Telling the map Stories

Christopher Rowe

Book - 2017

"There are ten stories here including one readers have waited ten long years for: in new novel-la The Border State Rowe revisits the world of his much-lauded story The Voluntary State. Competitive cyclists twins Michael and Maggie have trained all their lives to race internationally. One thing holds them back: their mother who years before crossed the border ... into Tennessee. Praise for Christopher Rowe: "Rowe's stories are the kind of thing you want on a cold, winter's night when the fire starts burning low. Terrific."--Justina Robson (Glorious Angels) "As good as he is now, he'll keep getting better. Read these excellent stories, and see what I mean."-Jack Womack (Going, Going, Gone) "Rowe�...39;s work might remind you of that of Andy Duncan. Both exemplify an archetypically Southern viewpoint on life's mysteries, a worldview that admits marvels in the most common of circumstances and narrates those unreal intrusions in a kind of downhome manner that belies real sophistication."--Asimov's "As smooth and heady as good Kentucky bourbon."--Locus Christopher Rowe's stories have been finalists for the Hugo, Nebula, World Fantasy, and Theodore Sturgeon awards, frequently reprinted, translated into a half-dozen languages, praised by the New York Times Book Review, and long listed in the Best American Short Stories. He holds an MFA from the Bluegrass Writer's Studio. Rowe and his wife Gwenda Bond co-write the Supernormal Sleuthing Series for children, and reside in a hundred-year-old house in Lexington, Kentucky"--

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Subjects
Genres
Science fiction
Fantasy fiction
Published
Easthampton, MA : Small Beer Press [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Christopher Rowe (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
269 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781618731326
  • The contrary gardener
  • Another word for map is faith
  • Jack of coins
  • The unveiling
  • Nowhere fast
  • Two figures in a landscape between storms
  • Gather
  • The force acting on the displaced body
  • The voluntary state
  • The border state.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In his inventive debut collection, Rowe bends the world we know, remaking regions of the southern United States. Appalachian settings, recurring characters, and dystopian themes of societal degradation link the stories. In "The Voluntary State," a band of marauders from Kentucky attack a painter named Soma's car and kidnap him. Japheth Sapp, the leader of the captors, recruits Soma in a plan to sneak into Nashville and kill Athena Parthenus, the governor of Tennessee. Meanwhile, Jenny, a mechanic, reunites Soma with his repaired (and sentient) vehicle. All paths converge in an explosive conclusion. In "The Border State," twin cyclists Maggie and Michael Hammersmith set off on a bike race across Kentucky. Their ride takes them along a river and the Girding Wall, which isolates Athena's Tennessee. The race evolves into a search for their missing father, and a hunt for answers to mysterious messages from their mother, who drowned in a flash flood 20 years earlier. Rowe skillfully reinvents familiar narratives and widens common story lines into a world where anything seems possible. Wild creativity, haunting imagery, and lyricism-as displayed in "Two Figures in a Landscape Between Storms"-urge readers forward even as the pacing slows to provide needed exposition. While at times the poetic syntax of the sentences hampers comprehension, the book offers an immersive and original reading experience. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Kentucky gets dystopianor just plain weirdin this debut collection of stories merging realism and science fiction.The Border State, the novella anchoring Rowe's debut, has an enduring theme: siblings searching for lost parents. But the Kentucky where the twin brother and sister are searching is less familiar, and less gentle, than the stereotypes of thoroughbreds and endless bluegrass. The state has been closed off from its neighbors after a conflagration with federal authorities, and telephones and rivers possess sentient and occasionally malicious powers. The twins' search takes the form of a Tour de France-style bicycle race, which gives the story constant movement as well as some well-turned glimpses of the landscape. Many of the remaining stories share the Kentucky setting as well as details about its curious reshaping. "Nowhere Fast," for instance, features the surprising arrival of a gas-burning car ("forbidden technology"), opening a discussion about society's greed for rushing. ("It takes as long to get somewhere as it should take...expedience leads to war and flood.") In "The Contrary Gardener," the sharpest story in the collection, a young woman becomes alert to political revolution and the dangers of technology (as with the mechanized bus driver, which seems to have developed a conscience) amid the Kentucky Derby, one of the last bastions of the state's old culture. And "The Unveiling" is a thoughtful allegory on the intersection of political resistance and what we literally put on a pedestal. Rowe's stories are rooted in Kentucky, but he's also often inventing a society out of whole cloth, and the short story form is sometimes an uncomfortable place for such aggressive worldbuilding; "The Voluntary State," for instance, introduces so many new creatures and histories that it becomes clotted with explication instead of action. Mostly, though, Rowe's stories are effective and relaxed. A clutch of complex, persuasive visions of an alternative South. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.