Smoke and Mirrors: Short Fiction and Illusions

Smoke and Mirrors: Short Fiction and Illusions

1998 • 356 pages

Ratings68

Average rating4

15

Neil Gaiman's first collection of short fiction spans the 80's and 90's and showcases a vivid imagination and some wonderful writing.

The stories here range from amusing to scary, from disturbing to perverse and are never less than interesting. Gaiman's introduction gives a brief description of the genesis of each story and he even includes an entire short story about a marriage. A kind of Dorian Gray for the suburban set.

Personal favourites include Chivalry, where an old lady finds the Holy Grail in a charity shop and is then visited by Sir Galahad himself; the Goldfish Pool and Other Stories, which is semi-autobiographical and tells of a writer coming to LA to work on a script and the old hotel he stays in; One Life Furnished in early Moorcock, about a boy's obsession with said writer (again semi-autobiographical); and Murder Mysteries, a story set amongst Angels during the time before the act of Creation itself.

Two stories haunt me though, the brief Babycakes and the dark Snow, Glass, Apples. One was written for PETA to highlight cruelty to animals and is quite disturbing; the other is a retelling of Snow White from the Queen's point of view. You'll never read that fairy tale in the same way again.

So, if you like Mr Gaiman you will love these stories. If you haven't read much of his work, this and his other collection, Fragile Things, are good places to start.

Happy reading!

January 6, 2013Report this review