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Earthware

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Eons had passed, an inordinate stretch of the ever-inexorable force of time, before the nervous tissue evolved consciousness. The lights had turned on, and suddenly it could look back upon itself perched in the place it looked from at the world. 20 short stories poke at different aspects of the human condition, including love, nihilism, and our future with technology.

94 pages, ebook

Published October 18, 2018

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armssaner

4 books8 followers

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Kitiera Morey.
Author 10 books34 followers
November 21, 2018
I received a free copy of this novel from the author in exchange for an honest review.

Despite how many short stories are in here, this is a quick read. Many of the stories are thought-provoking with such interesting ideas. A few actually upset me because they ended just as they were getting awesome. I hope these ideas are fleshed out in the future because I’d eat them up, and I’m not the biggest science-fiction fan.

Some of the stories needed a bit of work or shouldn’t have been included at all. They weren’t as fleshed out or didn’t have the same vibe as the other great stories. They didn’t sour my experience, but they did upset the natural flow of the book.

This book needed another two good edits before it got published, but I was able to follow the stories just fine.

All in all, I’m glad I read these short stories. The author is wildly creative and has a promising career ahead of them.
Profile Image for Brian Wilkerson.
Author 5 books30 followers
February 18, 2019
Amr Nasser asked me to read his short story collection, "Earthware". It has a frame narrative of aliens doing anthropology on Earth's humans, and so the short stories are presented as snapshots of their work. This means that my normal method of evaluation is insufficient. However, I will still assign a grade at the end.

These short stories are basically dramatizations of areas in science or psychology etc. that the author finds interesting. The topic, question, etc. is presented as typically two people talking to each other while other events may or may not take place.

For instance, there is one where a scientist makes the argument that smart phones are alive/intelligent because they can do more complex tasks than ants. They can't make this known to us because they don't have the means to. The mad scientist then devises an experiment to test this theory. The story ends as this experiment begins. I can only assume this means that the author does not an answer and doesn't want to speculate.

That is a thing with most of the stories. They have no ending or any kind of resolution, be it happy, sad or otherwise. They don't even have a Sequel Hook or The Adventure Continues sort of ending. They usually end after a single twist, which is something I feel is common to short stories as a style. Overall, they all feel like great beginnings of stories, without a middle or an end. This is especially egregious with "The Chant" because it ends at its climax. After reading it, I sincerely thought the book's formatting cut off the last sentence or so.

"The light at the end of the tunnel" is more like a completed story. It takes the "life is a (subway) tunnel" idea and makes a society out of it, complete with sub-cultures. There are the creative types who make art and music as they go, not really caring about getting out of the tunnel. There are the KBOs (Keep Buggering On) who only care about getting out of the tunnel, but are never far ahead of the others. Then there are the nihilists, who don't care about anything and that includes the resolve to let the subway run them over.

They are all really short, some only a page long. "Brink of Survival" is so short and ends so abruptly that I have no idea what is going on. "Pulling through the curtains", on the other hand, is made stronger for this. It is about a guy with memory loss who is taking medication for it. There is a lot of confusion and few details in its narration. It is disorienting. That's because the protagonist is disoriented by their illness. The treatment is ongoing as the story ends, but there is a sense that it will end in time. It is well done.

The thing about short story collections is that they are a grab bag of quality. Some are excellent, some are dreadful and some are decent. This one in particular is difficult to find an average. I hovered between C- and B+ so I'll settle in the middle.

Trickster Eric Novels gives "Earthware" an even B

This was a free review request. The author requested an honest review and so I provided one.
Profile Image for S.K. Gregory.
Author 143 books212 followers
January 18, 2019
This short story collection was interesting to read. I think that the last story was the strongest and the best one. I didn't fully understand the time travel one, but the collection would be enjoyed by fantasy fans.
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