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The Din of Celestial Birds
A Fantasy Short Story Collection by Brian Evenson
Subgenres & Tropes:
- Magic Realism,
- Literary Fantasy,
- Short Stories,
- Ghost Stories,
- Absurdist Fiction
This book is for you if you're into...
- Surreal worlds haunted by birds, ghosts, and blurred realities
- Bleak yet exuberant magic realism with dictators and dead children
- Stories where life and death bleed into each other
Though published second after Altmann's Tongue, The Din of Celestial Birds (1997) consists of the best of Evenson's early stories.
They take place in a country (perhaps several countries) that seems at once everywhere and nowhere, haunted by birds, ghosts, poverty, tyranny, and the permeability of the line between the living and the dead. These stories offer a heady mix of absurdity and bleakness on the one hand and exuberant magic realism on the other.
In one, a character imagines that a bird has been calling his name for six consecutive nights—and perhaps a bird actually has.
A dead child is brought back to a stuttering and incomplete life, while a dictator refuses to admit that he is dead even as he is being buried.
A scientist works in isolation to try to cheat death.
An ex-Nazi wanders in and out of the jungle, having become a different sort of nightmare.
These stories offer the gestures and satisfactions that would come to define Evenson's later work, but also suggest other paths he might have taken and reveal how indebted his fiction is to writers such as Ben Okri, Sony Labou Tansi, and writers of the Latin American Boom.
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