With the hilarious "Happy Valley," a story originally written by John Cleese and Connie Booth for Monty Python's Flying Circus, this third volume in an extraordinarily popular Mammoth Book series gets off to a suitably silly start. It continues merrily apace with "Attack of the Charlie Chaplins" by Garry Kilworth, visits "The Strawhouse Pavilion" by Ron Goulart, and takes in "A Bad Day on Mount Olympus" with Marilyn Todd. Along the way it introduces Esther Eisner's "Gunsel and Gretel" and Cherith Baldry's "Broadway Barbarian" and renews acquaintance with F. Anstey's "Ferdie." It bemuses as well as amuses with "A Case of Four Fingers" concocted by John Grant, not to mention "The Absolute and Utter Impossibility of the Facts in the Case of the Vanishing of Henning Vok" from Jack Adrian. And before this wildly comic romp ends, it discovers "Math Takes a Holiday" (Paul Di Filippo) and "Mother Duck Strikes Again" (Craig Shaw Gardner). Fantasy finds broad definition in this wackily comic tour. While some of the stories approach the domain of science fiction, others are lodged in an everyday reality. None of them, though, fails to entertain. Together, the more than thirty selections -- thirteen of them brand-new and the balance of them often rare finds or forgotten gems -- provide a fresh sampling of comic genius in the sphere of fantasy fiction and a wide range of tales to suit every taste in humor.
xi · Another Introduction · Mike Ashley · in *
1 · Happy Valley · John Cleese & Connie Booth · ss The Brand New Monty Python Book, 1973; based on a sketch on Monty Python
13 · Attack of the Charlie Chaplins · Garry Kilworth · ss New Worlds #222 ’97
24 · Mother Duck Strikes Again [from An Excess of Enchantments; Ebenezum and Wuntvor] · Craig Shaw Gardner · ex New York: Ace, 1988
35 · The Blackbird · Jack Sharkey · ss Fantastic Sep ’59
52 · Pale Assassin · James Bibby · nv *
76 · The Strawhouse Pavilion [Max Kearny] · Ron Goulart · ss Coven 13 Jan ’70
· A Bevy of Beasts
90 · Dragonet · Esther M. Friesner · ss Amazing Jan ’86
96 · The Diplodocus · Porter Emerson Browne · ss The New Broadway Magazine Aug ’08
110 · Nothing in the Rules [Squaredeal Sam] · Nelson S. Bond · ss Blue Book Aug ’43
124 · Bad Day on Mount Olympus · Marilyn Todd · ss *
· A Bunch of Fiends
137 · How Much Would You Pay? · Craig Shaw Gardner · ss *
147 · The Devil Times Three · Fredric Brown · gp; Nasty, vi Playboy Apr ’59; Rope Trick, vi Adam May ’59; The Ring of Hans Carvel, vi Nightmares and Geezenstacks, Bantam, 1961; Retold and somewhat modernized from the works of Rabelais.
152 · Fair-Weather Fiend [Kedrigern] · John Morressy · ss F&SF Jan ’91
· A Pair of Oddities
175 · The Byrds · Michael G. Coney · ss Changes, ed. Michael Bishop & Ian Watson, Ace, 1983
190 · Polly Put the Mockers On · Stan Nicholls · nv *
· A Trove of Oldies
211 · Ferdie · F. Anstey · ss The Strand Dec ’07
234 · The Queen’s Triplets · Israel Zangwill · ss The Idler Dec, 1892
247 · Crispin the Turnspit · Anthony Armstrong · ss Pearson’s Magazine Dec ’30
· A Halo of Angels
258 · Touched by a Salesman · Tom Holt · ss *
277 · Math Takes a Holiday · Paul Di Filippo · nv *
337 · Not Ours to See · David Langford · ss The Fortune Teller, ed. Lawrence Schimel & Martin H. Greenberg, DAW, 1997
244 · The Caliber of the Sword · Larry Lawrence · ss *; Published in the e-zine, Fantasy, Folklore and Fairytales, Sept 1999.
· A Recursion of Fairy Tales
353 · Gunsel and Gretel · Esther Friesner · nv *
391 · Frog · Tina Rath · ss *
398 · The Swords and the Stones · E. K. Grant · ss *
· A Touch of the Impossibles
413 · A Case of Four Fingers · John Grant · nv *
435 · The Absolute and Utter Impossibility of the Facts in the Case of the Vanishing of Henning Vok (a.k.a. The Amazing Blitzen) (r.n. Jack Ralph Cole) · Jack Adrian · ss New Crimes 3, ed. Maxim Jakubowski, London: Robinson, 1991
443 · Milord Sir Smiht, the English Wizard [Dr. Eszterhazy] · Avram Davidson · nv The Enquiries of Doctor Eszterhazy, Warner, 1975
473 · “Put Back That Universe!” [Smedley Faversham] · F. Gwynplaine MacIntyre · ss Analog Oct, 2000
490 · You’ll Never Walk Alone · Scott Edelman · nv *
A new and truly awesome collection of comic fantasy masterpieces!
It isn't often you find a posse of Greek goddesses putting down insurrection among unruly classical mortals, stranded aliens escaping earth in a church converted into a rocket, or a light-fingered time-traveller attempting to steal the universe - but here they all are, in another selection of bizarre comic fantasies.
Description:
With the hilarious "Happy Valley," a story originally written by John Cleese and Connie Booth for Monty Python's Flying Circus, this third volume in an extraordinarily popular Mammoth Book series gets off to a suitably silly start. It continues merrily apace with "Attack of the Charlie Chaplins" by Garry Kilworth, visits "The Strawhouse Pavilion" by Ron Goulart, and takes in "A Bad Day on Mount Olympus" with Marilyn Todd. Along the way it introduces Esther Eisner's "Gunsel and Gretel" and Cherith Baldry's "Broadway Barbarian" and renews acquaintance with F. Anstey's "Ferdie." It bemuses as well as amuses with "A Case of Four Fingers" concocted by John Grant, not to mention "The Absolute and Utter Impossibility of the Facts in the Case of the Vanishing of Henning Vok" from Jack Adrian. And before this wildly comic romp ends, it discovers "Math Takes a Holiday" (Paul Di Filippo) and "Mother Duck Strikes Again" (Craig Shaw Gardner). Fantasy finds broad definition in this wackily comic tour. While some of the stories approach the domain of science fiction, others are lodged in an everyday reality. None of them, though, fails to entertain. Together, the more than thirty selections -- thirteen of them brand-new and the balance of them often rare finds or forgotten gems -- provide a fresh sampling of comic genius in the sphere of fantasy fiction and a wide range of tales to suit every taste in humor.
A new and truly awesome collection of comic fantasy masterpieces!
It isn't often you find a posse of Greek goddesses putting down insurrection among unruly classical mortals, stranded aliens escaping earth in a church converted into a rocket, or a light-fingered time-traveller attempting to steal the universe - but here they all are, in another selection of bizarre comic fantasies.