as I did. This book will allow you to recall events you may have forgotten. I recently met Ms. Janie at a show, what a sweet woman. Not only was I impressed with her knowledge, I also loved her table setup which was geared towards children. I attend many shows and have never found any table to be packed with freebies for kids. Thanks Ms. Janie for remembering the kids are just as important! Keep writing and keep smiling, you are a beautiful person.

I love this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-10
This is a great book! If you love beanies, you'll love this book! It's da bomb!

A True Master Piece! No Beanie Collector should be without!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-12
If you want first hand encounters of the Beanie world! If you want researched articles with humor and truth! If you want to read from an HONEST Beanie expert, then you need to read the Beanie Invasion. After purchasing The Beanie Invasion, my family reads all of Ms. Janies articles. Ms. Janie is well respected and loved by the Beanie community. She apears on many websites and is a inspiration to us all. I would guess the reason why Ms. Janie is so popular, is because she tells it like it is and still remains human and kind to all. Ms. Janie is a fair reporter and we love her.

Short Stories
The Book of Mirdad: The Strange Story of a Monastery Which Was Once Called the Ark
Published in Paperback by Element Books (1992-11)
Author: Mikhail Naimy
List price: $12.95
New price: $47.99
Used price: $24.95

Average review score:

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-24
This book is very nice, it has universal philosophy, it has good explanation of in each chapter, it is best story. Language of this book is nonparallel. It is worth to reach such book and get inspiration.

A rare gem in the literary world.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-22
No mystic's library is complete without the Book of Mirdad.

The path to dissolving the self-conscious ego and beginning a new life free of faith, doubt, separation from existence and all other troubles is laid out in the form of an extensive zen koan as a novel. It gives the general ideas on finding rest for everyone who was caught up in the "normal" world finding their happiness in others, things, and situations, but being pained by the lack thereof or the loss of what one's reality was based on. It steadily points one in the right direction to finding oneself. Not the self one thinks one is because of where one is in life, or what one has, or who one has, but the original you.

It begins with the arrival of Mirdad in the monastery, much like Jesus in Jerusalem, finding fertile spiritual ground in the laity but having to fight with the leader of the monks who is mad with power and traditionalism, who under the cloak of piety has become filled with greed of profits, pride on accomplishments of material natures and other degenerate vices. Slowly but steadily the monks awake from the life they were living and begin to become at one with Mirdad and not just blind followers.

I needn't say more about the delightful work, simply buy the book and read it with an open heart.

5 Stars Not Enough
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-19
By far, this is the best book I have ever read! I loved it so much the first time I read it that I went out and bought 10 copies and gave them to friends and family. Unfortunately, and to my greatest surprise, not everyone got the profound message in this treasure of a book. Too bad I don't have a few of those copies to sell today seeing how much the going price is for this book. In truth, although I understand the high price since this is a priceless treasure of a book, I believe it should be priced for everyone to easily obtain a copy of it.

My wife and I have read it numerous times over the years and we held it as our primary book of wisdom for our morning discourses together for years.

There is no book like this. It takes you on a journey from the first sentence and peaks at the very last word, only to continue with you changed forever for having finished it.

One of Ten Best Books of the World
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-16
This book is rare and mysterious. The more one reads it the more one gets enthralled how such a work can exist. Its a lighthouse for those on the path. I myself read it innumerable times and still I can read it again.
It is universal,mysterious and does not belong to any particular ideology. Its beauty is in its mystery. Its sweetness is in its love. Its depth is in the secrets its contains. I give it five stars and more. If you are lucky the book will find you.

New Age From the Mouth of An Arab
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-22

Apparently the author appreciates his early upbringing as a Christian who was immersed in the Arabic Bible. From there he patterns his new "gospel" in which he preaches reincarnation, transmigration of souls and all the New Age stuff. He tries to get Mirdad, the hero, to mimic Jesus' teaching style but here everybody is a god and god is everybody, mesh-mash. I enjoy some of the sayings in Arabic, some challege me to see beyond what is my longstanding faith, while others just make me shake my head. In some ways, I felt that the author is trying so hard to mimic the style of Jesus but in order to show how New Age is superior. I personally would prefer to listen to Jesus Christ in His own style and in His own words, and never to a parody of his teaching. timothyabraham@gmail.com

Short Stories
Caspian Rain
Published in Hardcover by MacAdam Cage (2007-09-14)
Author: Gina Nahai
List price: $25.00
New price: $14.25
Used price: $12.79
Collectible price: $29.95

Average review score:

Gorgeous
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-18
With lush prose and surgical precision, Nahai examines pre-revolutionary Iran, a country hobbled by a social system so oppressive it crushes every one within it. Muslims and Jews live side by side, and each of their worlds is as socially stratified as the other. The novel is narrated by the young daughter of a wealthy Jew and her penniless mother, and she details their increasing desperation as her father falls in love with a Muslim woman. His abandonment of them leaves them emotionally bereft and socially isolated in a world that has no place for them. Brilliant and affecting. You will think about this novel for days after reading it.

A Book You Can't Put Down
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-17
Gina Nahai is one the most creative and literate authors working today and should find a regular place on the bestseller lists for her impressive storytelling talent. Her exquisite writing and character development never fails to keep me coming back for more.

Once I started reading "Caspian Rain" I couldn't put it down. Without giving away too much of the story, all I can say is that Ms. Nahai captures your interest with her complex and fascinating characters examined and described in her exquisite prose. You feel the heart and soul of the characters and every moment and situations resonates that much more deeply. I love to read anything Ms. Nahai writes and look forward to her next novel. I highly recommend "Caspian Rain" to anyone who loves to be drawn into a story that takes you to a place about universal themes dealing with real human emotions of loss and acceptance.

Caspian Rain: A literary masterpiece
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-14
"Caspian Rain" by Gina Nahai is a true literary masterpiece and one of the most beautifully written, insightful, touching, and stirring novels of our time. Set in pre-revolutionary Iran, Nahai tells the story of a young girl named Yaas, who faces the tragedy of slowly going deaf at the age of ten and watches in silence and fear while her parents marriage falls apart at the seams. Nahai captures the character of Yaas, who narrates the story, and manages beautifully to express Yaas' sadness, desperation, and incredible wisdom. Nahai's writing style is not only magical and poetic, but she manages to be straightforward in her plot scheme and make the readers feel as if they are sitting in Yaas' bedroom as she whispers her tales into their ears. Nahai's "Caspian Rain" is one of the rare novels one will find that has the power to change lives, touch hearts, and make a difference. This novel hardly falls short of perfection and should be read by all.

Caspian Rain
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-15
A hidden treasure. A fabulous story with a shocking ending. These characters stayed with me for days.

unforgettable
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-14
Reading Caspian Rain, by Gina Nahai, is like opening a golden treasure chest. Inside it, you will find all kinds of intriguing and fascinating objects. There are several interconnected stories being told . First there is the heartbreaking story of an innocent little girl, Yaas, who desperately longs for the love of her parents. In reading the book, the reader can feel her anguish, as she tries every which way to be noticed and loved. There is the story of the intelligent and ambitious Bahar, Yaas's mother, a story in which the reader can actually taste the bitterness that Bahar is left with, when she realizes that she cannot conquer any of the barriers that will forever keep her from realizing any of her dreams. There is the story of Omid, an emotionally stunted man who, while being the son of privilege, has come from a community which, as a result of being faced with deep prejudices, has had to downplay its' ethnicity and become self loathing . Finally, there are the very rich descriptions of the sounds, sights and smells of Tehran, a fourth character in the novel; a bustling city where the contradictions between the old and the new are funny, tragic and endless. The book was truly unforgettable.

Short Stories
Collected Short Stories of Roald Dahl
Published in Paperback by Penguin Books (1992-06)
Author: Roald Dahl
List price: $32.95
New price: $19.42
Used price: $13.25

Average review score:

The Everyman's Roald Dahl review!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-31
Once again! the Everyman's Library has outdone any other publisher's job of creating a thorough and precise piece of book history. This is the third book I have purchased and read through Everyman's Library and I sincerely feel their books are the only ones I will buy when creating my own hardcover collection. The quality of paper, the texture of the outer red cover, the beauty of the chronological timeline of events in the author's life, they not only think of it all, but go so far beyond what is called for in a $20 book. If I were a tree that died in the name of paper, I would only hope my flesh would go towards another Everyman's success.
On to Roald Dahl. Best writer Ever. Best collection Ever. Best stories I have Ever read. Best organization of stories contained within a single volume. This book is Paper Gold. My favorite writer and my favorite book publish company smooshed into a magnificent creation that is the perfect size for the average human; hand and lap!!! Touch the hard cover. Feel it upon your cheek. Smell the pages... In the name of all that is holy!

Dahl makes you laugh and...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-10
forces you to look in the mirror. I was introduced to Dahl by my 8th grade English teacher who saw something very dark inside of me (yes, another plug for better teacher pay!). "Pig" gave me nightmares, "Skin" made me wonder about the greed of human beings. What's missing are the "My Uncle Oswald" stories, but this collection is absolutely priceless!

Splendid book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-11
Excellent book from all points of view. Sewn edition, bound and quality of printing. I have another edition of Roald Dahl but unfortunately it's a paperback edition and the pages disappear one after another. I decided never to buy again paperback books. When I saw that Roald Dahl was published in Everyman's Library I immediately decided to order it and I am more than happy with what I received. It's very good for work with my students and I will leave it to my children as well. Many thanks to the publishers.

A great collection of Roald Dahl's short stories!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-11
I actually have a compendium of Roald Dahl's stories in a different edition but when I came across this edition with the inimitable Mr Dahl on the cover I had to buy it. It is a lovely edition that collects all of Dahl's short stories in one book, and I love the fact that it comes with a lovely red satin page marker! A great addition to any library.

Greatest Writer Ever
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-06
This collection of stories by Roald Dahl is great. He was one of the best and entertaining writers that composed such original work. I have read some of his stories more than once. I read them and when I am in the mood I pick them up again and read them again. I highly recommend these to anyone who especially has never read anything by Mr. Dahl.


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