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Long Walks, Last Flights & Other Strange Journeys
by Ken Scholes
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In his first story collection, sf newcomer Scholes displays a rare gift for inventive storytelling that already invites comparisons with the genre’s leading practitioners. His crisply minimalist prose paradoxically gives rise to an abundance of cleverly original ideas and is often permeated by black humor. At a nursing home for retired superheroes, the caped residents harass the nursing staff and reminisce about the old days. The intelligent chimpanzees trained to work on a moon-based mining colony make a sudden evolutionary leap and begin killing off their human hosts. Meriwether Lewis crosses paths with D. B. Cooper after the lost hijacker from the 1970s becomes stranded 200 years in the past. In the volume’s standout tale, “Edward Bear and the Very Long Walk,” Scholes’ homage to A. A. Milne recounts the fate of the lone survivor of a colonization effort on a hostile planet: an intelligently programmed toy bear. Scholes’ lucidly written afterword sheds light on the genesis for all those crazy ideas and provides a fitting warm-up for what will doubtless become an illustrious career.
Smart, savvy, poetic and the best damned thing you’re likely to pick up for less than twenty bucks any time soon.
| Jonathan Strahan, author of The Year's Best Science Fiction and Fantasy | |
Ken’s writing has the brilliance of short story masters like Ray Bradbury and Harlan Ellison, and a voice fresh with the needs of the extraordinary times we are living in.
| Brenda Cooper, author of Reading the Wind | |
One of the best new writers coming into the field.
| Dean Wesley Smith | |
Beautifully written and deeply moving.
| Mary Robinette Kowal, author of John W. Campbell Award Winner | |
A wonderful, unique blend of science fiction and fantasy.
| James C. Glass, author of The Viper of Portello | |
A truly original voice. Ken Scholes has the goods.
| Josh Rountree, author of Can't Buy Me Faded Love | |
I’ve spent weeks trying to find the appropriate adjectives to describe how much I like Ken Scholes’ stories. I finally figured it. Wow. That’s it. Wow—just plain wow.
| Ken Rand, author of Where Angels Fear | |
This is the golden age of fantasy, with a dozen masters doing their best work. Then along comes Ken Scholes, with his amazing clarity, power, and invention, and shows us how it’s done
| Orson Scott Card, author of Ender's Game | |
A keen eye for action and a keen ear for the sounds of the human heart. A hot new voice to watch for. . .Grab on now, because he's going places.
| Harry Turtledove, author of The Man With the Iron Heart | |
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