Forrest’s Reviews > Valerie and Other Stories > Status Update
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Forrest
is on page 240 of 242
In the middle of "The Abdication of the Serpent," I admit, I asked where this story was headed, doubtful of its outcome. But by the end, the meandering labyrinth finally made sense. It's a mystery undergirded by myth-building, and a coming-of-age, but not the age typically associated with such stories. It is, in summation, a fine, fine story. One that deserves a reread and will stick in my head for some time. 5*
— Feb 06, 2020 08:11PM

Forrest
is on page 208 of 242
It is in the lengthy denouement of "Valerie" that some aspects of the tale come into clear focus, while others are blurred. The effect is like looking through binoculars at a hazy distant la landscape. The broad strokes may be beautiful, but on closer examination, there is rot beneath. But the rot holds it's own beauty. 5*
— Feb 01, 2020 10:45PM

Forrest
is on page 185 of 242
"Valerie" continues to impress me. What a darkly-beautiful, beautifully-dark story. I am reminded of Rikki Ducornet's The Jade Cabinet and The Fountains of Neptune, tonally speaking.
— Feb 01, 2020 02:53PM

Forrest
is on page 174 of 242
"Valerie," so far, shows a world of mystique, beautiful and terrifying, in the lanes and hedges, the interstices; magical portals. I am curious where this goes. So far, it is an exceptional story.
— Feb 01, 2020 02:13PM

Forrest
is on page 156 of 242
My favorite, so far, "Dreams from the Apple Orchard" is a story of beautiful decay, of fissures in social unity, the beautiful, frightful interstices between the sanguine constructs of friendship and fruitfulness. Set in Eastern Europe right before WW II, this is a solemn foreshadowing of things to come. Brilliant and brutal. Five stars. I loved this story.
— Jan 30, 2020 10:41AM

Forrest
is on page 142 of 242
"Salammbô and the Zaïmph of Tanit" is a masterful tale in the decadent strain of Huysmans. Beauty is a fair mistress, but jealousy is more adamant. Like all good decadent tales, sumptuousness ends in nightmarish squalor. Five stars
— Jan 28, 2020 10:56AM

Forrest
is on page 127 of 242
The title "A Blue Dish of Figs" evokes the image of a carefully-crafted still-life painting that contains far more symbolic meaning than its banal subject matter. One can say the same of the protagonist and her life. It is crude and shapeless, awaiting the touch of an artist's hand to add color and give life. That artist is a child who teaches hidden wisdom to her Teacher. 5*
— Jan 24, 2020 11:41AM

Forrest
is on page 106 of 242
"Dance for a Winter Moon" is heartbreaking, even when you know exactly what's coming. Note to self: quote first full para of 102. It is amazing.
— Jan 21, 2020 10:28AM

Forrest
is on page 81 of 242
"The Slaves of Paradise" is a lush story of anguish told by an artist who accidentally, clumsily betrays his lover and the French resistance. The imagery in this story shall haunt me for some time. It is beautiful and tragic, in equal measure. Five stars.
— Jan 14, 2020 10:39AM

Forrest
is on page 58 of 242
I am rarely stunned by fables, and "The Binding" is no exception, though the writing is exceptionally good. I like the witchiness of it, but I am so over the tone of "fabulism" that I can't get too excited about it any more. I'm waiting for a fable that will prove the exception. Perhaps I was jaded by so many stories as a child. Nevertheless, I am not so jaded as to give this story less than four stars. So it is.
— Jan 11, 2020 04:09PM
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Yórgos
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rated it 5 stars
Dec 18, 2019 12:34PM

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