Passing Strange
by Ellen Klages
This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app
1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date Jan 24 2017 | Archive Date Feb 14 2017
Macmillan-Tor/Forge | Tor.com
Description
San Francisco in 1940 is a haven for the unconventional. Tourists flock to the cities within the city: the Magic City of the World’s Fair on an island created of artifice and illusion; the forbidden city of Chinatown, a separate, alien world of exotic food and nightclubs that offer “authentic” experiences, straight from the pages of the pulps; and the twilight world of forbidden love, where outcasts from conventional society can meet.
Six women find their lives as tangled with each other’s as they are with the city they call home. They discover love and danger on the borders where mystery, science, and art intersect.
Inspired by the pulps, film noir, and screwball comedy, Passing Strange is a story as unusual and complex as San Francisco itself from World Fantasy Award winning author Ellen Klages.
At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9780765389510 |
PRICE | $2.99 (USD) |
PAGES | 155 |
Featured Reviews
Passing Strange is a lovely novella which takes its own sweet time. As it opens, you expect one story, one protagonist... as it continues to unfold, you see that you were wrong. In my case, I didn't mind that bait-and-switch at all, but I imagine some people will find that shift in POV a little jarring. Though I didn't mind, I did find myself briefly wrong-footed by it.
The novella is set in San Fransisco, 1940, among a community of queer women whose lives intersect. I've seen a review where someone felt that the takeaway from this book was "yeah, yeah, we know gays back then had a hard time". There's that, of course, but there's also that community, and that's what I really enjoyed. I don't really want to say too much about it; I think it's best if the story unfolds itself for the reader in its own time.
I've also read a complaint that the speculative aspect isn't integral. It is, but it's subtle; the fact that it's there, quietly but throughout, allows the ending that otherwise couldn't be mysterious or touching or bittersweet. It's an ordinary sort of magic, in the way that the women use it -- it's a tool that happens to be to hand.
I enjoyed the story a lot. And it's another of the Tor.com novellas that feels like it was meant to be exactly this length, no longer, no shorter.
Link will be active from 20th Feb 2017.
Readers who liked this book also liked:
Silvia Moreno-Garcia
Historical Fiction, Literary Fiction, Sci Fi & Fantasy