Reviews

Relics, Wrecks, & Ruins by Aiki Flinthart

namulith's review

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3.0

I was in the mood for an anthology of short stories and the topic of Relics, Wrecks and Ruins is right up my alley. The selection of stories was quite nice. I didn't like all of them, but some I really liked. Overall I recommend this book if you want a nice mix of mystical, fantasy and sci-fi stories, all with a theme of the old and mysterious.

shelleyrae's review

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5.0

It’s not often that I respond to a Twitter call out but Relics, Wrecks and Ruins caught my attention for several reasons. Of course I’m always eager to support Australian authors, several of whom are contributors to this anthology, and I’m trying to include more fantasy and science fiction in my reading, but I was also moved upon learning that this was to be the final project for Australian Sci-Fi novelist and the editor of this anthology, Aiki Flinthart, who has been diagnosed with a terminal brain tumour, and that the profits from sales will fund a mentorship program for emerging writers in her name.

Relics, Wrecks and Ruins is an impressive collection of 24 short stories penned by a stellar range of authors including Australian writers Garth Nix, Kate Forsyth, Kylie Chan and international authors, Juliet Marrilier, Jasper Fforde, and Neil Gamain, among others who generously donated their work to the publication. The tales are loosely connected by the titular themes, exploring the relics, wrecks and ruins of the past and future, in this world and others. The stories cover almost every sub-genre of speculative fiction including horror, sci-fi fantasy, and dystopian.

As such, I think Relics, Wrecks and Ruins has something for everyone. There were several story’s that particularly appealed to me from both familiar and unfamiliar authors. Juliet Marrilier’s ‘Washing the Plaid’ is a charming, whimsical introduction to the anthology about a book lover discovering magic. A unique punishment devised by a future society features in 16 Minutes by Jasper Fforde. Fans of Julie Kagawa will enjoy Mary Robinette Kowai’s story, American Changeling where a human/faerie teenager is called upon to save the Seelie Queen. Lee Murray’s The Wreck of the Tartarus sees a submarine full of US sailors caught under a rockfall waiting for rescue. Readers familiar with Mark Lawrence’s Book of the Ancestor Trilogy will appreciate a Red Sister Story featuring Nona, Rulin and Clera called Thaw, and horror fans won’t want to miss Six Stringed Demon, where a rock band fights to exorcise a young boy in a hell of a battle by Sebastian de Castell. Aiki Flinthart has the honour of finishing the collection with a poignant story about birth, death, and humanity’s legacy.

Aiki Flinthart has successfully put together an exciting and powerful anthology with Relics, Wrecks and Ruins. A legacy to be proud of, it has my enthusiastic endorsement.

clivemeister's review against another edition

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4.0

Three and a half stars for this anthology of short stories, rounded up to four for the backstory: I know it was compiled as - almost literally - the dying wish of the compiler, Aiki Flinthart, and that's a lovely thing.

Some stories I loved - always nice to see another Nona Grey story from Mark Lawrence, for example - four stars for that one! 16 Minutes, by Jasper Fforde, is even better: a future where criminals are punished by being locked in endlessly repeated loops of time, living just a few minutes over and over again. Five stars there.

Others missed the mark for me, I'm afraid. Overall, definitely worth reading, but perhaps a shade more ruthlessness on the editing, and it'd have been happier with the rating.
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