6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
among his best, July 30 2010
By C. Manucy "babilary" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Fugue State (Paperback)
Ever since I read "Mudder Tongue" in McSweeney's quarterly, which is included in this collection, Brian Evenson has been one of my favorite authors. I've since read the story collection Altman's Tongue, and two of his novels, The Open Curtain, and Last Days.
His stories are often grim or violent, yet not gratuitous, and leavened by a quirky sense of humor. From the first sentence, he can grab the reader and pull them into a hypnotic world--which lingers after the story is done. Evenson has an amazing ability to take a very good story and turn it into a great story within a paragraph at the end, as he does in "The Accounting". His collection, Fugue State, is highly recommended.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A literate, fascinating, unsettling, and eerie successor to Edgar Allan Poe, Nov 9 2011
By Joshua Mauthe - Published on Amazon.com
I've been a fan of Evenson's work ever since reading the surreal, nightmarish Last Days, and Fugue State is just another reminder why that fandom is justified. Describing Evenson's beautiful and oddly unsettling prose is hard to do - it's like some fusion of Cormac McCarthy and Edgar Allan Poe, with emphasis on Poe's unreliably fractured narration and the psychological turning of the screws he so enjoyed. Fugue State is, in some ways, the "easiest" of Evenson's collections I've read; the stories are generally more straightforward, but even so, reality is hard to come by in Evenson's work, and sanity even harder. The stories here take on everything from a reluctant post-apocalyptic cult leader (the pitch-black religious satire "An Accounting") to a plague of amnesia (the unsettling and surreal "Fugue State"), and whatever the subject, Evenson has a way of provoking responses from the reader you'll never expect. Look, for example, as "Invisible Box," a story about a woman whose one-night stand with a mime leaves her convinced that he's left his invisible box at her house. The story sounds like it should be funny (and, to be fair, parts of it made me laugh out loud), but Evenson manages to take the situation and craft a story of a woman losing her mind out of it, ending on a creepily ambiguous note that sucks all the whimsy from the situation. Others, like "Alfons Kuylers," feel like a Poe story he never wrote, all the way to the chilling slow burn as both the reader and the character start to understand exactly what's going on. With his perfect prose, psychological games, and unsettling imagery, Evenson is a literary horror writer like no other, and it saddens me that so much of his work goes without notice right now. It's unlikely you'll ever read much like Evenson; if you haven't started, jump in now.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great bunch of short stories, Nov 15 2011
By Paul A. Duval - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Fugue State (Paperback)
I found this book to be dark and interesting. Themes of paranoia, amnesia, and loss abound. Lots of fun. Also, the short stories provide a lot of flexibility if you don't have a ton of time to read, while maintaining a constant theme throughout.