Synopses & Reviews
Reviews for Eileen Gunn's stories:
"Corporate satire and Kafkaesque metamorphoses gleefully collide."Seattle Times
"Reading this book is like getting to wear the eyeballs of a madwoman in your own sockets for a day."Warren Ellis
Stories from Eileen Gunn are always a cause for celebration. Where will she lead us? "Up the Fire Road" to a slightly alternate world. Into steampunk's heart. Never where we might expect.
Eileen Gunn is the author of the collection Stable Strategies and Others. She has received the Nebula and the (Japanese) Sense of Gender awards. She lives in Seattle, Washington.
Review
Reviews for Eileen Gunns stories:
"Corporate satire and Kafkaesque metamorphoses gleefully collide."
Seattle Times
"Without Eileen Gunn, life as we know it would be so dull we wouldnt recognize it. Among the five or six North Americans currently able to write short stories, she has not written anywhere near enough."
Ursula K. Le Guin
Reading this book is like getting to wear the eyeballs of a madwoman in your own sockets for a day. Nothings going to look the same.”
Warren Ellis
Gunns stories are like perfect little bullets, or maybe firecrackers. When you read Gunn, you remember that short fiction can be spare, beautiful, and deadly.”
Kelly Link
Eileen Gunn cant make herself write enough fiction. Encourage her by reading this right away.”
Bruce Sterling
Fresh, unusual perspectives on ordinary life.”
Publishers Weekly
Review
io9 Best of the Year: "Gunn's talent for the surreal and bizarre is pressed into the service of exploring how our own subjectivity, and the ways we construct our selves, help to imprison us."
"The best of the stories in Eileen Gunns collection Questionable Practices also subvert expectations, taking tropes of fantasy and science fiction and turning them on their head. Elves emerge at the start of one story, only to bring violence rather than enchantment with them; two campers encounter with a sasquatch moves from the uncanny and into the romantic. Certain stories riff on existing stories and settings, from Star Trek to Bas-Lag, and these didnt click quite as much for me. But when this book does click, it does so impressively, bringing with it an impressive sense of wonder."
Tobias Carroll, Vol. 1, Brooklyn
"True to form, Gunn's new book, Questionable Practices, contains a number of sardonically weird looks at the future and the strangeness of corporate culture. But her insatiable eye for weirdness branches out this time around, featuring a number of different takes on the fantastical.
There is also a good deal of silliness in Questionable Practices, which should be welcomed by anyone who's gotten tired of the pervasive stiff upper lip in SF and fantasy of late. From outright spoofs to metafictional pranks to sarcastic mischief, Gunn is constantly winking at the reader, while also packing tons of clever ideas. And just when you least expect it, she drops a serious truth bomb."
Charlie Jane Anders, io9.com
"This is an excellent collection. The stories each feel fresh and different, both from one another and from anything else being written today. Sometimes funny, sometimes heartbreaking, always meticulously crafted and brilliantly written, this collection is excellent work from a master of the short story. SF Revu
"Its always good news to get a new Gunn collection, and its always bad news that they come so infrequently."
Locus
"Gunns stories spin ideas done up with sharp edges; they hijack pop-culture favorites and redirect the actors within; they draw for us a series of what-ifs that carry reader and characters away into the dark, there, perhaps, to breed more ideas."
NYRSF
"Nebula-winner Gunn combines humor and compassion in 17 short, intricate gems that showcase her many talents. Of particular note among these outstanding works are the poem To the Moon Alice,” in which a bombastic threat provides escape from comedic domestic violence, and Michael Swanwick and Samuel R. Delany at the Joyce Kilmer Service Area, March 2005,” an affectionate fable-like tribute to two legendary authors. Up the Fire Road” provides dueling accounts of triadic romance and problematic parentage. Phantom Pain” is a kaleidoscopic examination of a wounded soldiers life. Though Gunn first saw print in the 1970s, this short collection contains a surprisingly large portion of her stories; her rate of publication has recently been increasing, giving fans reason to hope for many more delights to come."
Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"The overwhelming mood is darkly comic science fictionlike a strange blend of Terry Gilliam and Margo Lanagan. Teen fans of either or both of those geniuses would do well to turn to Gunn for a similarly unique ride. Her prose is vividly off-kilter, her plots memorable and usually hilarious, and her characters recognizable even when they are tropes. And even though nothing is quite what it seems in these stories, the authors firm grip on dream logic makes everything feel meaningful, even when it doesnt quite make sense."
School Library Journal, Adult Books for Teens
'Phantom Pain' is short and terrible and breathtaking in its ambition and its achievement. It takes the idea of a phantom limb, the way the nerves continue to sense an arm or leg that has been amputated, and expands the notion just a little bit. It tells of a man wounded in war who continues to relive the pain of that vivid moment throughout the rest of his life, so that the jungle track where he was shot and the library where he works or the marital home or the hospital where he ends up become indistinguishable. Pain and memory take away the shape of a life. It is a story that owes nothing to anyone else, it opens up entirely new perspectives for the reader, and if an entire collection made up of such stories might be unendurable, still it shows how much Eileen Gunn can achieve when she lets herself go in new directions."
Paul Kincaid, Los Angeles Review of Books
Reviews for Eileen Gunns stories:
"Corporate satire and Kafkaesque metamorphoses gleefully collide."
Seattle Times
"Without Eileen Gunn, life as we know it would be so dull we wouldnt recognize it. Among the five or six North Americans currently able to write short stories, she has not written anywhere near enough."
Ursula K. Le Guin
Reading this book is like getting to wear the eyeballs of a madwoman in your own sockets for a day. Nothings going to look the same.”
Warren Ellis
Gunns stories are like perfect little bullets, or maybe firecrackers. When you read Gunn, you remember that short fiction can be spare, beautiful, and deadly.”
Kelly Link
Eileen Gunn cant make herself write enough fiction. Encourage her by reading this right away.”
Bruce Sterling
Fresh, unusual perspectives on ordinary life.”
Publishers Weekly
Synopsis
Trains that go to unexpected places. A steampunk quartet. Stories that shake the tree. Stories that question normal practices.
Synopsis
Good intentions arent everything. Sometimes things dont quite go the way you planned. And sometimes you dont plan. . . . This collection of sixteen stories (and one lonely poem) chart the many ways trouble can ensue. No actual human beings were harmed in the creation of this book.
Stories from Eileen Gunn are always a cause for celebration. Where will she lead us? "Up the Fire Road" to a slightly alternate world. Four stories into steampunks heart. Into a very strange family gathering as they celebrate Christmas. Into the golem's heart. Never where we might expect.
About the Author
Eileen Gunn is the author of the story collection
Stable Strategies and Others and the co-editor of
The WisCon Chronicles Two. Her fiction has received the Nebula Award and the (Japanese) Sense of Gender Award. She is the editor/publisher of the late
Infinite Matrix. She lives in Seattle, WA.
Table of Contents
Up the Fire Road
Chop Wood, Carry Water
No Place to Raise Kids
The Trains that Climb the Winter Tree
To the Moon Alice
Speak, Geek
Hive Mind Man
Thought Experiment
Shed That Guilt!
The Steampunk Quartet:
A Different Engine
Day After the Cooters
The Perdido Street Project
Internal Devices
The Armies of Elfland
Michael Swanwick and Samuel R. Delany at the Joyce Kilmer Service Area, March 2005
Zeppelin City