Ratings88
Average rating3.8
After the great Gaiman desert of 2008-20013, I was so very relieved to see this collection come out close on the heels of Ocean at the End of the Lane. This collection certainly doesn't disappoint and contains a wide variety of stories from the ridiculously silly (And Weep Like Alexander) to the terrifyingly creepy (Feminine Endings). I tend to prefer the silly stories and still am looking around my rooms nervously for statue people because of the creepy ones.
I am not really a hardcore Whovian, but this collection does contain a treat for those who are and even us more marginal fans can enjoy it. The greatest hurrah is certainly “The Black Dog,” which Gaiman says is the second of 3 short stories (following Monarch of the Glen in Fragile Things) which follow Shadow's journey back to America. Also it has Bast in it and Bast is the best.
Two of the best stories have also been published as illustrated collections which I really need now. I've heard so much buzz about “The Sleeper and the Spindle” (for all the wrong reasons. It's a brilliant story and people way overreact to that kiss in a way that made me think I was going to read about a torrid lesbian affair between Snow White and Sleeping Beauty I find it a little annoyed that this misconception overshadowed a magnificently original retelling of both those tales from which the sea of bland fairy tale revisionists could really take a note or two.
Anyone who knows me at all knows I am an unabashed Gaiman fangirl and would be hard pressed to say a negative thing about the man. Some stories in this collection are better than others and which ones those are is totally going to depend on the reader. Trigger Warning has something for everyone and certainly a must have on the shelf of every short story fan.