7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
FAST SHIPS, BLACK SAILS EDITED BY ANN AND JEFF VANDERMEER, Jan 18 2009
By Alexandro C. Telander "Alex C. Telander" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Fast Ships, Black Sails (Paperback)
While this may not be the first pirate story anthology, Fast Ships, Black Sails doesn't hold back, with its captivating cover featuring a classic pirate standing proud at the prow of his ship, while small glowing-eye dragons fly around, a tiny dragon skeleton sits on his shoulder, and in the cloudy distance is what appears to be a ghost pirate ship. This collection edited by Ann and Jeff VanderMeer features a combination of classic swashbuckling pirate tales, as well as fascinating stories of the fantastic from authors like Conrad Williams, Garth Nix, Elizabeth Bear, and many more.
In the opening story, "Boojum" from Elizabeth Bear and Sarah Monette - possibly the best in the collection - we are in space, and the mighty spaceships are living entities that grow and change and have mouths; they are biomechanical. The authors do an excellent job of creating an interesting world that leaves the reader wanting more. In Naomi Novik's -- author of the successful Temeraire series - "Araminta, or, The Wreck of the Amphidrake," the daughter of a very important noble is kidnapped by pirates and thought murdered, but Araminta is a special woman with some unique powers allowing her to outwit the pirates who have taken her hostage. In Michael Moorcock's too short story "Ironface," there are pirates in space and Ironface is the most feared in the solar system, who makes the trip to Venus to accept the expensive bribe that he collects each decade, then his ship, Pain, floats back out into the dark realms of space.
Fast Ships, Black Sails has the perfect pirate story for any reader, as it presents both the classic and the unusual stories of privateers and buccaneers sailing the high seas, as well as the dark matter clouds of the cosmos.
Find more reviews, as well as a selection of my writing, and a link to the book review podcast BookBanter at www.alexctelander.com.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
A little gold, a little dross, Aug 14 2009
By John Middleton - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Fast Ships, Black Sails (Paperback)
Its difficult to rate an anthology, as the stories are rarely of uniform quality, for obvious reasons. Out of the 20-odd tales here, there are 5 or 6 I truly enjoyed, 2 or 3 I skimmed over out of duty, and the balance were readable, if you had time to kill.
Pirates of all types are found in this collection: space pirates, ice pirates, supernatural pirates, pirate pirates, and last but by no means least, rat pirates.
Boojum, the opening tale by Bear and Monette is one of the best in the book, but I also found Garth Nix and Naomi Novik did sterling work also. Suara Sea by Flint and Freer was fun, but my favourite story was "A cold day in hell" by Paul Batteiger. The imagery conjured up by that tale was superb and its setting unique: to call it Pirates on Ice is not to spoil the story but hopefully to intrigue. The world found in that story could support a whole novel, if not a series of them.
The nonsense tale "The Adventures of Captain Black Heart Wentworth" by Rachel Swirsky was also great fun, but sadly unfilmable, save by Pixar. Thats not to say a story should be filmable to be a success, but I challenge the reader not to regret being unable to see that tale on the big screen.
For the price, there are books of uniformly higher quality available, but as far as anthologies go, this is a solid one, assuming you like pirates (and if you don't, you should).
A great gift for talk like a pirate day, or to any Pastafarians who hold pirates in reverance.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Some great stories, April 12 2009
By rooreads - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Fast Ships, Black Sails (Paperback)
Naomi Novik's name drew me to this anthology, since I like her Temeraire series so much, but the standout story of this collection is the first one, BOOJUM by Elizabeth Bear and Sarah Monette. Of the others, some were enjoyable diversions, while others had me skipping pages. Some were engaging stories, others felt self-indulgent (taste is an individual thing, after all).
An anthology like this can serve a couple of purposes - not just enjoyment for itself but also as a taster of various authors' work. I've found a couple of new ones to follow up, so that's good.
There is such diversity that it doesn't necessarily read well story after story, but as a dipper, one story at a time rather than several in a row.
It's an engaging and varied collection of bonbons, pirates in all sorts of times and places, not all involving peglegs and parrots. But the one I've read over again, the one that will stay with me, is Boojum.