Reviews

Apex Magazine Issue 56 by Sigrid Ellis

caedocyon's review

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4.0

Available online at http://www.apex-magazine.com/jackalope-wives/

tehani's review

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5.0

A brilliant story, and deserving winner of the WSFA Small Press Award.

settingshadow's review

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5.0

This is a beautiful nugget of a story. It captures the setting of the southwestern desert beautifully and mixes it with what feels like such a traditional faerie tale in a truly unique way. I'd never heard of Ursula Vernon before, but I'll seek her out in the future.

kentcryptid's review

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5.0

Ursula Vernon is just fantastic. What a great little story.

nobodyatall's review

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5.0

This story is beautiful and well worth reading. No wonder it has won so many accolades.
I felt thoroughly uplifted by it and found myself grinning happily all the way through. Beautiful and wonderfully original.

I read it here: http://www.apex-magazine.com/jackalope-wives/
And also listened to a very well delivered audio version here: http://traffic.libsyn.com/apexmagazinepodcast/apex07.mp3

scamp1234's review

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3.0

Result Vernon's story was good, but the other new story from Gene O'neil and the Pat Cadigan reprint was just ok for Sigrid Ellison debut as the new editor.

nataliya_x's review

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5.0

This review is for the short story Jackalope Wives by Ursula Vernon. No, I did not read the entire magazine, but such are GR merge rules...
"It’s different when you got a choice."
This story is perfect. I have no other words for it - it's simply perfect. It takes only a few minutes to read, and yet in those few pages it easily achieves everything that it possibly can. It's incredibly atmospheric, lyrical, full of vivid imagery and told in a fairy-tale cadence and yet concise and complete and saying so much while saying little.

The legend is old and familiar. Find a magically beautiful changeling, trick her to stay with you, forcibly separate her from everything that was hers and make her yours, turn love into possession to fulfill your heart's desire. Because the point of the stories, quests and legends is getting what you want, isn't it?
"So the young man with the touch of magic watched the jackalope wife dancing and you know as well as I do what young men dream about. We will be charitable. She danced a little apart from her fellows, as he walked a little apart from his.

Perhaps he thought she might understand him. Perhaps he found her as interesting as the girls found him.

Perhaps we shouldn’t always get what we think we want."


In a North American desert at half-moon young men watch jackalope wives dance - the part-jackrabbit part-antelope creatures that shed their skins for the night of dancing in the moonlight when they appear as the beautiful, alluring, breathtaking women. And as it always happens, one of the young men - the broody one with a touch of magic - wants, needs, to make one of them his own, to own and possess his heart's desire.
"Now, it happened there was a young man in town who had a touch of magic on him. It had come down to him on his mother’s side, as happens now and again, and it was worse than useless.

A little magic is worse than none, for it draws the wrong sort of attention."
____________
"This sort of thing happens often enough, even with boys as mortal as dirt. There’s always one who learned how to brood early and often, and always girls who think they can heal him.

Eventually the girls learn better."
Everyone knows what to do - grab her changeling skin and burn it, tying her to the world of humans, giving her no choice but to stay with you.
“She was beautiful,” he said. As if it were a reason.

As if it mattered.

As if it had ever mattered.
But what do you do if it's not that easy? If something goes terribly wrong?
“Of course it hurts her!” yelled Grandma. “You think you can have your skin and your freedom burned away in front of you and not scream? Sweet mother Mary, boy, think about what you’re doing! Be cruel or be kind, but don’t be both, because now you’ve made a mess you can’t clean up in a hurry.
But forget the careless selfish young man. Forget the jackalope wife whose desires do not matter to him. They are in the story but it's not their story. It is the story of Grandma Harken, the one who picks up the pieces, the one who does not let love cloud her judgment, the one who has no illusions about the way the world works. The one who to me is a spiritual cousin of Pratchett's Granny Weatherwax.

The one who knows the price and knows that it must be paid.
"You get over what you can’t have faster that you get over what you could. And we shouldn’t always get what we think we want.”
___________________
It's a wonderful, wonderful story, fully deserving its Nebula win (and would have deserved a Hugo win if the world had been fair).

_________________________
Read it for yourself here:
http://www.apex-magazine.com/jackalope-wives/

calypte's review

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4.0

I love Ursula Vernon's style - sort of fairy-tale-ish, but with a wry sense of humour and an underlying cleverness. It's super-tough to write simply yet so well, and this was nigh-on a perfect little short story.

hadas's review

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5.0

Wow, what a short story - beautiful and fascinating and original. It definitely left we me wanting to read more of the Vernon's stories.

warloujoyce's review

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5.0

The moon came up and the sun went down. The moonbeams went shattering down to the ground and the jackalope wives took off their skins and danced.
Hmm, how can I explain that 5-star rating? I’d simply tell you to go ahead and read the story. I promise it’s worth your time. However, I’ll attempt to craft a brief review because this merits one.

Jackalope Wives is an example of why I became fond of short stories. There’s no scarcity of them and when I find a gem such as this one, I go back to wishing I can write like their authors do – because short stories, when executed well, are powerful and beautiful.

On the surface, this story is about jackalope wives who shed their rabbit skins at dusk and dance to wild music, as well as the folly of young men who think it’s justified to catch one for themselves.
“Of course it hurts her!” yelled Grandma. “You think you can have your skin and your freedom burned away in front of you and not scream? Sweet mother Mary, boy, think about what you’re doing! Be cruel or be kind, but don’t be both, because now you’ve made a mess you can’t clean up in a hurry.”
But this short story is ultimately about choice, consent, and consequences. How Vernon was able to weave those three together in a few pages without feeling forced or hurried is a triumph on its own. She also skillfully creates an excellent tale that combines wisdom and magic – two components that I cannot resist.

And let me tell you, Vernon knows how to leave an impression with her choice of words. I was rather fond of the following lines:
So the young man with the touch of magic watched the jackalope wife dancing and you know as well as I do what young men dream about. We will be charitable. She danced a little apart from her fellows, as he walked a little apart from his.

Perhaps he thought she might understand him. Perhaps he found her as interesting as the girls found him.

Perhaps we shouldn’t always get what we think we want.
------
“She was beautiful,” he said. As if it were a reason.

As if it mattered.

As if it had ever mattered.
P.S. Did I mention it’s free? Check out the Jackalope Wives here: http://www.apex-magazine.com/jackalope-wives/