
(Mass Market Paperback)
It's the 20th anthology featuringfantasy's fiercest sword-swinging, magic-slinging females.
The bestselling Swords & Sorceress series continues with this exciting 20th edition of all-new stories. It's all here: hard-hitting action, spellbinding magic, butt-kicking heroines... and some of the most popular names in fantasy today.
Originally slated to be the final Sword and Sorceress volume due to Bradley's death, this has been altered with a new introduction to reflect the continuation of the series and also includes the homily given at her funeral. There are 18 stories in this installment that revolve around the theme of finding your true self or your true path. The absolute best is George Barr's "Too in the Morning," about an inept sorcery student whose problem is an excess of talent. What she does with simple fleas is highly amusing. The stories are typically up to par for the series: there was only one I rated "ho-hum." This will be popular where the series and/or Bradley have fans. KLIATT Codes: JSA-Recommended for junior and senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 2003, Penguin Putnam, DAW, 315p., Ages 12 to adult.
A prolific storyteller from the time she was old enough to talk, Marion Zimmer Bradley had an enormous impact on the science fiction and fantasy genres, imagining centuries of technological and culture clashes in the colonization of a distant planet in her Darkover series and recasting the Arthurian legends from the perspective of the women in his life in her 1983 masterpiece, The Mists of Avalon.
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July 17, 2003: Unbelievable that this fantasy anthology has reached number twenty. Even more incredible is that the collection remains very fresh as the stars continue to be female practitioners of sword, spell, or both yet the underlying theme changes. This time the proposition is ?finding yourself or your true path?.
Besides eighteen overall well done tales (with a few really great ones especially a mermaid ? this reviewer admits Ariel and ilk always hooks me) starring female champions from all walks of life, some of the contributions dip into other genres like mystery and horror. The introduction also provides an interesting question in which several of the authors answering that when they were younger, they wanted to be (fill in the blank). Though mostly female authors, there are a few male writers, but readers will not be able to delineate gender without checking the name. Fantasy fans of heroines will appreciate this tale that will probably introduce the audience to future greats (no predictions forthcoming but watch out for the real McCoy) as previous collections have done. Finally besides the short stories, a nineteenth finale contribution ?Homily? is the final entry in more ways than one as this is the calming words said at the funeral of the legendary Marion Zimmer Bradley who obviously is writing words of wisdom starring heavenly souls.
Harriet Klausner