I would be lying if I told you that this is an easy book to read. It is not. It is a book that makes you pay attention because the prose is so rich and somewhat complicated. She writes mostly fantasy, with a dose of sci fi thrown in for good measure. I enjoyed the books, but I had to re-read a story or two to finally grasp all the nuances. Worth the effort.
Mothers Aren't the Only Monsters
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 14 years ago
The "Mothers" of the title occupy only the most recent stories in this, Maureen F. McHugh's first collection, which ranges over most of her career--the earliest story dates from 1992, while the latest is original to the volume--but is strongest in those published since 2001, stories that abjure future or alternate-history settings for a here-and-now (sometimes problematically so) in which women, most of them mothers (though again often problematically) seek to negotiate landscapes for which their lives thus far have left them unprepared. The protagonist in "Eight-Legged Story" obsessively sees herself as a wicked stepmother, though she has in no way wronged the troubled, maddening boy who came with her marriage, which his problems are now unraveling. The mother in "Frankenstein's Daughter" has indeed done a great wrong, though she was driven to it by unbearable bereavement and with good intentions, which do nothing to prevent its awful consequences. Rachel, in "Ancestor Money," is long dead; she is impelled to travel across space and time because of a dubious gift made to her by a descendent--meaning that she too was once a mother, though the descendant appears to be an in-law. And the middle-aged narrator of "Presence," who must watch her slightly older husband descend into the abyss of Alzheimer's and then, following a radical treatment, climb a different path partway back, becomes something like a mother to her spouse. Only in the most recent story, the two-page "Wicked" (McHugh now sticks the bad-stepmother theme on a pike and waves it before us), are we offered an outright Bad Mom, with a comic forthrightness that puts the reader squarely on her side. Do you think it's easy, McHugh seems to be saying, to be merely like this and not worse? The motifs of mother and monster are sounded together and separately, then played through variations. The narrator of "Oversite" ("Renata paints pictures of girls hit by cars") is both mother and daughter, meaning she gets it in both directions, like the girls caught in traffic in her teenager's disturbing paintings. Grasping to hold onto her loved ones--her mother is slipping away into dementia, her daughter into something less easily defined--she has implanted both with a global tracking chip, an electronic trail of breadcrumbs. Does this make her bad? Her mother wanders, teenagers do reckless things, and the woman in the middle is responsible for both. The brave and plainly correct course of action, so confidently sought out in genre fiction, is in McHugh's work simply not available. The older stories include her best-known, such as "The Cost to be Wise" and "Nekropolis," which became in time the opening sections of her most recent novels, and "The Lincoln Train," a Hugo winner. It would have been nice to see these stories in their own volume, filled out with other memorable early work such as "Protection" and "Whispers" (omitted here, presumably for reasons of space),
Free SF Reader
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
A pretty low-key story collection, with a 3.27 just scraping in enough to get the 3.5. Mothers and Other Monsters : Ancestor Money - Maureen F. McHugh Mothers and Other Monsters : In the Air - Maureen F. McHugh Mothers and Other Monsters : The Cost to Be Wise - Maureen F. McHugh Mothers and Other Monsters : The Lincoln Train - Maureen F. McHugh Mothers and Other Monsters : Interview: On Any Given Day - Maureen F. McHugh Mothers and Other Monsters : Oversite - Maureen F. McHugh Mothers and Other Monsters : Wicked - Maureen F. McHugh Mothers and Other Monsters : Laika Comes Back Safe - Maureen F. McHugh Mothers and Other Monsters : Presence - Maureen F. McHugh Mothers and Other Monsters : Eight-Legged Story - Maureen F. McHugh Mothers and Other Monsters : The Beast - Maureen F. McHugh Mothers and Other Monsters : Nekropolis - Maureen F. McHugh Mothers and Other Monsters : Frankenstein's Daughter - Maureen F. McHugh How to obtain an inheritance in the afterlife. 3.5 out of 5 Boyfriend that can see your dead twin is a bonus. 3 out of 5 Having to eat your dog will make you sad. 3 out of 5 Evil getaway. 3.5 out of 5 Adolescent lifestyle. 3.5 out of 5 Chip the kid. 3.5 out of 5 Flaming shopping. 3 out of 5 Werewolf boy lacking. 3.5 out of 5 Alzheimer's recovery. 4 out of 5 Step problems. 2.5 out of 5 Glove nicking monster. 3 out of 5 AI constraints. 3.5 out of 5 Slow clone. 3 out of 5 3.5 out of 5
A balanced and pleasing collection of short stories
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
Maureen McHugh has given me some really nice and thought-provoking reads in her novels over the past few years and I was pleased to see this collection of of short stories from her, most of which I had missed. I always approach short story collections with some trepidation.....when the stories are not on par with the writer's novels there is inevitable disappointment, and if the short stories are extremely good then there is still disappointment because the pleasure in reading them is so fleeting! However, every so often, there comes along a collection that does not fall into either trap and provides a haunting and lovely series of well-crafted little gems that are perfect in their own right. This is one such collection. I heartily recommend this one to anyone who has read McHugh in the past and enjoyed her works, and I invite those who haven't sampled her novels to test her writing first with these short stories. You won't be diasappointed with this one!
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