
Most Excellent and Lamentable
- Description
- Praise
- About the Author
-
Look inside the book  | Get the E-book on Amazon or Google Play
Enter the strange mind of Jason Erik Lundberg, hailed by The Guardian for âachieving emotionally resonant effects within just a few pagesâ. Let his imagination introduce you to an unearthly star girl, a foul-mouthed wombat, slithering immortals, a fish with premonitions, and much more.
These short stories, painstakingly selected from Lundbergâs first three collections, include a brand-new noveletteââSlowly Slowly Slowlyâ takes place in a future Singapore where an old folks' home takes the form of an actual zooâand the author's preferred texts of âThe Stargirl and the Potterâ and âIkan Berbudi (Wise Fish)â.
-
âThis is a superb collection of beautifully crafted stories. They range from exquisite miniatures that render entire worlds within a few words to longer stories rich with the complexities of human interactions with the Otherâwhere the Other might be a foreign tourist, a shaman, a fish that speaks or a wombat. Infused with a Southeast Asian sensibility, these tales transcend boundaries in the best tradition of speculative fiction.âÂ
âVandana Singh, author of Ambiguity Machines and Other StoriesâPhlogiston (I am assured by usually reliable sources) does not existâŠand yet something rare is powering these shimmering, surprising, infinitely combustible stories. Strange energies crackle throughout this most excellent collection.âÂ
âAndy Duncan, author of An Agent of Utopia and three-time World Fantasy Award winnerâLundberg has the enviable talent of achieving emotionally resonant effects within just a few pages.â
âThe GuardianâLundberg explores the randomness of magical occurrences and how a life without magic can be just as deadening as it is safe.â
âThe Green Man ReviewâJason Erik Lundbergâs stories, launched from the real world on a trajectory to the surreal, fuse the idle daydream with the desperate heart. You should read them.â
âJohn Kessel, author of Pride and PrometheusâWhat is deemed âstrangeâ becomes movingly conjoined with the familiar and the universal.â
âCyril Wong, author of Ten Things My Father Never Taught MeâLundbergâs writing is that of an Old Soul who views the world through Young Eyes; his work is jamais vu of the highest order: these stories are memories encountered for the first time, but never to be forgotten once theyâve been experienced.â
âJames A. Owen, author and illustrator of The Chronicles of the Imaginarium Geographica -
Jason Erik Lundberg was born in New York, grew up in North Carolina, and has lived in Singapore since 2007. He is the author and anthologist of over two dozen books, including A Fickle and Restless Weapon (2020), Most Excellent and Lamentable (2019), Diary of One Who Disappeared (2019), Carol the Coral (2016), Strange Mammals (2013), Embracing the Strange (2013), The Alchemy of Happiness (2012), Fish Eats Lion (2012), Red Dot Irreal (2011), the six-book Bo Bo and Cha Cha childrenâs picture book series (2012â2015), and the biennial Best New Singaporean Short Stories anthology series (est. 2013).
He is also the fiction editor at Epigram Books (where the books heâs edited have won multiple awards, and made various yearâs best lists since 2012), as well as the founding editor of LONTAR: The Journal of Southeast Asian Speculative Fiction (2012â2018). His writing has been anthologised widely, shortlisted for multiple awards, honourably mentioned twice in The Yearâs Best Fantasy and Horror, and translated into half a dozen languages. A Fickle and Restless Weapon is his first novel, and twenty-fifth book.
Â
Original: $20.90
-65%$20.90
$7.31Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
- Description
- Praise
- About the Author
-
Look inside the book  | Get the E-book on Amazon or Google Play
Enter the strange mind of Jason Erik Lundberg, hailed by The Guardian for âachieving emotionally resonant effects within just a few pagesâ. Let his imagination introduce you to an unearthly star girl, a foul-mouthed wombat, slithering immortals, a fish with premonitions, and much more.
These short stories, painstakingly selected from Lundbergâs first three collections, include a brand-new noveletteââSlowly Slowly Slowlyâ takes place in a future Singapore where an old folks' home takes the form of an actual zooâand the author's preferred texts of âThe Stargirl and the Potterâ and âIkan Berbudi (Wise Fish)â.
-
âThis is a superb collection of beautifully crafted stories. They range from exquisite miniatures that render entire worlds within a few words to longer stories rich with the complexities of human interactions with the Otherâwhere the Other might be a foreign tourist, a shaman, a fish that speaks or a wombat. Infused with a Southeast Asian sensibility, these tales transcend boundaries in the best tradition of speculative fiction.âÂ
âVandana Singh, author of Ambiguity Machines and Other StoriesâPhlogiston (I am assured by usually reliable sources) does not existâŠand yet something rare is powering these shimmering, surprising, infinitely combustible stories. Strange energies crackle throughout this most excellent collection.âÂ
âAndy Duncan, author of An Agent of Utopia and three-time World Fantasy Award winnerâLundberg has the enviable talent of achieving emotionally resonant effects within just a few pages.â
âThe GuardianâLundberg explores the randomness of magical occurrences and how a life without magic can be just as deadening as it is safe.â
âThe Green Man ReviewâJason Erik Lundbergâs stories, launched from the real world on a trajectory to the surreal, fuse the idle daydream with the desperate heart. You should read them.â
âJohn Kessel, author of Pride and PrometheusâWhat is deemed âstrangeâ becomes movingly conjoined with the familiar and the universal.â
âCyril Wong, author of Ten Things My Father Never Taught MeâLundbergâs writing is that of an Old Soul who views the world through Young Eyes; his work is jamais vu of the highest order: these stories are memories encountered for the first time, but never to be forgotten once theyâve been experienced.â
âJames A. Owen, author and illustrator of The Chronicles of the Imaginarium Geographica -
Jason Erik Lundberg was born in New York, grew up in North Carolina, and has lived in Singapore since 2007. He is the author and anthologist of over two dozen books, including A Fickle and Restless Weapon (2020), Most Excellent and Lamentable (2019), Diary of One Who Disappeared (2019), Carol the Coral (2016), Strange Mammals (2013), Embracing the Strange (2013), The Alchemy of Happiness (2012), Fish Eats Lion (2012), Red Dot Irreal (2011), the six-book Bo Bo and Cha Cha childrenâs picture book series (2012â2015), and the biennial Best New Singaporean Short Stories anthology series (est. 2013).
He is also the fiction editor at Epigram Books (where the books heâs edited have won multiple awards, and made various yearâs best lists since 2012), as well as the founding editor of LONTAR: The Journal of Southeast Asian Speculative Fiction (2012â2018). His writing has been anthologised widely, shortlisted for multiple awards, honourably mentioned twice in The Yearâs Best Fantasy and Horror, and translated into half a dozen languages. A Fickle and Restless Weapon is his first novel, and twenty-fifth book.
Â












