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| Category: |
Literary Fiction |
Publisher: |
eMergent Publishing |
ISBN-10: |
0980744601 |
Type: |
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| Pages: |
112 |
Copyright: |
January 1st, 2010 |
ISBN-13: |
9780980744606
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Fiction |
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In a small North American university town ten lives are intersecting...
Miranda is reaping what she has sown.
Mitchell understands there is no resisting fate.
Clint dreams of pursuing a violent destiny.
Elizabeth is about to make a discovery.
Robin hides a terrible secret.
Simon hasn’t slept in ten days.
Sam is haunted by nightmares.
Susie has lost everything.
David has just been found.
Jake is atoning for past evils.
...Ten ordinary people struggling to keep their sanity in an insane world.
Buy your copy!
Chinese Whisperings official site Chinese Whisperings
Chinese Whisperings is a series of conceptual anthologies of interconnected short stories by emerging writers. The Red Book is the debut anthology for Chinese Whisperings creators and joint editors Jodi Cleghorn and Paul Anderson.
The Red Book features short stories by Cleghorn and Anderson, along with eight other emerging writers: Jason Coggins, Rob Diaz, Annie Evett, Jasmine Gallant, Tina Hunter, Emma Newman, Dale Challener Roe and Paul Servini.
The eBook version of The Red Book is currently available with paperbacks expected to be available for sale March 2010.
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Professional Reviews
Chinese Whisperings: The Red Book - Review, by Dan Powell
Unlike other anthologies, which might be unified by theme or year of writing, Chinese Whisperings: The Red Book has been created in a sequential fashion, the stories taking place in the same American University town, each writer often referencing events from the preceding stories to tie the ten stories together.
The setting does not limit the subject matter or theme of each piece and all the stories are individual enough to be read in isolation; yet together they become more than a sum of the parts. Often while working through the collection I found myself sucked into a particular story to then discover just how it how it links in to the larger framework. Rather than kicking you out of the present story, the effect is one of cohesion, as the connections are revealed in an organic and natural way that is increasingly satisfying the further you wade into The Red Book's narratives. All this drives the reader forward through the collection.
Characters and storylines are surprisingly varied considering the structural and character constraints the editors and writers set themselves, moving from the perspective of an aid worker to that of a homeless man via a sleep deprived librarian and a violent street thug. The ten characters' stories move between the internalised, such as Miranda's, where she considers how she has come to be trapped in the clutches of a mysterious illness or Simon's, who in the midst of sleep deprivation begins to hallucinate, and more externalised plots concerning private detectives, violent criminals and corrupt organisations.
While none of the stories feel out of place within the collection, the most successful tales, for this reader at least, are those that are the most intimate. 'Mercurial' is an intense, claustrophobic piece that sees Miranda trapped as much by her actions as by the sickness that assails her. 'Not Myself' has an hallucinatory quality that captures the wanderings of a sleep deprived mind while showing the causes can often be both more mundane and more exciting than one might think. 'Heartache' is a moving tale of loss, with the main character seeking reasons for actions he cannot explain.
When the stories delve into the realm of genre fiction, they still retain some of that intimacy, which helps create the strong unity of the collection. The final tale, 'One in the Chamber,' provides a complimentary bookend to opener 'Mercurial,' its use of noirish detective fiction creating a contrasting sense of claustrophobia to that of the opening tale. 'Not My Name' and 'Discovery' expand the narrative beyond the American university town setting into other continents while bonds both thematic and character driven pull the stories back into the fictional gravity well of the setting and the collection as a whole. It is this breadth of genre and style within the collection that ensures there is something for everyone within its (currently virtual) covers.
What is perhaps most striking about The Red Book is the fact that, on finishing the final tale, it leaves the reader with a desire to return to the beginning and experience the various threads of plot and character again, certain that a second read will unlock deeper complexities of connection. In fact, this is encouraged by the editors with the creation of The Red Book Reversed. Whichever direction you end up tackling these stories, the Red Book comes highly recommended as an interesting concept that manages to live up to its promise.
The full length review can be found at Dan Powell's website http://www.danpowellfiction.com/
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