5.0 out of 5 stars
Just buy it., Sep 11 2003
This review is from: Candles for Elizabeth (Paperback)
Caitlin R. Kiernan, Candles for Elizabeth (MM Publishing, 1998)
MM Publishing, aka Meisha Merlin Publications, has quietly become one of the driving forces in publishing the cutting edge in fantasy and horror. Fantasy fans will probably recognize the name; the same company put out the painfully expensive (and just as gorgeous) limited editions of George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire novels a few years back, but their origins were not nearly so bold. Candles for Elizabeth, a chapbook-sized short story collection from uberauthor Cait Kiernan, was one of their first offerings. And damn and blast, is it a fine one.
Kiernan is one of the new generation of "horror of absence" authors, a realm populated by such luminaries as Patrick McGrath, Kathe Koja, and Lucius Shepard. While Koja takes her best inspiration from Andre Breton, Shepard worships at the altar of H. Rider Haggard, and McGrath has spent more time ('twould seem) browsing through the works of Agatha Christie, Kiernan's influence is the most logical for a genre like this--Sartre and his contemporaries. The dreck being spewed out by such hallowed authors as Bret Easton Ellis and Jay McInerney is not the new generation of existentialist fiction. Cait Kiernan is.
If Sartre were alive and writing Roads to Freedom today, one could probably find the characters in these three stories in the fringes. They wouldn't be main characters; Sartre was too wrapped up in the petit bourgeois to have given these folks more than a couple of paragraphs of screen time. But he would have been fascinated with them, just as we are today; the homeless, the outcasts, those who live on the fringes of society, taking nothing from it, but willing to give in return if anyone would allow them to. Poppy Z. Brite writes in her introduction to this collection that the characters therein "would still love to believe in magic and happiness, but don't dare let themselves." Indeed.
In "The Last Child of Lir," three homeless twentysomethings, one of them dying of an unspecified disease (Kiernan hints that it might be pneumonia), are referred to an abandoned warehouse by a crack-addicted acquaintance as a place to spend a few days out of the cold. "A Story for Edward Gorey" is also of the homeless-person variety, this one a nineteen-year-old butch lesbian obsessed with a purple curtain in an upstairs window, and the things she finds when she finally is allowed to venture behind it. "Postcards from the King of Tides," the most "traditional" horror story in the bunch (it bears the scars of Bradbury's "Something Wicked This Way Comes," by way of Koja?s The Cipher) doesn't tell us if its protagonists are homeless, as they're on a roadtrip. In all three cases, the events of the stories are designed to give us, though not the characters themselves, insight into their own humanity more than they are to scare. That what they find in their dreams and introspections is not that much different than what the characters in such would-be existentialist writers as Ellis find is beside the point (and, in fact, becomes somewhat admirable given the method of delivery); it?s how they come about the knowledge, and whether they know enough to grasp what they see, that counts.
One of the things that makes Kiernan's characters so attractive in the horror milieu is that they're not your typical horror story protagonist; these are the kids horror fans have been waiting for for thirty years, the ones who grew up in a post-Night of the Living Dead world. They're not scared by the usual mean-and-nasties, as (for some odd reason) most horror story protagonists still are. Kiernan's characters, like those of Koja, McGrath, Thomas Ligotti, et al. before her, are scared by what's inside, not what's outside. And that makes all the difference. **** 1/2
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4.0 out of 5 stars
I'm greedy ~ I want more!, Dec 26 2002
This review is from: Candles for Elizabeth (Paperback)
Candles for Elizabeth is a thin chapbook containing barely 60 pages of fiction (a few of the pages consist of introductions, the table of contents, etc). It's a bit pricey but it is oversized and has a glossy, creepy cover with gorgeous fonts instead of the standard drek found on most covers. Still, the text within is what I'm paying for and I can't help wishing there had been more of it.
The chapbook contains three short stories. One is an original written for the collection and two are reprints. All of the stories are difficult to synopsize. They're more like quick glimpses into these character lives than a by-the-numbers horror story and are told in a dream-like voice. The author relies on her wounded young characters and well-drawn atmosphere to tell the story and deftly holds back allowing the reader to use their own imagination. Her style takes some getting used to and probably isn't for everyone but I had no problem with it. There are no bloated sentences here and no unnecessary words. Personally, I found it a relief. The less bloat the better if you ask me. These stories aren't horrific in the traditional sense but they'll linger and haunt if you read closely.
Of all of the stories my personal favorite was "A Story for Edward Gorey". It was genuinely chilling. Everything from the oppressive heat, to the almost overwhelming feeling of loneliness and desperation comes vividly alive.
After reading The Last Child of Lir, a story the author says is a companion piece to two of her others, I had the urge to track down the other two stories. Although the characters and the grief-laden tale drew me in, I felt like I was missing something and needed more insight into these people and their lives. As written, this story didn't entirely stand-alone for me.
The final story, Postcards From the King of Tides, takes the reader on a road trip that takes a turn for the weird when the car breaks down and two of its curious occupants discover an odd sideshow. Odd and creepy. What more does one need?
More stories would've rated this book five stars but for five dollars (plus shipping) it was a tad too slight for the money. Still, I enjoyed it while it lasted and am left longing for more.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
a good place to start, Nov 23 2001
This review is from: Candles for Elizabeth (Paperback)
Although two full-length collections of Caitlin Kiernan's short stories are available (as well as two novels), this chapbook is a good place for the uninitiated to start. It contains three of her short stories, including one that was chosen for Best New Horror. Creepy, creepy good.
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