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The Autopsy and Other Tales

by Michael Shea

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281845,171 (3.9)7
Michael Shea has demonstrated an unnerving facility for the macabre, the cerebral, and the whimsical, and he possesses the deceptively effortless ability to conjure scenes of horror and dread leavened by sly humor. Over 590 pages long, this collection features all of Shea's best award-winning horror, fantasy, science fiction, and Cthulhu Mythos tales, with two complete novels and several stories that have never been collected. Laird Barron's insightful introduction provides a unique look at this remarkable, visionary storyteller. Combined with the illustrations of John Stewart, as well as several color photographs and devices, this marks the most important collection yet from an undisputed master of the short story.… (more)
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» See also 7 mentions

"The Autopsy" (1980) follows the exploits of a pathologist who attempts to determine what killed a group of miners in an isolated Colorado hamlet. It's one of the most beloved horror/sci-fi stories in the history of both genres, having received nominations for the Hugo Award and the Nebula Award. Readers are smitten with it; aficionados can't wait to recommend it to newbies.

So there must be some reason I didn't like it. Maybe I'm just an old grouch, right? I've wrestled sincerely with the question and, yes, there is a reason that I emphatically disliked "The Autopsy": it takes a pretty good pulp horror premise and ruins it with ludicrous overwriting. Slathers it with ten-dollar words that weigh down the story's momentum like a huge rusty anchor. Sometimes a beautifully clear, evocative sentence lights up the page ("In the freezing half-light all movement felt like defiance"); more often than not, Shea's pompous wordiness is self-defeating. In a story of mechanical horror such as this ("mechanical" in the sense that it pertains to physical forces rather than to matters of the spirit), a sense of steady movement isn't just important: it's everything. The story is supposed to sweep me up and carry me along. I don't want to stop in the middle of one gudgy run-on sentence after another to look up forensic terminology.

Two stars for the premise, which is interesting despite the needlessly byzantine execution. I really wanted this one to be more fun than it was. ( )
  Jonathan_M | Dec 6, 2021 |
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Michael Shea has demonstrated an unnerving facility for the macabre, the cerebral, and the whimsical, and he possesses the deceptively effortless ability to conjure scenes of horror and dread leavened by sly humor. Over 590 pages long, this collection features all of Shea's best award-winning horror, fantasy, science fiction, and Cthulhu Mythos tales, with two complete novels and several stories that have never been collected. Laird Barron's insightful introduction provides a unique look at this remarkable, visionary storyteller. Combined with the illustrations of John Stewart, as well as several color photographs and devices, this marks the most important collection yet from an undisputed master of the short story.

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