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An amazing King In Yellow anthology. So many of these stories are stand outs and they are all very well written. What I appreciate about this book is that each story is varied in their prose and their interpretation of the KiY, as well as the direction that their story takes. 4.5/5
Review coming soon.
Solid collectionReally enjoyed"Robert Chambers Reads The King in Yellow" by Lisa Norton"The Yellow Crown" by Carol Gyzander"Freedom for All" by JG Faherty"European Theater" by Trevor FiretogTop three stories"Y2K" by Todd Keisling"Suanee" by Steven Van Patten"The Exchange" by Tim Waggoner8/10
You can find my full review here - http://www.jeremiahdylancook.com/unde...
Good collection of stories with a strong central theme; not just The King in Yellow but the historical context suggested at in Chambers's works.
I liked this very much. I would give a higher rating if the editor at caught some minor mistakes (spelling error in a couple of stories) and the last story had been two separate, shorter tales.The last one I understand was published after the author's death and had multiple people review it and make changes to make it publication ready. It was a work of love, and I imagine it has a very special and personal meaning, which I can appreciate and made me value it as well.It's a good story. However i...
Stories inspired by The Yellow King. Favorites: John Langan's "Helioforge," Sarah Read's "The Inn of the Fates," and Tim Waggoner's "The Exchange.”
One of the best anthologies I’ve read. Each and every story is solid, built on a frightening foundation and filled with brilliant images and elegant language.
Major disappointment, actually. Very poorly edited, both in selecting the stories and cleaning up the copy (the Joe Pulver novelette is almost unreadable, in parts). Not much invention on show, either. Oh well.
I enjoyed all the stories, though the last one was pretty disappointing - if you want to end on a high note, maybe read that one in a different order. Definitely a good idea to re-read The King in Yellow first to get the most out of this!
In any theme anthology, the reader may expect to encounter works that satisfy them and works that do not. When that theme derives from two short stories originally published in 1895, you may expect this to go double or even triple, given the dizzying ambiguity of Robert W. Chambers’ “The Repairer of Reputations” and “The Yellow Sign”. Chambers’ weird oeuvre includes more tales than this, but these two contain most of what is known about The King in Yellow – the legendary play that drives all who...
An anthology of different takes on worlds under the sway of "The King In Yellow." Some of the stories didn't do much for me, but quite a few were excellent and haunting. I think anyone interested in the oeuvre would enjoy the book.