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WHAT THE REVIEWERS SAID Stephen Dedman, Nova Express:
John Shirley is the author of A Song Called Youth (the
Eclipse trilogy), Wetbones, City Come A-Walkin', Silicon Embrace,
the collections Heatseeker, New Noir and The Exploded Heart, and
co-writer of the screenplay for The Crow. This collection is
sub-titled "A Flock on the Dark Side", which sums up much of his work.
It's not unrelievedly dark; there are moments of humour (particularly in
Silicon Embrace), beauty, and even hope...but in this collection, as
in much of his other writing, the light comes mostly from the fantastic
elements.
The stories in Black Butterflies are divided into "This World"
and "That World". The stories in "This World" lack overtly fantastic
elements, and most of them are very frightening indeed. Shirley's
version of "This World" seems to be populated largely by psychopaths who
murder and rape as much from boredom and bafflement as anything else; one
of the few characters in "This World" to display anything resembling
empathy is the computer science teacher in "What Would You Do For Love?",
and she uses computer models to help predict the actions of people around
her. "What Would You Do For Love?" is not only the last story in "This
World," as though it were a segue into '"That World", it's the first in
which most of the characters will seem familiar to nearly all of us, and
the first with something like a conventionally happy ending. Shirley's
talent is that he enables usto empathise with characters who have so
little empathy for others, whether we want to or not, despite gut-punch
beginnings that many horror writers might use as a coup de grace. For example:
You know that girl, the one who died from cum? I used to know
her, and I know why she did it. ("Footlite")
Later, when he was thinking about what it would be like to take a
bullet in the head, Darry found that, even then, he couldn't blame
Marla. He thought: Marla was only one part death. ("What Would You Do
For Love?")
"That World" throws overt fantasy elements into Shirley's
universe, and while some of the stories (such as "Pearldoll" and
"Aftertaste") are almost conventional horror tales, others are...different. "The Exquisitely Bleeding Heads of Doktur Palmer Vreedeez",
in which celebrities are encased alive in plastic sheathing for a
horrific sculpture garden to the enjoyment of Idi Amin, is an enormously
over-the-top sick joke. "Delia and the Dinner Party", in which a little
girl's "imaginary friend" translates her parents' over-dinner
conversations, is a gem, and if you'd prefer something upbeat and dislike
televangelists as devoutly as I do, "Flaming Telepaths" will make your day.
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