Short Stories 365/210

“Bakery Boy” by Thomas Fuchs from Queer Fish: An Eclectic Anthology of Gay Fiction (Volume One), Pink Narcissus Press (2011). Edited by Margarita Bezdomnya and Rose Mambert.

What a wildly inventive story. I loved this. It was like a kinder, gentler version of a classic trope: the narrator who happens upon a curiosity shop that’s never been there before. Wedged between two more prominent businesses, it calls to him, and he ends up buying something odd without fully thinking through the consequences. Of course, the item nearly destroys him, but when he goes back to the site of the shop, intending to complain? It’s gone. As if it never was.

This story is one of that ilk, only the shop in question is not an antique store, it’s a bakery. Yes, that’s right. This is another one for our potential anthology.

Short Stories 365/209

“Welcome to Anteaterland” by Nathaniel Fuller from Queer Fish: An Eclectic Anthology of Gay Fiction (Volume One), Pink Narcissus Press (2011). Edited by Margarita Bezdomnya and Rose Mambert.

This story got off to a great start. The narrator‘s twelve year old son Samuel has just arrived home after a summer spent living with his mother, the narrator’s ex-wife. All should be right with the world, only the narrator and his partner Brian, who has been on the scene for nine years, had a fight a few days earlier. Brian stormed out and hasn’t returned. We’re told they do this sort of thing at least once every summer, but they’ve always managed to keep it from Samuel. It’s not like Brian to stay mad, especially when it impacts Samuel. And naturally, Samuel is upset and wants to find him. So father and son go looking in the one place they suspect Brian went: a theme park down the road called Anteaterland.

I like the concept of a theme park where you can be morphed into an animal and experience life as another species, but this species? Not so much. The area where the three reside is depicted as being chock full of oddly-themed parks. The first of the immersion style was called Jungleland. In it, guests get to live as a tiger. I realize it would be more cliche and not as funky, but I wish this story was about that park. I also wish it went somewhere, and the characters were changed by the experience, instead of the reader just being introduced to an interesting premise.

If there is a deeper meaning here I’m not too proud to admit it went over my head.

Short Stories 365/208

“Dark Entries” by Michael C. Thompson from Queer Fish: An Eclectic Anthology of Gay Fiction (Volume One), Pink Narcissus Press (2011). Edited by Margarita Bezdomnya and Rose Mambert.

I was on board with this story right from the title, although I admit I thought the author could not possibly have been referring to the Bauhaus song, which, in fact, he was. Then he chose to title the first of the seven sections of the story “Iblis”, which is the name of the Devil according to Islam. Color me intrigued.

Perhaps I’m just weird, but I collect this sort of knowledge. I’ve never forgotten one book in particular of a series I devoured in the early eighties (Dark Forces, fifteen titles put out by Bantam, which for years I mistakenly recalled as being from Tor), in which the antagonist was revealed, in the 11th hour, to be a demon. The main character didn’t know that was who or what he was dealing with, of course, because his opponent was going by the Russian term for demon: Chort.

I never forgot it.

So here we have section one, Iblis. The Devil. The Deceiver. It opens with a lone figure on the beach, contemplating the whole of the universe and his place within it. This is an intelligent man, an educated man, a somewhat arrogant man. A man who, we realize after a time or two, is high as a kite. Not stoned off his gourd. No, he’s flying high on a dangerous combination of speed and vodka.

Another character appears, calling his name (Lawrence). We get more information about Lawrence from the thoughts which spring into his mind, triggered by the arrival of this second man, whose name is Jonathan. We gets that Lawrence is not only intelligent but arrogant and self-centered. He’s selfish and petulant. He’s young. Jonathan is older, and seemingly more mature. It’s his beach house they are in, he is the only one with a job, and he is successful at his profession. But he’s also just as seriously messed up as Lawrence, though his drug of choice is cocaine. We’re told he’s a comedian by profession, which tells us volumes. In all likelihood he’s frighteningly intelligent, quick, and it’s quite possible that he has erected defenses around a very broken, very vulnerable core. These two men tear through the beach house after nightfall, flinging verbal barbs at one another and, in Lawrence’s case at least, entertaining thoughts of murder. What could possibly go right?

Then a mysterious, beautiful young man appears, far out in the water. Unable to distinguish reality from dreams because of the drugs flooding his bloodstream, Lawrence pursues him, but the stranger stays always out of grasp. When he wakes the next morning Lawrence is tempted to write off the encounter as a figment of his imagination, but Jonathan saw them together—the pursued and the pursuer—and has flown into a jealous rage.

The language of this story is gorgeous and frightening. The narrative flows seamlessly from the hallucinatory, dream state into wakefulness and back again, all the while ratcheting up the stakes and deepening the mystery about the beautiful boy on the beach and how it all will end. I cannot wait to read more from this author.

Short Stories 365/204

“Incubus Ex” by Ashley-Renee Cribbins from Queer Fish: An Eclectic Anthology of Gay Fiction (Volume One), Pink Narcissus Press (2011). Edited by Margarita Bezdomnya and Rose Mambert.

I’ve already reviewed two of the stories in this collection. The first was “Blood, Sugar, Sex, Magic” by Georgina Li (Short Stories 365/184) and the second was “Color Zap!” by Sam Sommer (Short Stories 365/194).

This first story is a lighthearted one. It introduces us to fifteen year old Austin, whose sister has gone off to college and left her incubus behind. Poor Sully the incubus is moored to the house by a hex bag she nailed to the wall of her bedroom (she doesn’t want him interfering with her plans to meet guys at college). Naturally, he starts pestering Austin, pleading with him to intercede on his behalf and convince Holly to release him. At first Austin just wants the demon gone, but then he has another idea…