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Tripping the Tale Fantastic: Weird Fiction by Deaf and Hard of Hearing Writers

Contributor(s): Heuer, Christopher Jon (Editor), Luczak, Raymond (Author), Langford, David (Author)

ISBN: 9781941960080

Publisher: Handtype Press

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Pub Date: October 18, 2017

Dewey: 823.0108092

LCCN: 2017942455

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.42" H x 8.00" L x 5.25" W ( 0.46 lbs) 198 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: Deaf and hard of hearing authors from around the world bring you this fun-sometimes disturbing-collection of short fiction that explore haunted Civil War battlefields, severed ears, lab-grown dinosaurs, forest creatures that steal away children, and deadly bio-engineered fleas.

Brief description: has been publishing and writing about SF since 1975. Novels include The Space Eater and The Leaky Establishment; there are many collections of magazine reviews and criticism. Langford's 29 Hugo awards span several categories: Fanzine and Semiprozine for the newsletter Ansible (1979-current), Short Story for "Different Kinds of Darkness" (2000) and Related Work for the online Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (with John Clute and others). He has always had hearing problems.

Review Quotes:

"So often the future we imagine is homogenous: everyone has the same baseline abilities and there is a presumption that all five senses are the norm. This collection has stories of people accessing new technologies, and people living in worlds where to hear is to be abnormal. There are stories that explore the imposition of language values on the Deaf community and the harm committed in the name of 'help.' And there are stories in which we get to experience how others communicate. A thought-provoking collection." --Farah Mendlesohn, author of Rhetorics of Fantasy

"Even for someone like myself--a hearing person who has long been around the Deaf community--this anthology often gives insight into a series of deaf characters in a way perhaps no hearing writer ever could, from reading the innermost thoughts from a Deaf perspective in thriller/horror to science fiction and fantasy, and every genre in between, whether it's 'The Ear, ' which interestingly recalls the old radio drama Suspense or the more chilling 'In the Haunted Darkness, ' which puts into words the feelings of likely more than a few people, sadly. More importantly, those stories without a deaf character highlight the most crucial takeaway: a deaf writer can world-build and set scenes as well as anyone." --Dave Galanter, author of Troublesome Minds

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