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E-raamat: Not So Stories

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Jan-2020
  • Kirjastus: Abaddon Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781786181039
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 23-Jan-2020
  • Kirjastus: Abaddon Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781786181039
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A contemporary and hugely relevant anthology of culturally diverse writers responding to and engaging with Kipling&;s Just So Stories.

Not the tales you were told

Once upon a time, Rudyard Kipling&;s Just So Stories&;fantastical yarns of wondrous creatures in faraway places&;bewitched children across the world. But times change. Today, Kipling&;s writing tells us a different tale; of a love of Empire, and the troubling legacy of British colonialism.

In Not So Stories, writers of colour from around the world reclaim these stories and remake them into something new. Something different. Something that belongs to us all.

Including stories by Adiwijaya Iskandar, Joseph E. Cole, Raymond Gates, Zina Hutton, Georgina Kamsika, Cassandra Khaw, Paul Krueger, Stewart Hotston, Tauriq MoosaJeannette Ng, Ali Nouraei, Zedeck Siew, Wayne Santos and Achala Upendran.

Arvustused

"There is a lot to enjoy here. A book whose time has come..." -- Suroor Alikhan * Talking About Books * "For any adult who was charmed by Kipling as a child." * Starburst Magazine * "Whether you love or can't stand Kipling, this is a terrific book." * The B&N Sci-Fi and Fantasy Blog * Funny, touching, and often profound. * Tor.com * Fantastical fables about why things are the way they are, like Just So Stories but without all the British Colonialism. -- Alex Wells, Bookriot -- Alex Wells * Book Riot *

Foreword, Nikesh Shukla
How the Spider Got Her Legs, Cassandra Khaw
Queen, Joseph Elliott-Coleman
Best Beloved, Wayne Santos
The Man Who Played With the Crab, Adiwijaya Iskandar
Sasra, Georgina Kamsika
Serpent, Crocodile, Tiger, Zedeck Siew
How the Tree of Wishes Gained its Carapace of Plastic, Jeannette Ng
How the Ants Got Their Queen, Stewart Hotston
How the Snake Lost its Spine, Tauriq Moosa
The Cat Who Walked by Herself, Achala Upendran
Strays Like Us, Zina Hutton
How the Simurgh Won Her Tail, Ali Nouraei
There is Such Thing as a Whizzy-Gang, Raymond Gates
How the Camel Got Her Paid Time Off, Paul Krueger
David Thomas Moore is the editor of Two Hundred and Twenty-One Baker Streets, alt.sherlock.holmes, Monstrous Little Voices and Dracula: Rise of the Beast.

Zina Hutton is an aspiring fantasy writer who tends to leap headfirst into new stories and worlds the second that inspiration strikes. She works as a freelance editor and writer with publication credits in Fireside Fiction, The Mary Sue, Strange Horizons, ComicsAlliance and Women Write About Comics.

Georgina Kamsika has spent most of her life explaining her English first name, Polish surname and Asian features. She graduated from the Clarion West workshop in 2012, and her current novel, The Goddess of the North, is with her agent.

Paul Krueger is the author of Last Call at the Nightshade Lounge, a novel about bartenders who fight demons with alcohol magic. He lives in Los Angeles.

Tauriq Moosa is a contributor to the Guardian, Daily Beast and other publications. His work has been referred to by The New York Times, the Washington Post, Forbes and other places. He once debated Desmond Tutu about god.

Ali Nouraei is a qualified barrister, a practising mediator, and has written fiction for fifteen years. His passions include history, literature, and cake.

Zedeck Siew used to work in Malaysian media, covering art, culture and parliament, and co-designed Politiko, a card game about Malaysian party politics. He is currently working on an illustrated catalogue of imaginary Southeast Asian animals, Creatures of Near Kingdoms, out in late 2017.