The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales of Dolls, by Ellen Datlow
Are you really a follower of this The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales Of Dolls, By Ellen Datlow If that's so, why do not you take this book now? Be the very first person that like and also lead this book The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales Of Dolls, By Ellen Datlow, so you can get the reason as well as messages from this publication. Never mind to be puzzled where to obtain it. As the various other, we discuss the connect to go to as well as download the soft file ebook The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales Of Dolls, By Ellen Datlow So, you might not lug the published book The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales Of Dolls, By Ellen Datlow everywhere.
The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales of Dolls, by Ellen Datlow
Read Online and Download The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales of Dolls, by Ellen Datlow
The Doll Collection is exactly what it sounds like: a treasured toy box of all-original dark stories about dolls of all types, including everything from puppets and poppets to mannequins and baby dolls. Featuring everything from life-sized clockwork dolls to all-too-human Betsy Wetsy-type baby dolls, these stories play into the true creepiness of the doll trope, but avoid the clichés that often show up in stories of this type.Master anthologist Ellen Datlow has assembled a list of beautiful and terrifying stories from bestselling and critically acclaimed authors such as Joyce Carol Oates, Seanan McGuire, Carrie Vaughn, Pat Cadigan, Tim Lebbon, Richard Kadrey, Genevieve Valentine, and Jeffrey Ford. The collection is illustrated with photographs of dolls taken by Datlow and other devoted doll collectors from the science fiction and fantasy field. The result is a star-studded collection exploring one of the most primal fears of readers of dark fiction everywhere, and one that every reader will want to add to their own collection. Stories in this anthology by: Stephen Gallagher, Joyce Carol Oates, Gemma Files, Pat Cadigan, Lucy Sussex, Tim Lebbon, Seanan McGuire, Carrie Vaughn, Stephen Graham Jones, Miranda Siemienowicz, Mary Robinette Kowal, Richard Bowes, Genevieve Valentine, Richard Kadrey, Veronica Schanoes, John Langan, Jeffrey Ford
The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales of Dolls, by Ellen Datlow- Amazon Sales Rank: #1105354 in Books
- Brand: Datlow, Ellen (EDT)
- Published on: 2015-03-10
- Released on: 2015-03-10
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 9.54" h x 1.19" w x 6.30" l, 1.09 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 352 pages
About the Author
Multiple-award-winning editor ELLEN DATLOW has been editing science fiction, fantasy, and horror short fiction for almost thirty years. She was fiction editor of OMNI magazine and SciFiction and has edited more than fifty anthologies.
Where to Download The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales of Dolls, by Ellen Datlow
Most helpful customer reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful. If you buy any one speculative anthology this month, it should be The Doll Collection. By Bibliotropic .net Dolls. You either like them or they creep you out on some level. Miniature humans in plastic or porcelain, they have a place in just about everyone’s lives. At some point in your life, you probably owned a doll, whether it was some collectible item you put on a shelf and admired from afar, or a hand-sewn ragdoll that was loved to death over the years. They’ve touched us, as individuals and as a culture. And The Doll Collection takes us on a spine-tingling ride through numerous short stories all about them, but with one proviso: no stories about “evil dolls.” It’s a fallback. The doll possessed by a malicious ghost demon or that steals the soul of is owner or some such cliché. There’s none of that here. All stories involve dolls in some way or another, and all are creepy, but there’s no fallback on old and tired themes, and that gives this collection a wonderfully fresh and original feeling.As always, some stories were stronger than others, but impressively, all the stories here were quite strong, and even when I didn’t expect to enjoy them so much due to prior experience with some authors’ works, I ended up surprised and impressed by how much I really did like what I read. Just goes to show that sometimes first impressions can be dead wrong, and I love being confronted with that when it yields new good fiction to read! But there were some amazing stories here, some true gems of the genre!Seanan McGuire’s There is No Place for Sorrow in the Kingdom of the Cold is probably the best example of this, and a stand-out offering in this anthology. Taking beautiful and expensive ball-jointed dolls and turning them into something powerful and ancient and disturbing was a stroke of genius, especially the way she did it, and I would pick up this book for that story alone! Trigger warning: there’s physical abuse from a too-smug [expletive] in this story, so it may well turn your stomach in some places, but the revenge ending was quite satisfying. Beautiful, dark, and haunting.But Joyce Carol Oates’s The Doll Master? Miranda Siemienowicz‘s After and Back Before? Richard Bowes’s Doll Court? Lucy Sussex’s Miss Sibyl-Cassandra? All amazing stories, all a treat to read! Mary Robinette Kowal’s Doctor Faustus is the very reason that I’ve thought I couldn’t swear allegiance to any gods or demons while acting; you never know what will happen as a result. Pat Cadigan’s In Case of Zebras shows why sometimes the young sees things that adults brush off, and why they should be paying attention.I think it’s the sheer variety of stories here that really makes the collection shine. When you give people a limitation in what they can write, it forces a stretch of the imagination, forces one to think outside the box, and you can get some wonderful creative and varied stories as a result. That’s the joy of The Doll Collection. Every story may involve dolls, to a greater or smaller degree, but that’s the only thing that connects them besides a general feel of the supernatural or macabre. It’s prefect for a quick dip into many authors’s writing styles, what they can do with words and a connecting theme, and I loved it.If you buy any one anthology this month, it ought to be this one. There’s very little to be disappointed by and so many things to impress you, whether you’re a fan of dark fiction, the supernatural, or just damn good stories. Datlow worked wonders with this idea and the selection of submitted stories, and the authors pulled out all the stops to make this a fantastic collection. Highly recommended for those nights when the rain is pouring, the wind is howling, and you want a little more tingle in your spine.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful. Even if dolls don't generally give you the creeps, they might after you read this collection! By misplaced cajun From dolls as vessels (for spirits, emotions, and other) and figurative dolls of another sort to poppets that can help heal and word dolls to watch out for, Ellen Datlow has collected an anthology of truly creeptastic tales. For anyone with even minor pediophobia this set of stories is likely to leave you cowering in the corner and looking at even the most innocent of kewpies with suspicion.Here's the full Table of Contents:Skin and Bone by Tim LebbonHeroes and Villains by Stephen GallagherThe Doll-Master by Joyce Carol OatesGaze by Gemma FilesIn Case of Zebras by Pat CadiganThere Is No Place For Sorrow in the Kingdom of the Cold by Seanan McGuireGoodness and Kindness by Carrie VaughnDaniel's Theory About Dolls by Stephen Graham JonesAfter and Back Before by Miranda SiemienowiczDoctor Faustus by Mary Robinette KowalDoll Court by Richard BowesVisit Lovely Cornwall on the Western Railway Line by Genevieve ValentineAmbitious Boys Like You by Richard KadreyMiss Sibyl-Cassandra by Lucy SussexThe Permanent Collection by Veronica SchanoesHomemade Monsters by John LanganWord Doll by Jeffrey FordSo unless we're talking the obviously meant to be creepy doll from Annabelle (did you know the REAL Annabelle was a Raggedy Ann doll?) dolls don't generally give me the heebie jeebies. But some of the dolls in this collection sure do! A few of my personal favorites: Jeffrey Ford's "Word Doll," which combines folklore and middle American farming (Ford is a character within the story as well), "Miss Sibyl-Cassandra" by Lucy Sussex was infinitely fun, and Richard Kadrey's "Ambitious Boys Like You" was, as Datlow promised in her O&F Podcast, particularly nasty!(If you're a fan of anthologies, Datlow is probably a name you'll recognize. She's made a career out of culling shorts to create the annual Best Horror of the Year anthologies as well as numerous collections like this one. Anton Strout featured her on the Once and Future Podcast a couple of weeks ago, giving readers like me a chance to hear more about what she does and her process for putting together an anthology. I highly recommend checking that out.)
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. A Collection Well Worth Your Attention By Orrin Grey I didn't actually get to read all the stories in this book before I had to move on to some other stuff for various reasons, but I read enough to know that it's an impressive collection. Anyone who knows Ellen at all knows that this is kind of the collection she was born to edit, and it shows. I'm personally a little saddened by the prohibition against "evil" dolls, because I do love a good evil/possessed doll story, but I understand why it would be necessary, and I think it did push some of the authors to stretch outside of what you might generally find in an anthology with this theme. Standouts for me included "Gaze" by the always-reliable Gemma Files and "Daniel's Theory of Dolls" by Stephen Graham Jones.
See all 17 customer reviews... The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales of Dolls, by Ellen DatlowThe Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales of Dolls, by Ellen Datlow PDF
The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales of Dolls, by Ellen Datlow iBooks
The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales of Dolls, by Ellen Datlow ePub
The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales of Dolls, by Ellen Datlow rtf
The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales of Dolls, by Ellen Datlow AZW
The Doll Collection: Seventeen Brand-New Tales of Dolls, by Ellen Datlow Kindle
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar