OFFRE LISEUSES
Une liseuse achetée = une housse offerte* jusqu'au 21 juin
- Accueil /
- Tanith Lee
Tanith Lee

Dernière sortie
Dancing Through the Fire
Life, death, love, and truth: major themes that frequently appear in Grandmaster Tanith Lee's fiction, are all represented in Dancing Through the Fire, one of the last collections she put together before her untimely death. The stories in this book have never before been collected, and four of them have never before been published. These tales will transport you from mystical lands to mystical worlds, corporeal manifestations of myth, and mythical interpretations of life, into realms you've never visited (and in some cases, could never have imagined visiting).\ In her obituary, the Guardian called Tanith Lee "one of the most influential revisionist and feminist voices in contemporary fantasy writing, " and said her work has a "sensibility in which the relentless pursuit of personal autonomy and sensual fulfilment leads her characters to the brink of delirium, as well as to a fierce integrity that can co-habit with self-sacrificing empathy." The Village Voice called her "the Princess Royal of Fantasy, " and enotes says she is "an accomplished technician and stylist.
Her sophisticated presentations carry the reader along breathlessly, yet her style invites reading aloud." Table of Contents:Prologue: Dancing Through the FireMove One: Life and Death Death Dances The Death of Death That Glisters Is My Lovely (previously unpublished short story)Move Two: The Power of Will The Flame Fold Last Dancer (previously unpublished short story)Move Three: Chancing It In the City of Dead Night Sold The World Well LostMove Four: Love Stories? Lora (previously unpublished short story) Medra Unnalash Comfort and DespairMove Five: Inner Truth Burn Her (previously unpublished novelette) The Sequence of Swords and HeartsEpilogue: Riddle Recognition: "Burn Her" (which was first published in Dancing Through the Fire) was a finalist for the 2016 WSFA Small Press Award. Dancing Through the Fire was a finalist for the 2016 Locus Award for Best Collection. Reviews of the Book: Lee's decadent, Gothic-inflected pieces range from delicate fantasias about the whims of a personified death to straightforward, suspenseful sword-and-sorcery featuring resourceful but outmatched thieves..
The collection's most emotional and most recent pieces are meditations on the power of art.. But it's difficult to read the stunning new piece "Burn Her, " in which a dead painter's right arm refuses to either stop painting or succumb to fire, as anything other than Lee's graceful acknowledgement and defiance of her own mortality, a very high point in this uneven swan song. -Publishers Weekly Dancing Through the Fire, subtitled "A Collection of Stories in Five Moves", is no random gathering.
Tanith Lee selected, introduced, and arranged these works before she died in May, also writing the prologue that gives the book its title, plus three new pieces suited to its symphony of shifting moods. The novelette "Burn Her" seems particularly bold.. The tales themselves can be eloquent, inspiring, wry-skewed takes on famous Lovers(?)-often, marvelously, all of the above.. "Burn Her" dances through the flame to glimpse a beauty that can only be suggested-not revealed or understood, while we still live.
-Locus (October 2015) Named to Locus Magazine's 2015 Recommended Reading List.
Her sophisticated presentations carry the reader along breathlessly, yet her style invites reading aloud." Table of Contents:Prologue: Dancing Through the FireMove One: Life and Death Death Dances The Death of Death That Glisters Is My Lovely (previously unpublished short story)Move Two: The Power of Will The Flame Fold Last Dancer (previously unpublished short story)Move Three: Chancing It In the City of Dead Night Sold The World Well LostMove Four: Love Stories? Lora (previously unpublished short story) Medra Unnalash Comfort and DespairMove Five: Inner Truth Burn Her (previously unpublished novelette) The Sequence of Swords and HeartsEpilogue: Riddle Recognition: "Burn Her" (which was first published in Dancing Through the Fire) was a finalist for the 2016 WSFA Small Press Award. Dancing Through the Fire was a finalist for the 2016 Locus Award for Best Collection. Reviews of the Book: Lee's decadent, Gothic-inflected pieces range from delicate fantasias about the whims of a personified death to straightforward, suspenseful sword-and-sorcery featuring resourceful but outmatched thieves..
The collection's most emotional and most recent pieces are meditations on the power of art.. But it's difficult to read the stunning new piece "Burn Her, " in which a dead painter's right arm refuses to either stop painting or succumb to fire, as anything other than Lee's graceful acknowledgement and defiance of her own mortality, a very high point in this uneven swan song. -Publishers Weekly Dancing Through the Fire, subtitled "A Collection of Stories in Five Moves", is no random gathering.
Tanith Lee selected, introduced, and arranged these works before she died in May, also writing the prologue that gives the book its title, plus three new pieces suited to its symphony of shifting moods. The novelette "Burn Her" seems particularly bold.. The tales themselves can be eloquent, inspiring, wry-skewed takes on famous Lovers(?)-often, marvelously, all of the above.. "Burn Her" dances through the flame to glimpse a beauty that can only be suggested-not revealed or understood, while we still live.
-Locus (October 2015) Named to Locus Magazine's 2015 Recommended Reading List.
Life, death, love, and truth: major themes that frequently appear in Grandmaster Tanith Lee's fiction, are all represented in Dancing Through the Fire, one of the last collections she put together before her untimely death. The stories in this book have never before been collected, and four of them have never before been published. These tales will transport you from mystical lands to mystical worlds, corporeal manifestations of myth, and mythical interpretations of life, into realms you've never visited (and in some cases, could never have imagined visiting).\ In her obituary, the Guardian called Tanith Lee "one of the most influential revisionist and feminist voices in contemporary fantasy writing, " and said her work has a "sensibility in which the relentless pursuit of personal autonomy and sensual fulfilment leads her characters to the brink of delirium, as well as to a fierce integrity that can co-habit with self-sacrificing empathy." The Village Voice called her "the Princess Royal of Fantasy, " and enotes says she is "an accomplished technician and stylist.
Her sophisticated presentations carry the reader along breathlessly, yet her style invites reading aloud." Table of Contents:Prologue: Dancing Through the FireMove One: Life and Death Death Dances The Death of Death That Glisters Is My Lovely (previously unpublished short story)Move Two: The Power of Will The Flame Fold Last Dancer (previously unpublished short story)Move Three: Chancing It In the City of Dead Night Sold The World Well LostMove Four: Love Stories? Lora (previously unpublished short story) Medra Unnalash Comfort and DespairMove Five: Inner Truth Burn Her (previously unpublished novelette) The Sequence of Swords and HeartsEpilogue: Riddle Recognition: "Burn Her" (which was first published in Dancing Through the Fire) was a finalist for the 2016 WSFA Small Press Award. Dancing Through the Fire was a finalist for the 2016 Locus Award for Best Collection. Reviews of the Book: Lee's decadent, Gothic-inflected pieces range from delicate fantasias about the whims of a personified death to straightforward, suspenseful sword-and-sorcery featuring resourceful but outmatched thieves..
The collection's most emotional and most recent pieces are meditations on the power of art.. But it's difficult to read the stunning new piece "Burn Her, " in which a dead painter's right arm refuses to either stop painting or succumb to fire, as anything other than Lee's graceful acknowledgement and defiance of her own mortality, a very high point in this uneven swan song. -Publishers Weekly Dancing Through the Fire, subtitled "A Collection of Stories in Five Moves", is no random gathering.
Tanith Lee selected, introduced, and arranged these works before she died in May, also writing the prologue that gives the book its title, plus three new pieces suited to its symphony of shifting moods. The novelette "Burn Her" seems particularly bold.. The tales themselves can be eloquent, inspiring, wry-skewed takes on famous Lovers(?)-often, marvelously, all of the above.. "Burn Her" dances through the flame to glimpse a beauty that can only be suggested-not revealed or understood, while we still live.
-Locus (October 2015) Named to Locus Magazine's 2015 Recommended Reading List.
Her sophisticated presentations carry the reader along breathlessly, yet her style invites reading aloud." Table of Contents:Prologue: Dancing Through the FireMove One: Life and Death Death Dances The Death of Death That Glisters Is My Lovely (previously unpublished short story)Move Two: The Power of Will The Flame Fold Last Dancer (previously unpublished short story)Move Three: Chancing It In the City of Dead Night Sold The World Well LostMove Four: Love Stories? Lora (previously unpublished short story) Medra Unnalash Comfort and DespairMove Five: Inner Truth Burn Her (previously unpublished novelette) The Sequence of Swords and HeartsEpilogue: Riddle Recognition: "Burn Her" (which was first published in Dancing Through the Fire) was a finalist for the 2016 WSFA Small Press Award. Dancing Through the Fire was a finalist for the 2016 Locus Award for Best Collection. Reviews of the Book: Lee's decadent, Gothic-inflected pieces range from delicate fantasias about the whims of a personified death to straightforward, suspenseful sword-and-sorcery featuring resourceful but outmatched thieves..
The collection's most emotional and most recent pieces are meditations on the power of art.. But it's difficult to read the stunning new piece "Burn Her, " in which a dead painter's right arm refuses to either stop painting or succumb to fire, as anything other than Lee's graceful acknowledgement and defiance of her own mortality, a very high point in this uneven swan song. -Publishers Weekly Dancing Through the Fire, subtitled "A Collection of Stories in Five Moves", is no random gathering.
Tanith Lee selected, introduced, and arranged these works before she died in May, also writing the prologue that gives the book its title, plus three new pieces suited to its symphony of shifting moods. The novelette "Burn Her" seems particularly bold.. The tales themselves can be eloquent, inspiring, wry-skewed takes on famous Lovers(?)-often, marvelously, all of the above.. "Burn Her" dances through the flame to glimpse a beauty that can only be suggested-not revealed or understood, while we still live.
-Locus (October 2015) Named to Locus Magazine's 2015 Recommended Reading List.
Les livres de Tanith Lee

10,99 €

10,99 €

7,99 €

8,99 €

8,99 €

9,49 €

9,49 €

7,99 €

9,49 €

9,49 €

9,49 €

8,99 €

8,99 €

8,99 €

7,99 €

10,49 €

7,49 €

8,49 €

8,49 €
