Ratings16
Average rating4.3
A collection of sixteen stories introduces a host of strange, wondrous beings that have never existed anywhere but in the imagination, with stories from Neil Gaiman, Diana Wynne Jones, and E. Nesbit.
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There were some great stories in this collection but the majority were either average or mediocre. Overall it wasn't that impressive
This collection, curated by my hero of heroes, Neil Gaiman, is extremely diverse and a lovely romp through the decades of fantastic beasts. It contains some of my favorites recollected (Come Lady Death and Sunbird), some authors I love whose works I'd never read (Larry Niven, Diana Wynne Jones), and a bunch of new people about whom I know want to know much more (Nalo Hopkinson, Nnedi Okorafor). My favorites were probably Jones' “The Sage of Theare” and Hopkinson's “The Smile on the Face.” The styles are diverse in content, culture, and style, so the reader never really has a chance to get bored. My only disappointment was that Neil's contribution was “Sunbird,” which is a great story but one I seem to own in so many collections already. Ah well.
The stories are mostly G rated with a couple that get a little darker and towards the YA end of the age spectrum (The Smile on the Face definitely fits in there), but for the most part I think this is enjoyable by lovers of magical creatures of all ages.