NEW & NOTABLE FICTION
So many books, so little time. Here is a selection of our new and notable hardcover fiction selections, novels and short stories. Paperback fiction now has its own page here.
The Dark Ride: The Best Short Fiction of John Kessel
The Dark Ride: The Best Short Fiction of John Kessel
The Dark Ride collects John Kessel’s best short fiction, beginning with 1981’s “Not Responsible! Park and Lock It!” and ending with 2021’s “The Dark Ride.” The stories range from flash pieces to novellas, from comedy to existential horror, from far future SF to Kafkaesque fantasy, including 40,000 words of never-before-collected fiction and extensive author’s notes.
“Completely strange and idiosyncratic. His stories are singular experiences... They burst out of their texts with news that is strange, mysterious, beyond reason or parsing—beyond Kessel himself, it seems, who must have been as startled as anyone to see such sentences appear on his page. They are uncanny. “
—Kim Stanley Robinson, from his Introduction
The Dark Ride collects John Kessel’s best short fiction, beginning with 1981’s “Not Responsible! Park and Lock It!” and ending with 2021’s “The Dark Ride.” The stories range from flash pieces to novellas, from comedy to existential horror, from far future SF to Kafkaesque fantasy, including 40,000 words of never-before-collected fiction and extensive author’s notes.
All his best are here, among them Nebula Award winners “Another Orphan” and “Pride and Prometheus,” by the writer Sci-Fi Weekly called “quite possibly the best short story writer working in science fiction today.”
Limited: 1000 signed numbered hardcover copies
"...capable of the most artful and rigorous literary composition, but with a mischievious genius that inclines him toward speculative fiction...[Kessel] writes with subtlety and great wit...and his craftsmanship is frequently absolutely brilliant. Plus, his sense of comedy is remarkable."
—Publishers Weekly
“Articulate, polished, dazzlingly ingenious, thoroughly varied but essentially of a piece...a systematic demonstration of just what, in serious and ambitious hands, contemporary literary SF can do.”
—Nick Gevers, Infinity Plus
"These are stories that liberate the mind, which of course is what escapism is all about."
--New York Times Book Review
From Publishers Weekly (Starred Review):
“It takes a brilliant author to pull off a Jane Austen–Mary Shelley mash-up, but Kessel does so with aplomb in the moving and suspenseful ‘Pride and Prometheus,’ which introduces Mary, the most bookish Bennett sister, to Victor Frankenstein… Across the board, these exceptional tales showcase Kessel’s remarkable ability to encourage suspension of disbelief through even the wildest what-ifs. This is a master storyteller at work.”
From Locus:
“For me, Kessel’s most iconic story, ‘’The Pure Product’’, draws its title and some of its sensibility from William Carlos Williams, a poet who famously disdained allegory and symbolism (his most famous quotation is probably ‘‘no ideas but in things’’; Kessel’s title comes from Williams’s ‘The pure products of America/go crazy’). Kessel’s blithely amoral time traveler terrorizing his way through 1980s America may be part of what briefly earned Kessel the label of ‘savage humanist,’ and may be related to the anarchic ‘Tyler Durden’ in ‘Stories for Men’, the time-traveling Detlev Gruber of ‘Some Like it Cold’ and ‘The Miracle of Ivar Avenue’ or the professional thieves of ‘The Baum Plan for Financial Independence’. But ‘The Pure Product’ is also a road-trip tale with echoes all the way back to Kerouac. When the narrator notes, ‘You lose track of how long you have been on the road, where are you going,’ he seems to be directly setting us up for the endless road trip of ‘Not Responsible! Park and Lock It!’ whose hapless (and mostly hopeless) characters live their entire lives on superhighways. Like much of Kessel’s most disturbing fiction, it carries just enough SFnal extrapolation to make it almost credible, but is essentially an absurdist parable.”
Table of Contents:
Introduction by Kim Stanley Robinson
Not Responsible! Park and Lock It!
Events Preceding the Helvetican Renaissance
Pride and Prometheus
The Motorman’s Coat
The Closet
Some Like It Cold
The Miracle of Ivar Avenue
Spirit Level
Stories for Men
The Pure Product
Gulliver at Home
Buddha Nostril Bird
Invaders
The Lecturer
Buffalo
Clean
Another Orphan
Consolation
The Baum Plan for Financial Independence
The Dark Ride
Story Notes