Angry Candy By Harlan Ellison

Angry Candy is a 1988 collection of short stories by Harlan Ellison that is loosely organized around the theme of death. The title comes the last line of the poem “the Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls” by e. e. cummings, “…the/ moon rattles like a fragment of angry candy.” The collection contains the short story “Eidolons” which won the 1989 Locus poll award for best short story. It also contains the novelette “Paladin of the Lost Hour”, which won a Hugo award for best novelette and was later converted by Ellison into an episode of the television series The New Twilight Zone. Angry Candy was nominated for a Bram Stoker Award and won a World Fantasy award for best collection of short stories.
Contains
Introduction: The Wind Took Your Answer Away
Paladin of the Lost Hour
Footsteps
Escapegoat
When Auld’s Acquaintance Is Forgot
Broken Glass
On the Slab
Prince Myshkin, and Hold the Relish
The Region Between
Laugh Track
Eidolons
Soft Monkey
Stuffing
With Virgil Oddum at the East Pole
Quicktime
The Avenger of Death
Chained to the Fast Lane in the Red Queen’s Race
The Function of Dream Sleep
Read By John Horton
Format: mp3
Bit Rate: 64kbps/22kHz Mono
File Size: 286 MB
Length: 10:25:49

 

This collection was converted from cassette but the sound is good.

The introduction seems a little long to me and John Horton is not as good a reader (to me) as many we have today...but the stories are great.

8 parts

1&2 of 8


Harlan Ellison - Angry Candy (1 of 8).mp3

Harlan Ellison - Angry Candy (2 of 8).mp3

You need to be a member of Times Past to add comments!

Join Times Past

Email me when people reply –

Replies

  • From Publishers Weekly
    Ellison's first book in six years, a harvesting of previously uncollected stories, is one of his best. The 17 stories are prefaced by "The Wind Took Your Answer Away," a remembrance and homage to the author's friends who have died since 1985and there have been manywritten with sadness and rage. Indeed, death or mourning figure in many of these tales. "Paladin of the Lost Hour" is an overly sentimental tale of an old man who keeps guard over an exiled hour that must never enter the time stream, lest time itself come to an end, and how he passes on his stewardship. Funny and intriguing, "Laugh Track" features a magician of a sound editor who conjures up the soul of the long-dead favorite aunt of a Hollywood writer from the sound of her laughter on an ancient sitcom laugh track. "Prince Mishkin, and Hold the Relish" is an hilarious anecdotal short-short about messed-up relationships between men and women and Dostoyevski. The urban horror story "Soft Monkey" tells of a retarded homeless old woman who witnesses a murder and is in turn pursued by the killers. Ellison's stories have too often been mechanistic, thin ideas fleshed out in overwriting and sentimentality. In this collection he demonstrates he's moving beyond that, becoming more complex, relaxed and reaching for emotion rather than sentiment.
    Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc. --
    From Library Journal
    In this collection, Ellison says, "This is a book of stories you may think of as angry candy . . . stories I wrote because my friends are gone, a lot of them. . . . " His introduction is a sad litany, a long list of lost friends. Perhaps he wrote these stories to comfort himself and othersas a way of pretending that people who die do not go into the earth, but "beyond that beyond most edge." To facilitate suspension of disbelief, Ellison's prose is dry, matter-of-fact; he tells the wildest possible tales in the most rational, sane tone. Among the collection is "Palladin of the Lost Hour," a heroic tale involving an old man and a magic watch, which explores the passage of guardianship from an old to young man. All fairy tales for grown-ups and science fiction devotees.Marcia Tager, Tenafly, N.J.
    Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc. -

     

    3&4 of 8

    Harlan Ellison - Angry Candy (3 of 8).mp3

    Harlan Ellison - Angry Candy (4 of 8).mp3

This reply was deleted.