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Beyond the Pale
Beyond the Pale: A Fantasy Anthology | Jim Butcher, Henry Herz, Abigail Larson
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"Beyond the Pale" is an anthology of fantasy, urban fantasy and paranormal stories that skirt the border between our world and others. Was that my imagination, or did I hear something under my bed? What was that blurred movement in my darkened closet? There is but a thin Veil separating the real and the fantastic, and therein dwell the inhabitants of these stories. "Beyond the Pale" contains twelve dark fantasy, urban fantasy and paranormal short stories by award-winning and New York Times bestselling authors: "Hooves and the Hovel of Abdel Jameela" by Saladin Ahmed (author of "Throne of the Crescent Moon") "The Children of the Shark God" by Peter S. Beagle (author of "The Last Unicorn") "Misery" & "Shadow Children" by Heather Brewer (author of "Vladimir Tod") "Even Hand" by Jim Butcher (author of "The Dresden Files" series) "Death Warmed Over" by Rachel Caine (author of the "Weather Warden" series) "Red Run" by Kami Garcia (author of "Beautiful Creatures") "Pale Rider" & "The Adventures of Lightning Merriemouse-Jones" by Nancy Holder (author of "Wicked") "Frost Child" and "South" by Gillian Philip (author of the "Rebel Angels" series) "A Knot of Toads" by Jane Yolen (author of "Owl Moon") The noun "pale" refers to a stake (as in impaling vampires) or pointed piece of wood (as in a paling fence). "Pale" came to refer to an area enclosed by a paling fence. Later, it acquired the figurative meaning of an enclosed and therefore safe domain. Conversely, "beyond the pale" means foreign, strange, or threatening. You are about to go Beyond the Pale.
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CatLass007
Beyond the Pale: A Fantasy Anthology | Jim Butcher, Henry Herz, Abigail Larson
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I enjoyed most of the stories in this collection. The narrator does an admirable job, using a variety of accents. I‘ve never been particularly fond of most male narrators attempts at female characters, so I think there were a couple of stories that could have benefited from having a female narrator. And for some reason, the final story didn‘t appeal to me at all and I decided not to finish it. So I‘d give this book ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2.