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Can't Live Without You [7]

Oceans of the Mind (online) Winter 2001
The Haunted Bookshop and Other Apparitions, Borgo Press, September 2007

Captain Fagan Died Alone [5]

The DAW Science Fiction Reader ed. Donald A. Wollheim, DAW, 1976
The Best of Both Worlds and Other Ambiguous Tales, Borgo Press, August 2009

Review by Ian Braidwood

This story is set in the same universe as To Challenge Chaos, though in tone it's more like An Offer of Oblivion.

It concerns Malachi Fagan, one of many children scattered across the universe by the promiscuous captain of the title. As Malachi grows into adulthood, he becomes increasingly intrigued by who his father is and so when his mother dies, he goes in search of his father.

Many of Brian's early short stories are quest stories like this one and like this one the consummation is not what the seeker wants.


The Cards Speak [1]

Horrors! 365 Scary Stories ed. Stefan Dziemianowicz, Robert Weinberg & Martin H. Greenberg, Barnes & Noble 1998 (as by Brian Craig)

Review by Trent Walters

The Cards Speak puts a twist on an old story. What if we made a deck of cards as we used to - unduplicated and original paintings, free of mass production - returning the magic that they once held?

The stakes of the game would have to be higher...


Carpe Diem [1]

The Penny Dreadfull (fnz) #9, November 1997 (as by Francis Emery)

Carriers [7]

Asimov's Science Fiction July 1993
Translated into German by Heiko Langhans as: 'Träger' in Die Strasse nach Candarei ed. Wolfgang Jeschke, Heyne, 1995
The Tree of Life and Other Tales of the Biotech Revolution, Borgo Press, September 2007

Review by Ian Braidwood

Bowring is the sole survivor of the ill-fated Mars mission. He now lives on an isolated pig farm, rejecting the company of his fellow people. Until one day, there are helicopters scouring the land around his farm and soldiers knocking on his door.

Once he had seen the soldiers off, he goes up to his bedroom to find the fugitives: a young woman and her baby.

This melancholy story reminds us that we are all carriers of memories of all sorts. It also brings new meaning to the word bloodshed.


Casualty [8]

Future Weapons of War ed. Joe Haldeman and Martin H. Greenberg, Baen, March 2007
In the Flesh and Other Tales of the Biotech Revolution, Borgo Press, March 2009

Changelings [5]

Interzone #85, July 1994
Changelings and Other Metamorphic Tales, Borgo Press, March 2009

Chanterelle [12]

Black Heart, Ivory Bones ed. Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling, Avon, 2000
Year's Best Fantasy ed. David G. Hartwell & Kathryn Cramer, Eos, 2001
Salome & Other Decadent Fantasies, Cosmos, 2004

Review by Ian Braidwood

Definite echoes of Handsel and Gretal here, though there is no trail of breadcrumbs.

Handsel and Chanterelle grew up in the city, but when their father dies, their mother Catriona takes them home to live with thier grandfather, a blacksmith. However, when they arrive in the village, their grandfatrher is nowhere to be found; so Catriona goes into the forest to search for him, never to return.

After a few days, hunger drives Chanterelle and Handsel in search of their mother and they wander the woods growing steadily weaker; until they meet an old she-wolf, who warns them not to eat the mushrooms. After a few more days, they are taken in by a mysterious woman who has nothing else to offer...


The Child-Stealers [36]

Tales of the Shadowmen 3: Danse Macabre ed. Jean-Marc & Randy Lofficier, Black Coat Press, December 2006
The Shadow of Frankenstein, Black Coat Press, December 2008

A Chip off the Old Block [10]

Postscripts #2, Summer 2004
In the Flesh and Other Tales of the Biotech Revolution, Borgo Press, March 2009

A Christmas Cure-All [2]

Crabapple (fnz) #?, c. 1967 (as by Kay Stirling)

Cinderella's Sisters [6]

The Gate #1, April 1989
Sexual Chemistry, Simon & Schuster (UK), 1991

Review by Ian Braidwood

For me, this is one of Brian's less successful efforts and for the same reasons as An Offer of Oblivion.

The tale concerns Aurora and Jeanne Dark, heiress' to the fortune of a genetic engineering pioneer, who are in the opinion of their peers ugly; hence the title. However, instead of having a more fortunate younger sister, the Cinderella of the title is the ideal of feminine beauty.

At 6,000 words this story is quite sizeable, but I feel would benefit from the room a novel could afford. It is a humane and touching story, but it lack's impact, because motivations are reported rather than shown.


The Colour of Envy [9]

Asimov's Science Fiction May 2001
The Cure for Love and Other Tales of the Biotech Revolution, Borgo Press, June 2007

Review by Ian Braidwood

This is about Tess Eliot, a media studdies student who to make ends meet, volunteers for an experiment in which she's smeered with goo containing genetically engineered chloroplasts. This naturally turns the skin of her arms and legs green, but she's not worried, because the chlororplasts won't survive long...

Another of Brian's witty anti-yuck-factor stories about the benefits of biotechnology, like The Milk of Human Kindness.


Coming to Terms with the Great Plague [7]

Omni On-Line 31 December 1997
Changelings and Other Metamorphic Tales, Borgo Press, March 2009
This Story is currently online at Omni Archives
Finalist for the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award for the Best Short SF of the Year 1997.

Community Service [8]

Terra Incognita #2, Spring 1997
The Haunted Bookshop and Other Apparitions, Borgo Press, September 2007

Complications [12]

Amazing Stories February 1992
Complications & Other Science Fiction Stories, Cosmos Books, 2003

Review by Ian Braidwood

An intriguing story set in a world where men are not separate conscious entities, but eel-like creatures, which have a quasi-parasitic relationship with their mothers and wives.

When a mother gives birth to a girl, the baby is suckled and brought up exactly as in this world; but if the baby is a boy, then the infant is transferred immediately to the daughter-in-law. Thus families are not nuclear, but follow the germ-line with the eldest mother taking the matriarchal role and marriages are arranged.

The complications of the title are to do with pregnancy. We are after all, still dealing with a biological system and all sorts of things go wrong with them; ask anyone who wears glasses.

All this is presented in a very unsensational way, which allows you to sympathise with Rachael as she tries to balance her wishes against the expectations and traditions of her society, and confronts the 'yuck factor' of having her son 'tanked'.

A thoughtful story which echoes Bedside Conversations.


The Conqueror [3]

Science Fiction Monthly v2 #3, (March) 1975

The Copper Cauldron [7]

An Oasis of Horror: Decadent Tales and Contes Cruels, Borgo Press, January 2008

The Corridor [1]

Procyon (fnz) #1, Winter 1975

The Cosmic Perspective [8]

The Cosmic Perspective/Custer's Last Stand, Drumm, 1985
The Cosmic Perspective and Other Black Comedies, Borgo Press, July 2009

Review by Ian Braidwood

Henry McCanless is born of indifferent parents into an indifferent world and quickly learns to make as little fuss as possible. He cultivates a love of the stars and ends up as the methodical professor of Astronomy in a well - off university.

One day he notices something about his wife Stella, which inspires him with a revolutionary vision of the universe, which literally changes everyone's cosmic perspective.

Brian portrays Henry with great pathos and even manages to bring him to a reconciliation with his fate and his discovery. A nice one I'm glad I read.


The Countryman [poem]

Manchester Evening News 1959

The Cult of Selene [2]

Albedo One #14, 1997
Translated into French as Le culte de séléné in Parallèles #8
The Gardens of Tantalus and Other Delusions, Borgo Press, March 2008

Review by Ian Braidwood

Professor Amarinth loved to loiter in the more secluded spaces of ancient Greek history; the study of the worship of Zeus wasn't for him. No, he decided to penetrate the mysteries of Selene, the Greeks' first moon goddess. As he traced the legend, he encountered Hecate, Artemis and Endymion, and came to understand the nature of the cult's worship.

It was when he tried to recreate the ceremonies that the trouble started...

Mildly amusing.


The Cure for Love [8]

Asimov's Science Fiction mid-December 1993
Translated into Czech as Lék na lásku in Asimov´s Science Fiction CZ August 1997
The Cure for Love and Other Tales of the Biotech Revolution, Borgo Press, June 2007

Review by Ian Braidwood

A very touching story in which Catherine Tyldesley - nee Grant - meets old school friend Don Sherrington and they go back to her flat to chat over coffee.

It turns out that life hasn't been kind to either of them in the years since they left school. Don's sister, Diana has committed suicide and Catherine has endured a stormy marriage and a thankless son.

As they talk, it becomes clear that Diana's death is linked to Don's work with genetically engineered viruses and his attempts to find a way of alleviating some of the worst affects of forming an emotional attachment.

A tragic tale and definitely one to seek out if you can.


Curiouser and Curiouser(A Kitchen Sink Drama by Carol Lewis) [3]

Redsine #4, February 2001
The Gardens of Tantalus and Other Delusions, Borgo Press, March 2008

Custer's Last Stand [9]

The Cosmic Perspective/Custer's Last Stand, Drumm, 1985
The Cosmic Perspective and Other Black Comedies, Borgo Press, July 2009

Review by Ian Braidwood

Marcus Custer is a hack, a purveyor of lurid, violent fantasies to the nation. From his suburban abode, he pours out a careless stream of sadistic rape and murder, which keeps him high in the best-seller's lists.

Then one day he wakes up to find his home picketed by the poor victims of his imagination, like poor Dorothy Gretton from Subscription to Sin. Not only that, but he dare not answer the phone for fear of it being one of his murderous creations on the other end demanding a rewrite.

Marcus finds he can no longer create, for no sooner has he invented a character than he finds it outside with its companions.

Determined to beat his tormentors, Marcus decides to tell the one story they can't stop him writing...

Witty and ironic, a story to make any writer nervous.


The Brian Stableford Website