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Waifs And Strays [Hardcover]

Lint De
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Hardcover, Oct 1 2002 --  
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Book Description

Oct 1 2002
Charles de Lint is a thirteen-time finalist for the World Fantasy Award, and eight of his books were chosen for the reader-selected Modern Library Top 100 Books of the Twentieth Century. His best-selling and award-winning work has always featured teenage characters. Here, at long last, is a collection of his stories about teenagers-a book for teen and adult alike. From the streets of his famed Newford to the alleys of Bordertown to the realms of Faerie, this is speculative fiction that will tranfix and delight, that will make readers think and feel and keep reading. Waifs and Strays is a must-own for de Lint fans, and an ideal introduction to his work for newcomers.

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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Urban teens take center stage in a pair of edgy short story collections. Waifs and Strays presents 15 previously published works by Canadian fantasy writer Charles de Lint, including "May This Be Your Last Sorrow" from The Essential Bordertown and "There's No Such Thing," which appeared in Yolen and Greenburg's anthology Vampires. In its first appearance, "Sisters," tells of precocious 16-year-old Appoline, a vampire ("Yeah, I drink blood. But it's not as gross as it sounds. And it's not as messy as it is in some of the movies") who plans to wait until her sister, Cassandra, turns 16 before turning her into one, too. Ages 12-up.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal

Grade 8 Up-Mythic fiction is at its best in this anthology of stories of memorable heroines, rooted not in a secondary world but in an urban environment. The author introduces each selection, providing insight and interesting biographical information. The subject of two stories is a 16-year-old vampire named Apples who receives "the Gift" from a stranger during a Bryan Adams concert. She hopes to "turn" her sister Cassie when she is older, if she agrees, so they can live together forever. Poking fun at the television version of a teenage vampire, the heroine offers a more pragmatic view of her lot in life as she avenges evil doings in her neighborhood. In the section "Bordertown," where magic and reality coexist, an elf named Manda saves the life of a Harley-riding black man who is the neighborhood peacekeeper in a city rife with prejudice and violence. Elements of Robin Hood, Merlin, Native American mythology, and Celtic music weave through each story. Some of the heroines are humans who briefly tiptoe into a magical realm or are skeptical about its existence. De Lint's characters are often lonely and intelligent misfits whose self-discovery triumphs over plot. Described as "urban fantasy," these stories represent a hybrid genre for readers who only want one arm through the door into another world.
Vicki Reutter, Cazenovia High School, NY
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars
4.0 out of 5 stars
Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Let The Fairy Out of the Jar! May 5 2003
Format:Hardcover
I love fantasy, and I was expecting the usual. This is not the usual! I don't really like reading short stories, either, but these read like they really happened, and were reported yesterday in the newspapers. Quite different, really! Some of the stories I yearned to be full-blown novels, especially "Merlin Dreams in the Mondream Wood". When's the last time someone brought Merlin back to you? I miss him! Some, like "The Graceless Child", were haunting and eerie. The vampire sisters in "Sisters" was thought provoking!
Altogether, and interesting read.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Well worth your time, money and shelf space! Nov 23 2002
Format:Hardcover
I particilarly like de Lint's Newford stories and novels but this very special collection of stories with varied settings is an excellent choice for adolescents, their teachers, libraries and schools. This wonderful short story anthology is de Lint's short fiction with teen protagonists. There's two Maisie Flood stories that take place in Newford; she's just off the street herself, but lives with an adult developmentally disabled man Tommy and a great number of castoff dogs ("Waifs and Strays" and "But for the Grace Go I"). "Stick" takes place in Bordertown. The eponymous martial arts expert defends a halfling from some Bloods, the band Horn Dance to defend him in turn, with music. "There's No Such Thing" and "Sisters" are charming, funny and a little sad teenage vampire stories set around Ottawa.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Ugh, don't bother! Mar 1 2004
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
As a teen living with women who love words, I get a lot of great gifts in the form of books. And I like Charles de Lint. EXCEPT when he is writing for or about us young 'uns. His teenage characters are bland, often stupid in their inexperience, and they talk like no real teenager I've ever met. Even the two Newford stories included in this volume, ostensibly written for adults, are just - boring, and unrealistic, and preachy.

It's apparrent - and de Lint says as much in his intro - that what we have here is a publisher (or perhaps an editor, Ms. Windling?) bent on wringing every last cent out of de Lint's fame, so they cobbled this thing together for the "youth market," knowing people like my loved ones would trustingly scoop it up to gift young fans. They got gulled. Don't let it happen to you!

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