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Eternity and Other Stories

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Here are seven stories from a master of the art. Viktor Chemayev is the Philip Marlowe of Russian detectives, a sad-eyed, heavy drinking romantic who refuses to stay beat. In the title novella of this extraordinary collection, he goes head-to-head with an Irish assassin in the depths of a Moscow nightclub in an attempt to win back his true love, who has been sold to the Beelzebub-like king of the Moscow underworld... Lucius Shepard is known for his dark, unpredictable vision, and in this assemblage of some of his best writing he takes us from Moscow to Africa; from the mountains of Iraq, where Specialist Charlie N. Wilson encounters a very different sort of enemy, to Central America, where a bloody-handed colonel meets his doom via lizards. In these seven tales Shepard's imagination spans the globe and, like an American Gabriel Garcia Marquez, refuses to be restricted by mere reality.

224 pages, Paperback

First published August 30, 2005

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About the author

Lucius Shepard

296 books158 followers
Brief biographies are, like history texts, too organized to be other than orderly misrepresentations of the truth. So when it's written that Lucius Shepard was born in August of 1947 to Lucy and William Shepard in Lynchburg, Virginia, and raised thereafter in Daytona Beach, Florida, it provides a statistical hit and gives you nothing of the difficult childhood from which he frequently attempted to escape, eventually succeeding at the age of fifteen, when he traveled to Ireland aboard a freighter and thereafter spent several years in Europe, North Africa, and Asia, working in a cigarette factory in Germany, in the black market of Cairo's Khan al Khalili bazaar, as a night club bouncer in Spain, and in numerous other countries at numerous other occupations. On returning to the United States, Shepard entered the University of North Carolina, where for one semester he served as the co-editor of the Carolina Quarterly. Either he did not feel challenged by the curriculum, or else he found other pursuits more challenging. Whichever the case, he dropped out several times and traveled to Spain, Southeast Asia (at a time when tourism there was generally discouraged), and South and Central America. He ended his academic career as a tenth-semester sophomore with a heightened political sensibility, a fairly extensive knowledge of Latin American culture and some pleasant memories.

Toward the beginning of his stay at the university, Shepard met Joy Wolf, a fellow student, and they were married, a union that eventually produced one son, Gullivar, now an architect in New York City. While traveling cross-country to California, they had their car break down in Detroit and were forced to take jobs in order to pay for repairs. As fortune would have it, Shepard joined a band, and passed the better part of the 1970s playing rock and roll in the Midwest. When an opportunity presented itself, usually in the form of a band break-up, he would revisit Central America, developing a particular affection for the people of Honduras. He intermittently took odd jobs, working as a janitor, a laborer, a sealer of driveways, and, in a nearly soul-destroying few months, a correspondent for Blue Cross/Blue Shield, a position that compelled him to call the infirm and the terminally ill to inform them they had misfiled certain forms and so were being denied their benefits.

In 1980 Shepard attended the Clarion Writers’ Workshop at Michigan State University and thereafter embarked upon a writing career. He sold his first story, "Black Coral," in 1981 to New Dimensions, an anthology edited by Marta Randall. During a prolonged trip to Central America, covering a period from 1981-1982, he worked as a freelance journalist focusing on the civil war in El Salvador. Since that time he has mainly devoted himself to the writing of fiction. His novels and stories have earned numerous awards in both the genre and the mainstream.

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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Jonfaith.
2,167 reviews1,759 followers
February 15, 2026
Standing, it looked to Chemayev that the stones beneath his feet were miles away, the surface of a lumpy planet seen from space. A shadowy floater cluttered his vision. The white leaves each had a doubled image, and March's features, rising form the pale seamy ground of his skin, made no sense as a face--like landmarks on a map without referents.

2026 reread:

My memories were pretty firm and I was again delighted by this collection which of course conjures Conrad but also beckons Ballard. I’m reasonably certain I didn’t read the Florida noir piece nor the one involving the artist in prison. I thought they were the weakest of the collection.

Original review:
This collection came into my possession two years at a library sale in Louisville. Soon after I read Only Partly Here the opening piece, a ghost story of Ground Zero which remains the best fiction I've read concerning September 11th. Maybe as divine punishment, I then put down the book and nearly forgot it until the other day. Somewhat stranded in the house with a foot of fresh snow outdoors I picked up the book and read Eternity, a disturbing piece which concludes the tome about Putin's Kleptocracy serving as a bastion of damnation for all of Mother Russia's sins. Reeling from that I flipped back to Shepard's second story about air strike which ruptures the ground in Iraq and opens a passage to Jahannam (Hell in Islam)and read through the collection sequentially. These are philosophically charged stories addressing colonialism, addiction, the War on Terror and the psychology of incarceration. I'm not sure if I am simply over-smitten with the displayed themes to compensate for the enhanced (over-written?) dialogue which predominates. It is debatable whether I care. There was a touch of sadness when I discovered last night Shepard passed away last year. I suspect this won't be my last encounter with such frenetic and New Weird work.
Profile Image for Adam.
558 reviews443 followers
September 10, 2008
Tales of gothic and surreal horror which by being set in places of recent real world tragedy like ground zero of 9-11, the Congo, Iraq, Russia, Central America, and in the American Jail system tackle with these issues and avoids escapism. The tales are great with hints of Ballard, Cortazar, , Borges, and Poe. “Jailwise” and “Eternity” maybe his most extended pieces of nearly pure surrealism. Like Hawthorne he is offering us parables that kaleidoscope any interpretation we try to place on them. Shepard is without a doubt one of our greatest living authors.
Profile Image for Graham P.
345 reviews48 followers
August 27, 2023
As usual, Shepard, master surrealist of crime & fantasy, continues his mastery of the novella with this collection, which shows his usual heavy-handed existentialism touched with magic and violence. Here are more tales of ex-pats and wanderers skirting the edges between a fallen empire and the sorcery hiding within. As duplicitous as his prose is dense, Shepard was perhaps one of the most consistent novella-ists of his time - and never fully branded horror, crime, fantasy or SF, he takes all in with his sorcery ways that evoke classic SF, UK espionage, and hallucinogenic terrors. While some may bristle at his density of prose and inner turmoil of his characters, not many can paint the individual in strife as Shepard had done over two strong decades of fantastical work.

'Only Partly Here' is as modern a ghost story as you can get. Here the rubble of 911 carries more than destruction, but ghosts that permeate the downtrodden barriers of reality. 'Crocodile Rock' has yet another operative seeking a spiritual treasure that may just cut his chord - here, the setting Africa, and yes, a crocodile is the creature to possess. 'Hands Up! Who Wants To Die?' is of the on-the-lamb crime story of Floridian losers on the run from themselves, only to be enmeshed in a great mystery where alien visitations and time splits tweak the narrative. 'The Drive-In Puerto Rico' shows another lost soul in the Caribbean who happens to be a war hero seeking asylum from not only his country but from himself. 'Eternity and Afterward' is more of the usual - tough hitman infiltrates an otherworldly mecca underground only to encounter spiritual side-journeys, godlike Soviet mystics, and Hell painted white, where the vodka flows and the party never ends.

But it is 'Jailwise' that tears the roof off the collection. It is a fine piece of mood, precision, and some far-out blissful fodder as well. Here in a prison of the reformed, there are no guards, no walls, no rules. The inmate/narrator is an artist who is allowed free reign to paint his own cathedral, only to get embroiled with a loving genderless woman and a group of ageless mystics who may be pulling the strings not only from the prison but from another dimension...and mainly from within himself. Utterly beautiful and heartfelt. One of the best prison SF entries ever written, right up on par with Thomas Disch's 'Camp Concentration.'

As always, Shepard is a master.

9 reviews1 follower
February 11, 2008
Another unbelievably wonderful collection by Shepard. Shepard transforms seemingly everyday incidents into sequences full of sinister forces, unearthly visions and terrifying hallucinations. And in every story there is something infinitely essential about humanity, the beauty and terror of existence.
42 reviews
September 15, 2018
This book is full of mind expanding ideas and well described scenarios, great lines and well evoked weird moments, but the stories themselves left me a little unsatisfied. I felt that the characters, though vivid and believable, lacked qualities that would have made them exceptional in some way. It wouldn't have mattered in what way. I didn't mean just that some added quirk would have added interest, but some deep seated flaw or redeeming facet that would have made them different to the rest of us. On the whole it felt as though these were ordinary people in extraordinary situations, I didn't particularly feel for them as they weren't really striving for anything above or outside themselves or even within themselves. One of the things that made "A Handbook of AmericanPrayer" so fascinating and compelling was that the main character had his life destroyed, but he still kept it together and went on rebuilding no matter what. There's not really anyone like that in the first 4 stories in this and that's as far as I got. Some very decent writing. Close but no cigar.
273 reviews2 followers
August 10, 2022
This is superlative fiction writing whose quality transcends the mediocre perception that sci-fi and fantasy often have among readers who aren't interested in either genre.
Profile Image for Mark.
1,149 reviews45 followers
February 2, 2021
Lucius Shepard short story collection shows how fantasy weds with criticism of shifty geo-politics and be entertaining. One story has odious leader killed by supernaturally summoned lizard swarm. Shepard's poetic justice takes sharp left turn and no less entertaining.
Profile Image for Gregor Xane.
Author 19 books341 followers
June 9, 2010
This is an excellent collection. And short stories are always a tough sell with me.
Profile Image for Forest Passage.
24 reviews5 followers
October 4, 2010
It had potential, but as the collection went on it became blurry, and rudderless. Lucius shephard could have done better.
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