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DescrizioneA mysterious circus terrifies an audience for one extraordinary performance before disappearing into the night. . . . In a Hugo Award–winning story, a great detective must solve a most unsettling royal murder in a strangely altered Victorian England. . . . Two teenage boys crash a party and meet the girls of their dreams—and nightmares. . . . These marvelous creations and more showcase the unparalleled invention and storytelling brilliance—as well as the terrifyingly dark and entertaining sense of humor—of the incomparable Neil Gaiman. By turns delightful, disturbing, and diverting, Fragile Things is a gift of literary enchantment from one of the most original writers of our time. Recensioni dei lettoriGoodreads) (The rating is actually 3.5, but when I considered how I found the poems distracting (and not in a good way) I decided to give this book 3 stars. Or maybe I am just a bad poetry reader, hahahaha. This ... Goodreads) (This is a great volume of short stories. Better yet, the poems in its pages - and there were only three or so - were some of my favorite poems I've read, and I'm normally not a huge fan of poetry. More fantastic, richly imaginative tales from Neil Gaiman. Goodreads) (A splendid collection from one of my authors. Will give mini-synopses/reviews of the stories. A Study in Emerald - Wow! I don't know if I've ever read a better short story in my life. Written for an ... Recensioni della criticadi Kirkus Reviews Neo-Goth-Pulp-Noir has pretty much been trademarked by Gaiman (Anansi Boys, 2005, etc.), and these 31 jagged slices of life and the afterlife dependably deliver the damaged goods: zombies, dream-haunted kiddies, femmes fatale and fiends. Reprising his role from American Gods (2001) as ex-con, taciturn hunk, superhero and reincarnation of the Norse god Baldur, Shadow shakes things up in "The Monarch of the Glen," battling a primeval beastie and romancing a woodland nymph in the unlikely setting of a tycoon's get-together on the Scottish heath. "Good Boys Deserve Favours" highlights a lonely lad's moony passion for his double bass. "Strange Little Girls," penned to accompany a Tori Amos CD, catalogues the Eternal Feminine from showgirls to Holocaust victims to la belle dame sans merci. "October in the Chair" whimsically features the months as characters. "A Study in Emerald" offers smart, nifty homage to Conan Doyle. In "Harlequin Valentine," Missy the waitress chows down lovingly on the heart of the motley-clad acrobat of the commedia dell'arte, but even that grisly feast is rendered with swooning lyricism. Gaiman again proves himself a perverse romantic, heir not only to Poe and Baudelaire but to the breathless Pre-Raphaelites. (The poetry he includes here, for example, is generally less creepy than drippy.) He wears his pop cred in boldface, and street-smart hipness saturates these eerie epiphanies. But the collection also boasts lush prose, a lack of irony and a winning faith in the enchantment of stories. Expect the unexpected. Then savor the luscious chills. di Bookreporter.com - Stephen Hubbard It should come as no surprise to find that Neil Gaiman dedicates FRAGILE THINGS to Ray Bradbury, Harlan Ellison and the late Robert Sheckley. After all, they are undisputed masters of the writing world in the science fiction and fantasy genre, occasionally gaining acceptance from the outside writing universe as well. Of these three, Bradbury is the most successful beyond the barrier that is still ... L'autore |