aiee's review

4.0

I just really love Neil Gaiman. The final story of the collection is my favorite by far, and... yeah, I just really love his twisted mind.



I just really went off Neil Gaiman's whole writing style about 50 pages in? But I forced myself to finish it and I didn't even read the last two stories but I don't care.
dark lighthearted mysterious relaxing slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: N/A
Loveable characters: N/A
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: N/A

Fabulous! Gaiman’s collection of shorts was just as fun and uncanny as the rest of his writing. It also served as a reminder to me that Gaiman and George R. R. Martin are contemporaries as writers and were influenced by many of the same pop culture phenomena.

The quality of writing is excellent, as always, but I did not enjoy the stories as much as his other works. It veers quite dark, further in to the darkness than I prefer.

A collection of short stories . Smoke and Mirrors is an appropriate name for this book. Nothing is what it seems .. prospective readers- Note that this has adult themes. For me The stories range from two stars to five stars. Fascinating, sometimes confusing,and often disturbing , would be a good way to describe most stories . Worth reading if you are a fan of Gaiman.

i love everything neil gaiman ever writes.
well, that’s not exactly true, but it is true that very few pieces in this collection missed the mark for me. excellent all around.

Be bold, be bold, but not too bold...

I can't come up with a very coherent way to organize my thoughts, so I'm just going to comment a little on the stories that stuck out to me the most (which, admittedly, is at least half of them).

The Wedding Present
This story inspired me to start writing short stories. The first "story" in the book (though only in the Introduction) and I was hooked. Gaiman writes that most of the stories in this collection didn't reach the conclusion he had originally intended, but I think that's what really adds magic to Smoke and Mirrors.

Chivalry
This was positively adorable. It read as if it were being read aloud, which is an extremely difficult feeling to get (easier so in short stories, but still) out of a story and I loved it. It was humorous and sweet and the darkness present in some of the other stories in this collection steers clear of this one. Good on you, Mrs. Whitaker.

Troll Bridge
I feel like I've read a fairy tale similar to this before, not specifically like Gaiman's, but similar. I got an odd deja-vu when I read it, but possibly it was just a feeling of identification. I still can’t explain it, the best word I have to describe it is “strange”.

The Goldfish Pool and Other Stories
This one was incredibly surreal. I felt like I was caught in the situation myself, that something of my creation was taken out of my hands and twisted into something I couldn’t recognize at all. Add that to the impossible June Lincoln, and the carp in the pond, and the words washed over me as if I were reading a memory.

The White Road
This one is my personal favorite. Twisty and clever (just like a fox), and an ending I didn’t quite see coming. The language was enticing, enchanting even, and it caught me from the first line.

Queen of Knives
I have very little to say except that this one /hurts/. Deeply.
And, in the kitchen, all alone,
I saw him stab a knife into a box.
You made me love you.
I didn’t want to do it.

Ouch.

We Can Get Them For You Wholesale
I don’t really have much to say about this one, except that I found it so funny. It read so comedically, I thoroughly enjoyed it and it’s definitely my second favorite.

The Sweeper of Dreams
This was beautiful, simply short, and (if you can excuse me), surreally dream-like. I really don’t have much to say, the length doesn’t provide much for me to expand on. I really enjoyed this one.

The Sea Change
I loved the language of this one. It was dark, it was rough, and it was powerful (much like the sea itself). The structure was well done and it read almost like a song. I felt deja-vu with this one as well, possibly because I’m so connected to the sea? Who knows. Third favorite.

Murder Mysteries
This was the only story in this collection that I just did not like. I don’t know what it was, but I couldn’t get through the story. I wasn’t hooked. It wasn’t gripping, like the others. I was bored. I skimmed through it, if only to make it seem read to myself, and was glad to get over it. I guess there’s always one.

Snow, Glass, Apples
Ah, yes. The final story, and what a finale indeed. I really enjoyed this one, it felt new (which is always a rather odd experience when I read). The phrase “nothing new under the sun” does not apply to this tale (and if it does, I’d love to read more like it). Retellings (if this is what you’d call this) of fairy tales are some of my favorite short stories. Excellent practice for writers (even with such experience as Gaiman).

I love NG's storytelling and this collection of writings does not disappoint. While not every story is a 5-star story, the overall experience is definitely excellent. His stories are imaginative, inventive, sometimes dark, sometimes funny, always engaging.

Loved so many of these short stories. “The Price” which involved a cat desperately fighting evil demons each night to protect his human family, was endearing and touched the heart. “Shoggoth’s Old Peculiar” was a fun read in which a tourist ends up in the strange town of Innsmouth for the night, hobnobbing with peculiar locals at an even more peculiar pub. There are several great tales concerning the end of the world, some interesting prose concerning sexuality, and a fun little tale in which a modern-day elderly woman bargains with Sir Galahad about the holy grail she purchased at a thrift store, now occupying pride of place on her mantle.
This collection contains a wealth of fun stories which cover a wide array of topics. Some lighthearted and humorous, some serious and sensitive, some mildly disturbing, all enjoyable.