Shaw’s (
One Hand To Hold, One Hand To Carve) collection of unforgettable, ominous, and provocative stories proclaims them as a new voice to watch in weird fiction. While each tale stands on its own, all are united by the title of the book, a refrain (or version of it) that appears in each story; the phrase should invoke comfort and joy, but in Shaw’s hands, it gets twisted into something deeply unsettling. In “Apartémon,” a phone app for making new friends goes rogue, and the jewel of the volume, the original novelette “Ready Player (n + 1),” provides an original, biting, and fun response to the toxic masculinity of the bestselling novel to which the title alludes. The stories feature attention-grabbing first lines and direct and engaging narrations, a combination that allows readers to easily navigate the strange and awe-inspiring space between their reality and Shaw’s imagination.
VERDICT Shaw’s striking stories will connect with a wide range of readers, especially those who like to be simultaneously entertained and asked to think about what they just read, much like in the short fiction of Philip Fracassi and Cassandra Khaw or the novels of Jeremy Robert Johnson.
Comment Policy:
Comment should not be empty !!!