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The Horns of Elfland

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15 fantasy tales on theme of music from moonlit fairy symphonies to the evil spell of a witch's bell, include
"The New Tiresias" by Jane Emerson (18th century girl grows up)
"Audience" by Jack Womack (the Museum of Lost Sounds)
"Flash Company" by Gene Wolfe
"Merlusine" by Lucy Sussex (funny)
"The Color of Angels" by Terri Windling
"Aïda in the Park" by Susan Palwick

352 pages, Mass Market Paperback

Published May 1, 1997

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About the author

Ellen Kushner

141 books610 followers
Ellen Kushner weaves together multiple careers as a writer, radio host, teacher, performer and public speaker.

A graduate of Barnard College, she also attended Bryn Mawr College, and grew up in Cleveland, Ohio. She began her career in publishing as a fiction editor in New York City, but left to write her first novel Swordspoint, which has become a cult classic, hailed as the progenitor of the “mannerpunk” (or “Fantasy of Manners”) school of urban fantasy. Swordspoint was followed by Thomas the Rhymer (World Fantasy Award and the Mythopoeic Award), and two more novels in her “Riverside” series. In 2015, Thomas the Rhymer was published in the UK as part of the Gollancz “Fantasy Masterworks” line.

In addition, her short fiction appears regularly in numerous anthologies. Her stories have been translated into a wide variety of languages, including Japanese, French, Dutch, German, Spanish, Latvian and Finnish.

Upon moving to Boston, she became a radio host for WGBH-FM. In 1996, she created Sound & Spirit, PRI’s award-winning national public radio series. With Ellen as host and writer, the program aired nationally until 2010; many of the original shows can now be heard archived online.

As a live stage performer, her solo spoken word works include Esther: the Feast of Masks, and The Golden Dreydl: a Klezmer ‘Nutcracker’ for Chanukah (with Shirim Klezmer Orchestra). In 2008, Vital Theatre commissioned her to script a full-scale theatrical version. The Klezmer Nutcracker played to sold-out audiences in New York City, with Kushner in the role of the magical Tante Miriam.

In 2012, Kushner entered the world of audiobooks, narrating and co-producing “illuminated” versions of all three of the “Riverside” novels with SueMedia Productions for Neil Gaiman Presents at Audible.com—and winning a 2013 Audie Award for Swordspoint.

Other recent projects include the urban fantasy anthology Welcome to Bordertown (co-edited with Holly Black), and The Witches of Lublin, a musical audio drama written with Elizabeth Schwartz and Yale Strom (which one Gabriel, Gracie and Wilbur Awards in 2012). In 2015 she contributed to and oversaw the creation of the online Riverside series prequel Tremontaine for Serial Box with collaborators Joel Derfner, Alaya Dawn Johnson, Malinda Lo, Racheline Maltese and Patty Bryant.

A dauntless traveler, Ellen Kushner has been a guest of honor at conventions all over the world. She regularly teaches writing at the prestigious Clarion Workshop and the Hollins University Graduate Program in Children’s Literature.

Ellen Kushner is a co-founder and past president of the Interstitial Arts Foundation, an organization supporting work that falls between genre categories. She lives in New York City with author and educator Delia Sherman, a lot of books, airplane and theater ticket stubs, and no cats whatsoever.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Audrey.
Author 1 book83 followers
August 13, 2007
some good stories, some not as good. the mix between music and fairie is an old one, and is handled deftly by several authors in this collection.
Profile Image for Cynthia Armistead.
363 reviews26 followers
July 4, 2010
It took a while to track down this volume, as it has long been out of print. Interlibrary loan was, once again, my friend. But how odd to read an actual physical book again, when I've been reading ebooks almost exclusively lately!

Most of the stories were a bit darker than anticipated. 1997 was not such a depressing time to me, so I'm not sure why that would be the case.

I've had to send the book back to the library already, so I don't have it at hand despite finishing it last night.

The first standout story was "The Drummer and the Skins" by John Brunner. Finding a reference to a Yoruban peoples' tradition in a white British author's story was somewhat surprising, but go figure. I'm a white southern American woman, too. I suppose some people might argue that neither of us have no right to be interested/know about such things/whatever. I think of Brunner as a very hard SF writer, so that was especially surprising from him. His inclusion in a fantasy anthology was a surprise altogether. These surprises are some of the things I enjoy about anthologies - they challenge my assumptions.

I was rather bitter when I first thought I understood what Terri Windling's novelette "The Color of Angels was about. "Just what I need to read about," I told Sam. "A story about a woman gradually losing everything she loves to illness." MS, in the story (not one of my diagnoses, but it hit far too close to home, anyway). Suffice it to say that I was glad that I continued to read.

Even if I hadn't been happy with where the story went, I would not have been able to resist Windling's writing. She brings in so much of the world - colors, textures, music - so that I felt far more immersed in that one piece than I have in my own life at times. She is marvelously evocative. I haven't managed to put my hands on any of the Bordertown/Borderlands books, despite seeking them for a long time. Now I'm adding her solo works to to the "look for" list, and pushing them much higher on the priority scale.

"The Death of Raven" by Ellen Kushner was unexpectedly comforting. Very brief, quite simply, but one I would love to see reprinted to increase its availability. (It may have been reprinted, for all I know. I certainly hope that it has been.) I've got Kushner's novels on my "to-read" shelf, but I think I'll move them up a bit.
397 reviews28 followers
May 29, 2011
An unusually good anthology of fantasy stories on the theme of music. Not all winners, but that's true of any anthology. Notable stories include "The New Tiresias" by Jane Emerson (there's a fine human dimension to this story of an eighteenth-century girl growing up among the tangled motives of adults); "Audience" by Jack Womack (the Museum of Lost Sounds); "Flash Company" by Gene Wolfe; "Merlusine" by Lucy Sussex (this is a fun one); and "The Color of Angels" by Terri Windling. "Aïda in the Park" by Susan Palwick was also good, though flawed.
Profile Image for Libroslibra.
28 reviews4 followers
March 1, 2016
The wonderful thing about anthologies is each story may be taken on its own merit. So it is with The Horns of Elfland. There were a few stories I wouldn't read twice, because they either had little to do with my own experience or seemed downright tedious. On the other hand, we find trolls at piano recitals, the obligatory deal with the devil but with a humorous twist, magical deer, and a couple of characters in heartrending circumstances. Well worth a read.
Profile Image for Jenny.
129 reviews1 follower
Read
February 18, 2014
I actually only read Windling's lovely magic realist story, 'The Colour of Angels', which is a perfect accompaniment to her novel, 'The Wood Wife'.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews