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Book Reviews of Vanishing Acts

Vanishing Acts
Vanishing Acts
Author: Ellen Datlow (Editor)
ISBN-13: 9780312869618
ISBN-10: 0312869614
Publication Date: 7/6/2001
Pages: 384
Rating:
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
 6

3.7 stars, based on 6 ratings
Publisher: Tor Books
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

4 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

althea avatar reviewed Vanishing Acts on + 774 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Well-known for editing the popular Years Best SF & Horror anthologies, Datlow here has created an anthology based around the concept of extinction - one of the areas, in my perception, where science-fiction so easily crosses over into the truly horrific

Suzy McKee Charnas - Listening to Brahms
An alien race of lizard-people has become obsessed with human popular culture through listening to our radio (&etc) transmissions Filled with enthusiasm, they send an interstellar mission to greet humanity but by the time they arrive, humanity has self-destructed, and the only humans left alive are the crew of a space mission. The lizards bring the survivors back to their own planet, where they are feted as celebrities but this does not save the survivors from depression and insanity Meanwhile, the lizards culture, taken over my their love of all things human, seems to be going the same way as humanitys has Told from the perspective of one of the survivors, a none-too-stable individual who clings to the classical music of Earth as his touchstone.

Paul McAuley The Rift
An ill-conceived expedition made up of a motley mix of adventurers, scientists, and media hounds has set out to explore one of the last wildernesses on Earth a rift valley/canyon hidden deep in the Amazon. What they might find there could be stranger than they could guess Well-written, but I didnt really find the disorganization and incompetence of the expedition believable, from what Ive read about such (non-fictional) ventures elsewhere

Bruce McAllister The Girl Who Loved Animals
A social worker, in between dealing with her own issues (including a troubled, addicted daughter), deals with one of her clients a none-too-bright young woman in an abusive relationship who has now caught the attention of religiously-motivated assassins and the press for agreeing to do something some people find terribly offensive carrying the fetus of an all-but-extinct animal in her womb, to term. The issues here are sensitively dealt with, but I found the side-plot about the narrators own daughter and her problems to be somewhat unnecessary.

Ian McDowell Sunflowers
In a small Midwestern town, theres a field that has come down through one familys hands without ever being developed or plowed over. And that one field is a link to plains of the past, where huge flocks of passenger pigeons fly overhead and extinct sunflowers sway in the breeze as writer and ex-punk Kelly discovers when she comes to visit her younger, goth cousin, whos been having a hard time of it, in a town infested with jocks and the Klan, especially because shes gotten very close to one of those jocks sister Better than most fiction that tries to deal with contemporary subculture (and usually makes an offensive botch of it).

Brian Stableford Tenebrio
This ones pretty much straightforward supernatural horror. A professor is reluctantly dragged out to inspect a remote site by his former student, an ecological protester. Although the site (an uninspiring stand of trees) does not seem to have anything unusual going for it except an strangely high number of common beetles when one of the protesters dies in a freak accident, things get weirder than expected

William Shunn Dance of the Yellow Breasted Luddites
Working with endangered species as a kind of community service punishment in an interstellar civilization, debtor Hannah Specter encounters a bit of trouble when the birdlike creatures her team is supposed to introduce into a wildlife preserve seem to have an unreasonable hatred of the automated prospecting machines that also occupy the preserve. Teamwork and a bit of thinking outside the box may save the day

David J. Schow - Blessed Event
Cop thriller meets Invasion of the Body Snatchers as two policemen investigate a man who killed his pregnant girlfriend, believing that the fetus was an alien monster

Karen Joy Fowler Faded Roses
A melancholy story (and an all-too-believable one) set in a future zoo that points out that not only do we not really appreciate what we have neither will we realize what weve lost when its gone.

Mark W. Tiedemann Links
Historical piece, set in the time of Darwin. A friend of the naturalist tries to buy an unusual creature for scientific examination.

Daniel Abraham Chimera 8
In a future time, scientists try to reconstruct ruined ecosystems by introducing creatures created through gene splicing and hybridization. But with unauthorized experimentation, more may have been unleashed on the world than was intended.

Michael Cadnum Bite the Hand
A short and weird little piece about an eccentric collector who buys what appears to be a mummified specimen of a mythological centaur. But is it really dead?

M. Shayne Bell The Thing About Benny
After the destruction of the rainforests, the hunt is on to find any last remnants of plants that may have somehow survived preserved among common houseplants in private gardens or offices. Benny is a slightly eccentric young man who is obsessed with ABBA (yes, the Swedish pop group) and has an almost preternatural ability to find these rare specimens. Oddly charming.

A.R. Morlan Fast Glaciers
A heretofore undiscovered tribe who communicate through whistling are found, and a group of anthropologists are sent to study them. However, a student researcher believes that contact with the team is hopelessly destroying the tribes culture; even triggering physical changes to their morphology. However, when she takes matters into her own hands, in a well-meaning gambit, the results may be worse than anything she could have imagined.

Avram Davidson Now Let us Sleep
This is the oldest story in this volume, and the only one Id read before. It still packs a punch probably because, if instead of taking place on a planet that just happens to be on an interstellar route, it were set on, say, some islands that just happened to be a stopping point between Europe and Australia in the days of sailing ships, you could easily convince me that it was factual. In this portrayal of the human capacity for not only callous and wanton destruction, but for planned and justified cruelty and genocide this is one of the bleakest statements about human nature that one could find in literature. Its an excellent story.

Ted Chiang Seventy-Two Letters
Some other reviews of this volume have said that it would be worth buying for this story alone. I would have to agree. As far as I can tell, Ted Chiang was only published (so far) eight stories. (This was his third) However, he has won 3 Nebula Awards, the Hugo, the Sidewise award for Alternate History (for this story), the John W. Campbell Award , the Asimov's Reader's Choice Award, the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award, a Locus Poll award, and has been nominated for both the Mythopoeic award and the World Fantasy award. Wow. This guy does not let a story out of his hands until it is perfect, apparently.
At least, this story is pretty close!
It posits an England where the golems of Jewish mythology are not merely the province of rabbis, and not magic. Rather, they follow natural laws, and research and development is ongoing in the technological field of producing golems. However, when a young researchers advances in improving the dexterity of golems is seen as a threat to human workers, hes shunned by the Union but picked up by a wealthy patron who has discovered a more serious threat to the future of humanity a threat which could only possibly be solved by the most brilliant nomenclators of the day
The setting is vivid, the issues are current, the ideas are brilliant I cant praise this story too much!

Joe Haldeman Endangered Species
A short poem about war and religion.
PhoenixFalls avatar reviewed Vanishing Acts on + 185 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I very much enjoyed the premise for this collection, but unfortunately the stories were uniformly bland. A few had clever ideas, a couple were moderately thought-provoking, but the only one with any of the emotional punch I associate with the theme of species death was one of the reprints, Avram Davidson's "Now Let Us Sleep." None of the stories were poorly written, but I had half forgotten them the very next day.
Bossmare avatar reviewed Vanishing Acts on + 306 more book reviews
Great short stories. I liked the Girl Who Loved Animals, Sunflowers and Bite the Hand.
saber avatar reviewed Vanishing Acts on + 159 more book reviews
Published in 2000, it contains 16 science fiction stories