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![]() | Stalin's Teardrops (1991) And Other Stories A collection of stories by Ian Watson |
Publisher's Weekly
Watson's ( The Flies of Memory ) new collection displays the wide range and subtlety of his short fiction. Although the first two stories are unfocused and somewhat heavy-handed, despite some wonderfully bizarre imagery, the remaining 10 tales are provocative and surprising. Many explore the blurred boundary between objective and subjective reality--in ''Stalin's Teardrops'' the efforts of Soviet mapmakers to obscure the geographical truth actually create alternative landscapes. Others are flavored with the surreal: in ''The Human Chicken'' an eight-pound fowl is born to a bemused young couple. The best selections transform traditional story types into new tales. ''The Beggars in Our Backyard'' is a thinly disguised allegory that avoids tendentiousness, managing to provide both entertainment and social commentary. ''The Pharaoh and the Mademoiselle'' might have been a typical tale of an Egyptian curse, but Watson's idiosyncratic approach makes it truly unusual; half the story is related from the point of view of a set of tiny figurines and the other half takes the form of a play. From the regional flavor of ''Tales from Weston Willow'' to the quirkiness of ''From the Annals of the Onomastic Society,'' these stories offer a wealth of diverse, intelligent reading.
Watson's ( The Flies of Memory ) new collection displays the wide range and subtlety of his short fiction. Although the first two stories are unfocused and somewhat heavy-handed, despite some wonderfully bizarre imagery, the remaining 10 tales are provocative and surprising. Many explore the blurred boundary between objective and subjective reality--in ''Stalin's Teardrops'' the efforts of Soviet mapmakers to obscure the geographical truth actually create alternative landscapes. Others are flavored with the surreal: in ''The Human Chicken'' an eight-pound fowl is born to a bemused young couple. The best selections transform traditional story types into new tales. ''The Beggars in Our Backyard'' is a thinly disguised allegory that avoids tendentiousness, managing to provide both entertainment and social commentary. ''The Pharaoh and the Mademoiselle'' might have been a typical tale of an Egyptian curse, but Watson's idiosyncratic approach makes it truly unusual; half the story is related from the point of view of a set of tiny figurines and the other half takes the form of a play. From the regional flavor of ''Tales from Weston Willow'' to the quirkiness of ''From the Annals of the Onomastic Society,'' these stories offer a wealth of diverse, intelligent reading.
Used availability for Ian Watson's Stalin's Teardrops
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Hardback Editions
January 1992 : Hardback
| Title: Stalin`s Teardrops Author(s): Ian Watson Publisher: Trafalgar Square Publishing Availability: Amazon More details... |
May 1991 : Hardback
| Title: Stalin's Teardrops Author(s): Ian Watson ISBN: 0-575-04942-1 / 978-0-575-04942-0 (UK edition) Publisher: Gollancz Availability: Amazon Amazon UK Amazon CA More details... |
Paperback Editions
March 1992 : Paperback
| Title: Stalin's Teardrops Author(s): Ian Watson ISBN: 0-575-05281-3 / 978-0-575-05281-9 (UK edition) Publisher: Gollancz Availability: Amazon Amazon UK Amazon CA More details... |
January 1992 : Paperback
| Title: Stalin's Teardrops Author(s): Ian Watson Publisher: VGSF Availability: Amazon UK More details... |
1992 : Paperback
| Title: Stalin's Teardrops Author(s): Ian Watson Publisher: VGSF Availability: Amazon More details... |
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