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Loading... The Unicorn Anthology (2017)by Peter S. Beagle (Editor), Jacob Weisman (Editor)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Good collection, nice variety of views from different cultures. ( ) Rating anthologies is always hard. **The Unicorn Anthology**, fittingly edited by *Peter S. Beagle* contained stories that touched me, and stories that just passed some time. Different strokes for different folks, and all that. Most stories tended to be dark and tragic, unsurprisingly enough. There are a couple of very good stories in there, so if the whole mythical realism thing interests you, check it out. (An ARC in exchange for a review was provided by the publisher via NetGalley.) I received an ARC through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Average rating: 3.7 stars (rounded to 4) A great variety of unicorn stories, some that could still be read to children, and some decidedly adult ones. Two of the stories have queer women as their protagonists, and one of them has a gay male side character and also mentions the severity of the AIDS crisis. I'm used to anthologies like this not really acknowledging queer people at all, so that was nice. I expected some plotlines about virgins and unicorns, because that's a big part of unicorn stories, but some of the stories took the virginity = purity thing to uncomfortable extremes. In several of the stories, even kissing someone, or just HEARING too much about marriage can stain a virgin's "purity". I know that's the traditional unicorn story, but in a fresh new anthology that has "not just for virgins anymore" in the description, I really expected more subversion of this trope. I much preferred stories like Ghost Town, where the purity in question is more about moral purity and pureness of the heart. Some stories have really interesting worldbuilding: for example, in Falling off the Unicorn, only virgins can ride unicorns, so competitive riders are heavily infantilised. They have to be short, they have to be girly, even when they are teens or adults, they aren't allowed to use bad words, etc. Thankfully, this is shown to be just as toxic as it sounds. However, at one point the same story implies that having lesbian sex doesn't count. In the end, it felt more like they were trying to say that only boys stain girls (because even kissing a boy stains you, but sex with a girl doesn't), but yeah, I'm not a fan of the implications there, and it wasn't really clear what the authors wanted with it. My lowest rated story in the anthology is A Hunter's Ode to His Bait, where a hunter buys a twelve-year-old girl from her mother to help him lure unicorns. They work together for years, and sure, the girl is of age when they start a relationship, but it reaaaaally felt like the guy was grooming her there. My absolute favourite was Stampede of Light, which is about lonely children and the teachers who don't let them get lost. Individual ratings: The Magical Properties of Unicorn Ivory by Carlos Hernandez: 4.5 stars The Brew by Karen Joy Fowler: 4.5 stars Falling Off the Unicorn by David D. Levine and Sarah A. Mueller: 4.5 stars A Hunter's Ode to His Bait by Carrie Vaughn: 2 stars A Thousand Flowers by Margo Lanagan: 3 stars (rape/dubious consent) The Maltese Unicorn by Caitlín R. Kiernan: 3 stars (rape/dubious consent) Stampede of Light by Marina Fitch: 5 stars Ghost Town by Jack C. Haldeman II: 5 stars The Highest Justice by Garth Nix: 4 stars The Lion and the Unicorn by A.C. Wise: 3 stars Survivor by Dave Smeds: 4 stars Homeward Bound by Bruce Coville: 3.5 stars Unicorn Triangle by Patricia A. McKillip: 3 stars My Son Heydari and the Karkadann by Peter S. Beagle: 3 stars The Transfigured Hart by Jane Yolen: 3.5 stars Unicorn Series by Nancy Springer: 4 stars No soft, cuddly unicorns here! Maybe my expectations were too high. Or maybe some of the writers ideas about unicorns and mine didn't mesh. Although I didn't expect to read about my granddaughters' favorite pillow representations of soft cuddly unicorns that are straight out of Disney, I was unprepared for many of the raw facets presented. Unfortunately quite a few of these tales just didn't excite me. I knew this collection was going to be unconventional but it seems I over anticipated my enjoyment. At moments I felt I'd wandered onto some sort of darkly modern gothic TV set. I was taken but not captured by the twist in Carrie Vaughn's “A Hunter’s Ode to His Bait.” I would say my favorite was “The Highest Justice” by Garth Nix but then I've always enjoyed his writings. A Tachyon ARC via NetGalley no reviews | add a review
Contains
Unicorns: Not just for virgins anymore. Here are sixteen lovely, powerful, intricate, and unexpected unicorn tales from fantasy icons including Garth Nix, Peter S. Beagle, Patricia A. McKillip, Bruce Coville, Carrie Vaughn, and more. In this volume you will find two would-be hunters who enlist an innkeeper to find a priest hiding the secret of the last unicorn. A time traveler tries to corral an unruly mythological beast that might never have existed at all. The lover and ex-boyfriend of a dying woman join forces to find a miraculous remedy in New York City. And a small-town writer of historical romances discovers a sliver of a mysterious horn in a slice of apple pie. No library descriptions found.
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.087660806Literature American literature in English American fiction in English By type Genre fiction Adventure fiction Speculative fiction Fantasy CollectionsLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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