Authors: Sarah Monette,Lynne Thomas
Tags: #fantasy, #short story, #short stories
A
BOUT THE
A
UTHORS
Sarah Monette
grew up in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, one of the three secret cities of the Manhattan Project, and now lives in a 105-year-old house in the Upper Midwest with a great many books, two cats, and one husband. Her Ph.D. diploma (English Literature, 2004) hangs in the kitchen. Her first four novels were published by Ace Books. Her short stories have appeared in
Strange Horizons
,
Weird Tales
, and
Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet
, among other venues, and have been reprinted in several Year’s Best anthologies. Short story collection,
Somewhere Beneath Those Waves
, was published by Prime Books in fall 2011. Sarah has written two novels (
A Companion to Wolves
, Tor Books, 2007;
The Tempering of Men
, Tor Books, 2011) and three short stories with Elizabeth Bear, and hopes to write more. Her next novel,
The Goblin Emperor
, will come out from Tor under the name Katherine Addison. Visit her online at www.sarahmonette.com.
Lynne M. Thomas
(aka Dr. L. Marie Howard) is the Curator of Rare Books and Special Collections at Northern Illinois University in DeKalb, Illinois, where she is responsible for popular culture special collections that include the literary papers of over fifty SF/F authors (including Sarah Monette). Lynn will also be the editor of
Apex Magazine
as of late 2011. She is the co-author of
Special Collections 2.0
, a book about web 2.0 technologies and special collections in libraries with Beth Whittaker (Libraries Unlimited, 2009), as well as academic articles about cross-dressing in dime novels and using libraries to survive the zombie apocalypse. She is perhaps best known as the co-editor of the Hugo-nominated
Chicks Dig Time Lords
(2010) with Tara O’Shea, and
Whedonistas
(2011) with Deborah Stanish, essay collections celebrating women involved in media fandoms and the production of television series, published by Mad Norwegian Press. Her next book will be
Chicks Dig Comics
, with Sigrid Ellis (2012).
A
CKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Many thanks to the editors in whose publications these stories first saw daylight, especially Barbara and Christopher Roden, and Steve Pasechnick.
Thanks also to Sonya Taaffe, without whose enthusiasm this collection would not exist. And to Sean Wallace, who listened to her.
“The Wall of Clouds” first appeared in
Alchemy
1 (December 2003).
“Bringing Helena Back” first appeared in
All Hallows
35 (February 2004).
“The Inheritance of Barnabas Wilcox” first appeared in
Lovecraft’s Weird Mysteries
7 (May 2004).
“The Green Glass Paperweight” first appeared in
Tales of the Unanticipated
25 (August 2004).
“The Venebretti Necklace” first appeared in
Alchemy
2 (September 2004).
“Wait for Me” first appeared in an online magazine,
Naked Snake Online
(September 2004), and then on www.sarahmonette.com.
“Elegy for a Demon Lover” first appeared in
Tales of the Unanticipated
26 (October 2005), and was reprinted in
The Best of the Rest 4
(2006).
“Drowning Palmer” first appeared in
All Hallows
41 (February 2006) and was reprinted in
The Year’s Best Fantasy
and
Horror, 20th Annual Collection
(2007).
“The Bone Key” first appeared in
Say . . . What’s the Combination?
(May 2007).
“Listening to Bone” appeared for the first time in this collection.
F
OOTNOTES
1.
Roman, Steven. “Neurasthenia and the Fantastic: A Case Study”
Journal of Nervous Disorders
27:3 (Fall 2008): 54-65.
2.
Taylor, Damian. “Paranormal Visitations at the Parrington”
Yale Paranormal Bulletin
334 (Winter 2009): 4-7.
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Fors, Marie. “Police Investigate Mysterious Disappearance at
The Parrington” Sentinel Journal Gazette
(May 25, 2010): 3.
4.
Chappell, Fred. “The Waters of Memory”
The Sewanee Review
108:2 (Spring, 2000): 234-248.
5.
Booth, Kyle Murchison. [Reading Journals]. [n.d.] Kyle Murchison Booth Papers, Box 2, Folders 3-4, Parrington Museum Archives. See also: Turk, Tisha. “Archival Confidential: The Rhetoric of Reading in the Journals of Kyle Murchison Booth”
PMLA
252 (New Series, 2009): 34-47.
6.
Wolfe, M. “The Strange Afterlife of Henri III”
Renaissance Studies
10:4 (December 1996): 474-489. See also: Bibliothèque nationale (France).
Département des imprimés.
Title: Catalogue général des livres imprimés de la Bibliothèque nationale. Auteurs.
Published: Paris: Imprimerie nationale. 1897-1981;
Naming the Witch: Magic, Ideology, and Stereotype in the Ancient World
By Kimberly B. Stratton. New York: Columbia University Press, 2007.
7.
Index librorum prohibitorum
, SS. mi D.N. Pii PP. XII iussu editus, anno MDCCCCXLVIII. [In Civitate Vaticana] Typis Polyglottis Vaticanis, 1948.
8.
Guazzo, Francisco Maria.
Compendium Maleficarium
. Milan: Apud Haeredes Augustini Tradani, 1608.
9.
Parrington Museum Archives. Mathilda Rushton Parrington Memorial Library Annex Collection ω DIRLOG4.3. Log of Director Havilland DeWitt. [n.d.]
10.
“‘Jewels of the Madonna’ Latest Opera Novelty Here”
New York Times
Feb 25, 1912: SM10
11.
Wishnevsky, S.E. “Genealogists Seek Family Ties at the Parrington.”
Parrington Museum Newsletter
(Fall 2007): 3-5.; Howard, L. Marie. “Kyle Murchison Booth Papers Now Available to Researchers”
Parrington Points: The Official Blog of the Samuel Mather Parrington Museum
(August 2009) http://www.parringtonmuseum.org/blog.
12.
Thomas, Bethany. “Authorial Autonomy and Matricidal Madness in Kyle Murchison Booth’s “The Bone Key”
Journal of Foucaultian Studies
32:4 (Winter 2010): 32-44.
13.
Howitt, Anna Maria. “The School of Life”
The Illustrated Magazine of Art
Vol. 2 (1853); Boston: Ticknor & Fields, 1855.
14.
Tennyson, Alfred. “Hail Briton” and “Tithon”. Heath Ms. Cambridge University Library. As quoted in Donahue, Mary Joan. “Tennyson’s Hail, Briton! and Tithon in the Heath Manuscript.”
PMLA
64:3 (Jun. 1949): 385-416.
15.
Banham Bridges, K.M. “Factors Contributing to Juvenile Delinquency”
Journal of the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology
. 17:4 (Feb. 1927): 531-580.
16.
Puhvel, Martin. “The Swimming Prowess of Beowulf” Folklore 82:4 (Winter, 1971): 276-280.
17.
The Works of Geoffrey Chaucer
, ed. F. N. Robinson, 2nd ed. (Boston, 1957) As cited in Evans, Lawrence Gove, “A Biblical Allusion in Troilus and Criseyde”
Modern Language Notes
74:7 (Nov., 1959): 584-587. For an art historical interpretation, see “The Unicorn Tapestries”
The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin
New Series 32:1;
The Unicorn Tapestries
(1973 – 1974): 177-224.
18.
Stapleton, M.L. “Thou Art Exact of Taste”: The Ars Amatoria as Intertext in “Paradise Lost”
Comparative Literature Studies
36:2 (1999): 83-109.
19.
McReynolds, Rosalee. “The Sexual Politics of Illness in Turn of the Century Libraries”
Libraries & Culture
25:2 (Spring 1990): 194-217; Wharton, Annabel. “Two Waldorf-Astorias: Spatial Economies as Totem and Fetish”
The Art Bulletin
85:3 (Sep. 2003): 523-543; Butler, Harold B. “Social Aspects of Scientific Progress”
Proceedings of the Academy of Political Science
15:4
Current Problems of Unemployment and Recovery Measures in Operation
(Jan, 1934): 51-62; Givner, Jessie. “Industrial History, Preindustrial Literature: George Eliot’s
Middlemarch
”
ELH
69:1 (Spring, 2002): 223-243.
20.
Goldberg, Susan, Roy Muir, and John Kerr.
Attachment theory: social, developmental, and clinical perspectives
. Hillsdale, NJ: Analytic Press, 1995. Turkeltaub, Daniel. “The Syntax and Semantics of Homeric Glowing Eyes: “Iliad” 1.200”
The American Journal of Philology
126:2 (Summer 2005): 157-186; Levinas, Emmanuel.
Alterity and Transcendence
(Trans. Michael B. Smith) Columbia University Press, (1999 [c1970]).