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Amy Sterling Casil

Auteur van Imago (Alan Rodgers Books)

31+ Werken 139 Leden 30 Besprekingen

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Fotografie: Amy Sterling Casil, March 2011

Werken van Amy Sterling Casil

Imago (Alan Rodgers Books) (2002) 38 exemplaren
The B-1 Lancer (U.S. Warplanes) (2003) 10 exemplaren
Without Absolution (2000) 8 exemplaren
Shakespeare in Hell (2007) 5 exemplaren
Mad for the Mints 5 exemplaren
To Kiss The Star 4 exemplaren
switch.blade: School's Out — Redacteur; Medewerker — 3 exemplaren
Female Science Fiction Writer (2012) 3 exemplaren
Perfect Stranger 3 exemplaren

Gerelateerde werken

Blood Lite II: Overbite (2010) — Medewerker — 217 exemplaren
Brewing Fine Fiction (2010) — Medewerker — 59 exemplaren
The Shadow Conspiracy II (2011) — Medewerker — 51 exemplaren
Beyond Grimm: Tales Newly Twisted (2012) — Medewerker — 50 exemplaren
L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future, Volume XV (1999) — Medewerker — 49 exemplaren
Nevertheless, She Persisted: A Book View Café Anthology (2017) — Medewerker — 47 exemplaren
L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future, Volume XIV (1998) — Medewerker — 43 exemplaren
Dragon Lords and Warrior Women (2010) — Medewerker — 20 exemplaren
The Usual Path to Publication: 27 Stories About 27 Ways In (2016) — Medewerker — 13 exemplaren
Rocket Boy and the Geek Girls (2009) — Medewerker — 4 exemplaren
Panverse Two (2010) — Medewerker — 3 exemplaren

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Deze bespreking is geschreven voor LibraryThing Vroege Recensenten.
I had a rough time with this one, so I did not make it very far through. Tangled, seemingly-unrelated ideas -- some of which might have been decent stories by themselves -- connected by uneven writing and confusing connections. Not my thing at all.
 
Gemarkeerd
mrbove | 25 andere besprekingen | Jun 23, 2020 |
Shakespeare in Hell is an intriguing title. Think of all it can conjure up – allusions to Milton and Dante, who both had more luck finding stories in the darker realms of the afterlife, and with the villains of their pieces, than with an antiseptic realm of winged creatures playing harps, come to mind; one can imagine Shakespeare choosing Hell as a better stage for his plays and poetry. Or perhaps Shakespeare sinned with his Dark Lady, landing him in eternal flame. Or — well, the possibilities seem endless.

But Amy Sterling Casil has not taken full advantage of the myriad plotlines available to her. We are given no moral structure for this Hell, and no hint of a Deity meting out punishments and rewards. We never do learn precisely why Shakespeare is in Hell, though it does appear to have something to do with the Dark Lady, who is here given the identity of Emilia Bassano Lanier, who lived at roughly the same time as Shakespeare and was the first Englishwoman to assert herself as a professional poet. Nor are we explicitly told why Oscar Wilde is there; Casil apparently does not want to say straight out that being gay will land you in Hell, though she hints at it. There is no explanation for Edgar Allan Poe’s presence there either. Unaccountably, the other major terrestrial character who has a major role in this novella is H.R. Haldeman of Watergate fame, suggesting that God doesn’t forgive (despite the fact that Haldeman publically repented for his role in Watergate at the end of his life).

The moving force in the novel is Beelzebub, who has just consigned Isadora Duncan and Busby Berkeley to the Lake of Fire for failing to provide him with sufficient amusement. He needs something new to amuse him, something meatier. Haldeman, who rides his shoulder, suggests that he could have Julia Child grill a porterhouse (and why is she in Hell? No clue), but Beelzebub corrects him: he wants intellectual meat, a play or a novel. They head for the cave (an allusion to Plato? The author doesn’t follow through on this possibility) where ten thousand writers are all caged together without a single reader. (Don’t the writers ever read each other’s work? Every successful writer I’ve ever read about is an insatiable reader.) Beelzebub waves around three “Get Out of Hell Free” golden tickets, which he offers in exchange for a play. Wilde and Poe volunteer when Sophocles, Pope, Byron, Shelley and Shakespeare refuse to appear in response to Beelzebub’s summons. Beelzebub instructs them that he wants a play that improves on “Hamlet,” and he has some instructions in that regard, including that Hamlet should kill Claudius immediately. Once Beelzebub leaves, the two of them go off to find Shakespeare, as they feel they are not capable of writing a play themselves.

The novella meanders on from there, giving us brief glimpses of many authors, poets and playwrights, and in particular demonstrating how Emilia refuses to be ignored as a possible replacement for the missing Shakespeare. Shakespeare, Wilde and Poe all have their own moments of redemption that seem to come from nowhere and that do not seem to actually redeem them — and if they do, the mechanism of that redemption isn’t made clear. We see no play, no poetry, no writing, nothing that requires that the characters in this novella be masters of the written word. And one more mystery is never solved: what the heck does Bob Haldeman have to do with this?

Small presses, self-publishing, e-books and low prices have given the novella new life in this new digital age. Alas, they have also made it possible for authors to publish novellas that are not ready for the light of day. A good editor might have helped Casil shape something out of this morass of ideas and fragments of ideas. But this novella should not have been published in its present form.

Originally published at http://www.fantasyliterature.com/reviews/horrible-monday-shakespeare-in-hell-by-....
… (meer)
½
 
Gemarkeerd
TerryWeyna | Jul 21, 2014 |
Deze bespreking is geschreven voor LibraryThing Vroege Recensenten.
An imago is a computer construct that is also alive, thinking and immortal, although it has no physical form other than a projected 3D image. DisLex is the company that has created imagoes, believing that by studying imagoes we can understand life and cheat death. Supposedly, understanding imagoes will also help find a cure for HMV, a horrifying mutational contagious disease that afflicts some humans.

I had a very hard time getting into the story, not following the leaps of knowledge and technology that were supposed to tie together imagoes, immortality and HMV. I felt no attachment to any of the characters, who seemed quite flat and uninteresting, and really disliked the protagonist, not because he was a great evil villain but because he was just so petty and disagreeable.… (meer)
½
 
Gemarkeerd
sandragon | 25 andere besprekingen | Apr 30, 2012 |
Deze bespreking is geschreven voor LibraryThing Vroege Recensenten.
Interesting account of a maniacal Disneyesque figure and his effects on the people around him and the world that comes to rely upon his technologies.

I was never sure about the Disney aspects of the story, but they never became particularly important.

A disease is mutating humans causing distrust and fear among the "normals". The main characters get caught up in the politics of the situation, and virtual characters in a virtual world may hold the keys to changing things in the real world.

There were a couple interesting characters (one a surprising choice that ended up my favorite character in the book) and some uninteresting ones that simply seemed to drift along with events, too stupid to realize what was happening. There were some interesting concepts only partially explored.

I have used the word "interesting" three times already, and it's because I don't want to criticize the book too harshly or heap undue praise upon it. It wasn't a bad read, although some of the events were mildly disturbing to read through, but it didn't grab me or fascinate me either and I found the ending vaguely anti-climactic.

I'm on the fence with this one. I'm not sure I'd recommend it, but I'm not adverse to reading more from the same author.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Shijuro | 25 andere besprekingen | Apr 25, 2012 |

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Statistieken

Werken
31
Ook door
13
Leden
139
Populariteit
#147,351
Waardering
½ 3.4
Besprekingen
30
ISBNs
41
Talen
1

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