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Penguin Book Of Modern Fantasy By Women
 
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Penguin Book Of Modern Fantasy By Women (Paperback)

by Joanna Russ (Foreword), Various (Author), Susan Williams (Illustrator)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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From Publishers Weekly

Fantasy, as novelist Russ contends in her introduction to this impressive collection, gives women "the method to handle the specifically female elements of their experience in a way that our literary tradition of realism was not designed to do." Editors Williams and Jones take a very broad view of what constitutes fantasy: the collection, comprised of 38 stories written between 1941 and 1994, opens conventionally enough, with Elizabeth Bowen's classic horror story "The Demon Lover" but also includes more masculine-seeming SF by the pseudonymous James Tiptree Jr. (Alice Sheldon), whose disturbing "The Milk of Paradise" reminds us that love, especially of the alien other, can be the strongest force of all. There are several specifically feminist entries, such as Lisa Tuttle's moving "Wives," about creatures on a strange planet who are forced to bind and emotionally starve themselves to conform to a male ideal of femininity, and the cheerfully amoral, appallingly satisfying "Boobs," by Suzy McKee Charnas. There is room here for the darkly fantastic (Tanith Lee's "Red As Blood"); for the delicately sentimental (Zenna Henderson's "The Anything Box"); and even for one of the most deliciously droll of flying saucer stories (Muriel Spark's "Miss Pinkerton's Apocalypse"). If, as Russ says, "fantasy is reality," then this is the reality of some higher, more eloquently truthful, plane.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Booklist

A new Penguin anthology offers 38 works of short fantasy fiction written since 1941 by as many hands. The contributors include such stellar science fiction names as Ursula K. LeGuin, Leigh Brackett, Kate Wilhelm, Shirley Jackson, James Tiptree, and Joanna Russ (who also wrote the foreword to the collection), all of them represented by superior pieces; some comparatively new or less well known authors (e.g., Lynda Raian, Lucy Sussex); and several writers not readily associated with the fantasy genre (e.g., Janet Frame, P. D. James, Muriel Spark). Although the volume does not really support the notion of a distinctively feminine vision in the brand of literary fantasy it showcases (action-adventure fantasy would be another kettle of broadswords entirely), it adds greatly to any collection's resources of highly readable fantasy stories. Roland Green --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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4.0 out of 5 stars An impressively scoped, consistently good read., May 15 2000
By Shu Shiung Low (Melbourne, Australia) - See all my reviews
The readership of fantasy has been said to be predominantly feminine (as opposed to the predominantly masculine readership of science fiction), so it is perhaps not much of a surprise that one of the best collections of fantasy writing would be one dedicated solely to the work of women authors. If one were looking for non-patriachal, original, stimulating fantasy generally uncluttered by the cliches of the genre one could do worse than one of the most important collections to come out of the field in the last few decades. The range of the book, which also traverses science-fictionesque territory, is impressive, from straightforward space opera (The Ship Who Sang, by Anne McCaffrey; the short story that birthed the famous novel of the same name), to revisionist visions of classic fairy tales (Red as Blood; a revisionist Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs story with a distinctly Stokerian--re: Vampiric--twist). Classy packaging and a beautiful cover illustation (Baby Giant) complete a pleasant reading experience. The Penguin Book of Modern Fantasy by Women is a welcome mainstay on the bookshelf of essential science-fiction and fantasy writing.
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