The late Lucius Shepard was one of his era's best and most quintessentially American writers. His dark yet grudgingly hopeful worldview gave birth to a treasure trove of fiction that could have been written by nobody else. Crows and Silences collects four select short novels, each totally unlike the others. In Kalamantan, jewel merchant Barnett follows the trail of the expat American fool Curtis MacKinnon deep into the jungles of Borneo, only to discover that the ancient gods of the Dayak have been awakened in soul-maddening form. In Skull City, the junkie Larson, the Satanist Cooge, and a woman stuck in two worlds at once have a fateful confrontation in what may be Hell--or possibly someplace worse. In Louisiana Breakdown, faithless musician Jack Mustaine meets Vida Dumar, a small-town woman with a dangerously sordid past, and each seeks in the other more than either is prepared to give. And in Colonel Rutherford's Colt, gun dealers Rita Whitelaw and Jimmie Ray Guy are thrust into conflict with white supremacists, armed only with a pistol and Jimmie's preternatural ability to invent stories. A combination of misfortunes prevented Lucius Shepard from breaking out into the literary world beyond SF and his elevation to the Pantheon of writers remains always a breath and a wish away. In the meantime, here are four tales of people hoping to survive the daily trauma of their lives. All caught in a world of crows and silences and trying to make the best of it.
Genre: Science Fiction
Genre: Science Fiction