Member Reviews
Una raccolta notevole; non solo il tema è affascinante e disturbante insieme, ma ho trovato molto ben scritti tutti i pezzi, con l'eccezione di Fury, che mi ha annoiato. Per il resto, l'angoscia di una femminilità mummificata in ruoli tradizionali (buona figlia, buona madre, buona moglie) che neanche l'emigrazione, il lavoro in un altro continente, lo studio universitario di generazioni riescono a lasciare indietro viene resa con efficacia.
Una vera sorpresa la maggior parte delle autrici, e francamente inquietanti le creature tradizionali (soprattutto filippine e malesi) che sono le guest star di molti racconti.
Great anthology. It introduces new and established authors and their stories to readers. There's no such thing as a perfect anthology because carious styles and stories will appeal to different readers. This one succeeds at offering a huge variety of tones and voices. I'm sure everyone will find an interesting story here.
I loved the idea of this anthology, I'm always up for some avengy/revegy stuff. This, sadly, did not work for me. I just felt like that I had to go through a long way to get to the satisfying end. I appreciate the idea behind these stories, but again, it became a chore to read these. I hope other readers will enjoy it more than i did. 2 stars for the anthology, 1 for the idea behind it.
Anthologhy from Asian woman about Asian woman. Some scary, some heartwarming.
THE GENETIC ALCHEMIST’S DAUGHTER by Elaine Cuyegkeng
Scientist playing god. Ofelia chua Mercado is the owner of Exo-womb. The lab that can fix failure in genetic, make clone of perfect human. They can create mutan animal too. This story so creepy, world like that.. wow.. maybe in the next future it is possible.
KAPRE: A LOVE STORY by Rin Chupeco
Love at first sight from monster to human. Kapre meet Nina when she is just a baby, he watch her grew and then friends with her. Oh my god i cry in this story, love between mortal and imortal was hard. One gonna die and the other one will life forever with memory of love and heartbroken.
A PET IS FOR LIFE by Geneve Flynn
Momster capture ghost!! Train them to keep the, safe. What a uniqe story!!
PHOENIX CLAWS by Lee Murray
Phoenix Clawas aka Chicken feet. It is delicious tho. Lucy boyfriend must pass test of eating chicken feet, it is like family tradition to see if this man fit in the family. Im still curious after the last microwave chicken feet!
OF HANGER AND FURY by Grace Chan
I dont get it.. soo she is a ghost? Hungry ghost?
SKIN DOWDY by Angela Yuriko Smith
Beautiful with tech, in era that girl can get beauty like robot. Her husband a surgeon technical creates superb beauty, she want to do all of it so her husband will love her but at the end.. another grass look more green. Lol.
TRUTH IS ORDER AND ORDER IS TRUTH by Nadia Bulkin
The story about a princess who dispel from her kingdom because of slander that she is creature of darknes. With her some follower the journey begin to find Jungkuno. When she get there, it is time to plot revenge and claim back her throne. Queen Dhani the Undying, Priestess of the Faith, Shaman Queen. Nyai Roro Kidul.
RITES OF PASSAGES by Gabriela Lee
Paying a debt. Eyes for eyes, child for child. Forrest keep it is promise and come get the child.
THE NINTH TALE by Rena Mason
The journey about Fox spirit, who will accept her nine tail and go home to heaven. She learn how trick and greedy human and how kindness can be hide behind deceitfull.
VANILLA RICE by Angela Yuriko Smith
Sorty about alien world? When technologhy super, can change dna, a mother to be has trauma when she is child, try to change her daughter appearance.
FURY by Christina Sng
Zombie time! Horor sotry not complet without them. Genocide was launch to heal the world, to create a new breed humans, devoid of race and cultures, peace and hope,
THE MARK by Grace Chan
Well i guess it is about depression, saddness lost her child make her see things?
FRANGIPANI WISHES by Lee Murray
I dont understand this srory.. she haunted by ghost or dementia?
LITTLE WORM by Geneve Flynn
Story about Kwee-kia, child spirit who dies when a baby. A lonely woman make Kwee kia because all her children alread gone with life.
Thank you to NetGalley for provide this book, it is pleasure to review this book.
#BlackCranes #Anthologhy #RDSPublishing #RawDogScreamingPress #NetGalley #ARC #LeeMurray #GeneveFlynn #NadiaBulkin #ElaineCuyegkeng #RinChupeco #GraceChan #AngelaYurikoSmith #GabrielaLee #RenaMason #ChristinaSng #NancyHolder #AlmaKatsu
I really enjoyed Black Cranes.
It was a great Anthology of stories by Asian Women about Asian Women.
I ended up loving most of the stories and my favourite was probably The Ninth Tale.
I definitely recommend this book!
Thank you for giving me the opportunity to read this book in exchange for an honest review.
I enjoyed this compilation of stories of women who spoke out whether with words or with actions. This is a strong collection of tales with only one or two that I was not fond of. My favorites include "A Pet is For Life" and "The Ninth Tale".
I absolutely loved all of these short stories. Each one was insightful, heartbreaking, and empowering. I especially enjoyed the stories involving mythological aspects - it’s certainly a common theme in many myths and legends that women are always the ones who end up being punished for mistakes and shortcomings not directly involving them, and I greatly appreciated how some of these stories discussed that. While all of them were thought-provoking and enlightening, I’d have to say that my favorite was “Little Worm” by Geneve Flynn. I know that I’ll definitely have that one running through my mind 24/7 for a while (more likely, forever).
‘We can be many things. The only thing we can’t be is defeated’
Before ending the prologue to Black Cranes, Alma Katsu offers a last welcome to the reader with these words, a perfect phrase before entering the collection of fourteen tales that will travel to different places, from Malaysia to New Zealand, to completely fictional locations. From tales rooted in ethnic folklore to imagined (and maybe known to some of the readers) cultures and beliefs.
I was hesitant about the way to approach this review. Should I explain each story separately? Look for similarities, maybe? And I finally decided to somehow imitate what Alma Katsu does in the prologue: unify themes, and at the same time express the differences, the things that worked for me and the things that did not. I must also admit that sometimes I found myself afraid of whether my ignorance about Asian folklore was making me miss some pivotal points of the narrative, and what I thought was a simple Google search ended in several hours and a couple of Asian mythology books in my TBR.
Black Cranes starts strong with ‘The Genetic Alchemist’s Daughter’, by Elaine Cuyegkeng, which I will say is one of my favourite stories from the whole collection and puts the bar extremely high from the very beginning. It is a story that mixes science fiction with horror to create a deeply disturbing society in which babies can be made from scratch, the parents deciding which attributes will suit them better or, and this is the horrifying part, people can be modified if the parents are not happy with how their children are behaving or the path they are about to choose. It left me devastated and wary of our own future.
Following with the science fiction theme, we have two stories by Angela Yuriko Smith, ‘Skin Dowdy’ and ‘Vanilla Rice’. ‘Skin Dowdy’ presents a kind of cyberpunk society where women modify their bodies in order to be flashier and shinier for their suitors, transforming themselves into pieces of art but leaving their human part behind. ‘Vanilla Rice’ confronts us to the wishes of a mother trying to help her daughter in order to not feel as out of place as she once felt only for the daughter to realize that she does not belong anywhere.
The final science fiction story, ‘Fury’ by Christina Sng, puts the reader in a more known environment: a zombie apocalypse. In here, and through the eyes of Kate, a military soldier trained to survive everything, we will see the decadence of the human race and also the sacrifices that are made in the heart of a family.
Family is also the pivotal point in ‘Phoenix Claws’, by Lee Murray, a peculiar tale where a simple, made-up tradition evolves into a deafening curse.
Ghosts also make their appearance in Black Cranes, but forget about the more western-known, cinema-driven, black-haired female ghosts. In here, ‘Of Hunger and Fury’ by Grace Chan shows the inherent risks of family curses and ghosts that are not properly heard; in ‘Frangipani Wishes’, by Lee Murray, the ghosts thrive in resentment, following our main character like a cloud and scream or become silent depending on the occasion.
And then we have ‘Little Worm’, by Geneve Flynn, where it is not a ghost, but a spirit, a kwee kia, in the centre of a mother-daughter reunion filled with sadness and repentance.
There are, as explained above, several stories related to ethnic folklore. Coincidentally, these are, together with ‘The Genetic Alchemist’s Daughter’, the ones I enjoyed the most. I was already a fan of Nadia Bulkin, and I had already read ‘Truth is Order and Order is Truth’ in its Spanish translation, but it was amazing to come back to it and feel the journey to Jungkune as if it was the first time. I knew nothing of the tiyanak, but I felt its pull each time a character was near the forest in Gabriela Lee’s ‘Rites of Passage’. And, even if I knew about the female fox spirit, I enjoyed being in her company in Rena Mason’s ‘The Ninth Tale’. And finally, the writing style, the flowing of the words, was the best attribute of Rin Chupeco’s ‘Kapre: A Love Story’.
There are two tales I was not sure where to classify: ‘The Mark’, by Grace Chan, where a woman starts to suspect that her husband is not really her husband, and ‘A Pet is for Life’, by Feneve Flynn, maybe the tale with the biggest plot twist in the whole collection.
In general, Black Cranes was a fantastic collection of tales. As already mentioned, some shine above the others, but there’s not one single story that feels out of place. To the contrary, my feeling with most of them was that I wanted more information, more details. And it was simply great to have the opportunity to approach, as a Westerner, pieces of a culture from the point of view of the almost always silent, domestic women.
Nancy Holder could not have said it better in her Afterword: ‘They have not simply spoken, they have roared’.
This one got nominated left and right, and, having read it, it’s easy to see why. The quality is there, and the theme is just right: Asian women in dark speculative fiction.
Bookended by famous author provided Foreword and Afterword and featuring lesser known names as entries, this anthology takes on the restrictive gender stereotypes, the oppressing importance of conventional family structures and heavy weight of expectations that Asian culture traditionally places on women.
The range of the stories is quite striking and most are very good, very compelling. Definitely good introductions to some new authors (a lot of them from Australia and New Zealand) for me.
I can’t say there were any real standouts for me, but that bodes well for the overall quality. I know I cared less for the more fantasy-like tale and enjoyed the more realistic narratives. Well, realistic is relative when it comes to weaving nightmares, but you know…
At any rate, this was a good. Interesting. Thought provoking start to finish. Strong cultural critiques all around in darkly delicious scary story shells. Recommended. Thanks Netgalley.
This is an amazing collection of extremely creepy horror stories written by Asian women who take the stereotypes of their roles in culture and turns them on their heads.
Whether a story deals with zombies, myths and lore, or even the darker side of love, each one is written from the perspective of cultural demands and how these expectations intertwine with the horrors presented.
I also want to say how beautifully written these stories are! They bounce around in your head and in between the prose are creatures lurking, ready to spring. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and highly recommend it!