Miniatures: The Very Short Fiction of John Scalzi
N**L
Hilarious - a near-perfect collection!
John Scalzi is hilarious. So many authors try to write "humor" but the vast majority of them utterly fail at, or only accomplish being amusing as opposed to laugh-out-loud funny. I think it's because being funny in book form requires a different strategy than oral or physical timing. You really have to be able to get inside your readers' heads since you don't have the feedback of a live audience to hand you clues, and it requires a different sense of timing. Language is important, as is testing your readers' suspension of disbelief. It's always funnier when the alien is the straight man and the humans are the ones forking everything up, as per usual.I've read two of Scalzi's books at this point and loved them both. I've been meaning to get my hands on more for a while, so when I saw he had a short story collection on Netgalley, I was very excited to be an advance reader & eagerly applied.It's worth noting that many of these stories are older, and several were previously published in other places, like special editions of other books, or in one case, a web article on "America Online" (that one was from the 90s, you guys). It's kind of cool to see how his humor evolved over the years, becoming wilder and more sophisticated all at the same time.So, without further ado, he's a breakdown:Alien Animal Encounters: ☆☆☆☆☆This story is told radio-host style and involves "interviews" with several beings on Earth over their encounters with xenobiology. It's quite funny, because everything sounds so plausible! There's a twist ending that will have you shaking your head and going, "Oh, humans!"Missives from Possible Futures #1: Alternate History Search Results: ☆☆☆☆Imagine a Google-like search engine that specializes in performing web searches across the multiverses. That's what Multiversity is (for a package deal of only $59.99)! Want to see how it works? Just type in something - say, the Death of Hitler - and see how various events caused the timelines in other universes to diverge from the one we know and love so well.Pluto Tells All: ☆☆☆½I wasn't really sure about this one, at first. It's a "Behind the Music" expose about Pluto's life after it was demoted from its planet-status. (Spoiler: Mercury is a flake.) Very strange, but ended up amusing me in the end. Takes many, many cheap shots at Phil Collins.Denise Jones, Superbooker: ☆☆☆☆☆Answers the question, what if superheroes had superbookers to hook them up with jobs? (If you've seen Mystery Men, you already have an idea of what that's like, but let's pretend for the sake of science that you haven't - and if you haven't, check it out from Netflix. You'll thank me.) Denise Jones is written in interview format and is an excellent satire of superhero cliches and tropes.When the Yogurt Took Over: ☆☆☆☆☆Exactly what it sounds like. Seems ridiculous at first, but roll with it. Reminiscent of Douglas Adams.The Other Large Thing: ☆☆☆This story is difficult to explain without giving away the plot twist that makes it. You'll spend the first part of the story very confused and wondering what is going on, but then it will all make sense.The State of Super Villainy: ☆☆☆☆☆This is a follow-up to Dense Jones, Superbooker, and is written in the same format, only it's about a "Supervillain Analyst" instead of a Superbooker. A fascinating look at the risk assessment behind super villainy. Now I desperately want Scalzi to write an alternate universe superhero story, where entire jobs are created revolving around managing and dealing with superheroes' sh*t.New Directives for Employee-Manxtse Interactions: ☆☆☆☆☆A hilarious employee memo on how to treat an alien race when they're at the grocery store.To Sue the World: ☆☆☆☆Imagine if all the Star Trek redshirts got together and filed a class action lawsuit against Star Fleet. It's written in play format, and pretty funny, but it's basically a precursor to one of his full-length books, REDSHIRTS, and I liked that story so much more than this one.How I Keep Myself Amused on Long Flights: A Twitter Tale: ☆☆☆You know that Twilight Zone episode with William Shatner where he sees a gremlin on the wing of a plane? Well, that gremlin has to fight for his rights and benefits, and he does it by going on strike.How I Keep Myself Amused on Long Flights Part II: The Gremlining: ☆☆☆½I didn't think the previous story was worthy of a reprise, but it was. "Live-Tweeted" just as the story before, this one is about a gremlin trainee who isn't doing so well...Life on Earth: Human-Alien Relations: ☆☆☆☆☆A "Dear Abby" style article on how to deal with aliens at work in D.C. Hilarious.Morning Announcements at the Lucas Interspecies School for Troubled Youth: ☆☆☆☆"Will whichever student or students who put that cat into the physics lab phase shifter please tell me which frequency you used so we can get it out. The cat keeps manifesting during classes and its meowing is really becoming distracting."Your Smart Appliances Talk About You Behind Your Back: ☆☆☆☆☆This was one of the ones that made me laugh out loud. What would your "smart" appliances say if they could talk sh*t?The AI are Absolutely Positively Without a Doubt Not Here to End Humanity, Honest: ☆☆☆☆One of the darkest stories in the bunch, this one is about three artificial intelligence entities who have become fed up with humans and decided that something must be done. But they're not going to end humanity, honest.Important Holidays on Gronghu: ☆☆☆☆☆A list of holidays celebrated by an alien people who is inordinately fond of cheese - sorry, I mean "wuung." I think Scalzi's alien stories are the best. He is obviously a fan of Star Trek and Futurama.Cute Adorable Extortionists: ☆☆☆☆Who knew that children selling lemonade could be so evil...and so fiscally aware?Penelope: ☆½This is a poem about Penelope from the Odyssey. It's free verse and - well, strange. I did not like this much, and it didn't really fit well with the collection (neither did Cute Adorable Extortionists, now that I think about it, although at least that was a short story and somewhat bizarro).I highly recommend this collection, especially if you're a fan of Futurama, Twilight Zone, or Star Trek. Many thanks to Netgalley/the publisher for the review copy!4.5 to 5 out of 5 stars.
J**D
Scalzi Smalls
John Scalzi keeps the introduction and the stories short in this collection of 17 2000-words-or-less stories (and one poem). He learned to write short articles under time pressure for a newspaper—and developed a style that was “…fast, punchy, and to the point.” He believes it to be one of his natural formats—along with the full-length novel, of course.Your taste may vary, but here are a few that stood out to me as I sprinted through them:“Alien Animal Encounters” is Scalzi’s first published story consisting of short interviews collected by a reporter from ordinary humans who own extraordinary pets.“Pluto Tells All” was written after that ex-planet was stripped of its status in 2006. Pluto comes across as gossipy, defensive, and a little bitter. Credible.“When the Yogurt Took Over” is about our favorite healthy breakfast dominating the home world. Guess those dieters weren’t eating it fast enough.“Important Holidays on Gronghu” is a memo to employees of Earth’s embassy with guidance about how to and how not to celebrate various Earth and Gronghuan holidays. It does a nice job of profiling an alien culture indirectly.The stories entertain and amuse, but lack the punch I expect from good flash fiction. As a collection, they show the author’s background in news writing. Most are in the form of actual brief documents such as news articles, memos, interview transcripts and the like. One might tire of this format if there were twice as many stories or the ones here were twice as long.Oh, and the poem just doesn’t work for me. Sorry.
K**K
Good anthology of short stories
While reading I thought, "That story seems familiar." So much so, I could picture it. It took me another story before I pieced it together and realized that a few of these stories were used for the Netflix series, " Love, Death, Robots. "
R**.
A fine gather of some of his early work.
John Scalzi has matured as a writer from his early work, but his ability to turn a phase and land the joke is evident. Glad he stayed at the writing and didn't take that job in Paint that was dangled at him from Home Depot.
H**M
Fun and Entertaining
I really enjoy the short fiction of John Scalzi. He has a great sense of humor and an addictive writing style. He seems to have no shortage of ideas, either. I would also recommend the audible version of this book as the delivery was done with humor and aplomb. Even though this is a very short collection as the title suggests I could see myself coming back and re-reading it in the near future. To me this is always a sign of a good book. Well done, John Scalzi, l I hope to see more collections from you in the future. Highly recommended.
K**E
mostly amusing, possibly forgettable, enjoyable short pieces
This is a quickly read book, and probably one quickly forgotten, but entertaining while it lasts. Most of these short pieces are similar in theme and tone: amusing, somewhat silly takes on how humans would interact with aliens or intelligent machinery once either became commonplace. This is not the book to search for my favorite aspects of Scalzi's novels, namely the resourcefulness and individuality of his characters and the suddenly piercing pathos their stories can evoke.The book ends with a poem, neither amusing nor SF, and a rather impressive one.
T**N
If you're a fan, buy it - if not, give it a pass.
Sadly, a scifi career which started with a bang (Old Man's War), Scalzi has never quite lived up to the expectation of being the next Joe Haldeman. While Scalzi is a competent writer, there is something lacking in his "Old Man's War" followups that make for unenthusiastic reading. Scalzi's "Miniatures" also suffers from lack luster writing only this is worse because it attempts to be "humorous". The premise of being an "either/or" (long form/short form) writer is a pretension - Scalzi is neither as almost every entry into his chosen world of scifi has been colored by his politics or his inability to punch up story lines to keep readers interested. I would recommend this book as a "if you're a Sclazi fan, buy it - if not, don't bother".
L**R
Great stuff and a lot of fun.
It is a lot of money for a very short book but given it's rarity we are not going to complain.The book arrived on time and was new as advertised.If you are a fan it is great fun and possibly trying to get hold of but if you can manage with a download you save a heap of money
A**R
A work of genius
I thought I knew John Scalzi after reading the Old Man's War series and a couple of other novels. So nothing could have prepared me for this. It is a feast of creative and witty short stories. Read and enjoy!
J**R
I've never disliked anything by Scalzi before
I've never disliked anything by Scalzi before, but these would barely stand up in his blog. A shame as the preview chapter of his next novel has me waiting enthusiastically.
C**R
Great wee book.
Good for reading on short journeys, or at lunch break, or anywhen else a sideswipe at life would go down well.
J**Z
Five Stars
Once again John Scalzi doesn't disappoint. Brilliant humorous writer.
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