Genre:
Short Story Anthology
Description:
“A
religious refugee fleeing for his life in his own country. A
trickster asking an enemy for safe haven. A horrific visit to a
psychiatric ward overrun by its charges. An unexplained theft from a
biomedical lab. The last known survivor of a mysterious plague. A
wormhole to the most peaceful and secret place in the world. A
detective on the trail of a human trafficker.
What
does asylum mean to you?
… seventeen
authors explore the obvious and hidden meanings of this theme—from
a werewolf on a mission and self-sacrifice in a post-apocalyptic
world, to shadowy wizardry, a questing knight, and a gentle prison
for geniuses.”
Author:
This
anthology, sponsored by The Northwest Independent Writers Association
has contributions from 17 different authors:
Jeffrey
Cook
William
Cook
Pamela
Cowan
Jonathan
Ems
Ginger
Dawn Harman
Connie
J. Jasperson
Madison
Keller
Cody
Newton
E.M.
Prazeman
Katherine
Perkins
Dey
Rivers
Walt
Socha
D.L.
Solum
Laurel
Standley
Rebecca
Stefoff
Jennifer
Willis
Matthew
Wilson
The
Northwest Independent Writers Association (NIWA) supports indie and
hybrid authors and promotes professional standards in independent
writing, publishing, and marketing. Learn more at their website.
Appraisal:
All of
these stories were good with a wide range of genres including
fantasy, science fiction, paranormal, and dystopian. I liked some
better than others, but the reasons why were personal taste, not the
quality of the stories. Two stories stood out for me which I'll
highlight as examples. Coincidentally they're the last two stories in
the anthology. Maybe I'm suffering from some form of recency bias.
Travail
by E.M Prazeman is not the kind of story I'd normally gravitate
toward. It's the story of Sir Brian Buldwen, a knight living in the
kind of primitive medieval world you'd expect. It felt slow in the
beginning, mainly because the author was establishing the story world
and it isn't the kind of world that appeals to me. But I realized
about a quarter of the way into the story that I was fully sucked in.
I cared about Sir Brian and wanted him to succeed. I was amused by
his jester friend, Pick. From the point I was hooked, I stayed that
way. Part of it might be that the language used was modern without a
barrage of phony (or maybe not) olde English words to keep reminding
the reader we're operating in a different time.
The
other story that stuck with me was The
Last Refuge, a
post-apocalyptic or dystopian story by William J. Cook. This story
strikes close to home in our current political environment in the US
as we follow Hamza, the Muslim main character, as he comes to terms
with losing his family, a wife and daughter, and then discovers that
his own survival is questionable. Luckily, just as in times past,
even when it seems like the entire world has become evil, there are
some who choose to do the right thing.
FYI:
Some
adult language and situations.
Format/Typo
Issues:
A
small number of typos and copyediting issues.
Rating:
***** Five Stars
Reviewed
by: BigAl
Approximate
word count: 65-70,000 words
4 comments:
Thank you for posting a review. I am happy that you enjoyed the short stories.
Thanks for dropping by, Ginger.
Thanks for the review. I also loved the second story you mention but haven't read the other. I'm sort of skipping around in there just enjoying the chance to read an entire story, start to finish, in my limited free time. Short stories are definitely making a comeback for me.
Pam
Thanks for the comment, Pam. I think with the advent of ereading that works of all kinds lengths are becoming more popular, especially those shorter than novels. The reason you give, having something bite-sized that fits better into limited time slots is one of the big reasons for this, especially those on the shorter end. (Not having to conform to the economics of paper production and distribution is another big one.)
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