Featured in the Netflix series Love, Death & Robots Bestselling author Ken Liu selects his multiple award-winning stories for a groundbreaking collection–including a brand-new piece exclusive to this volume. With his debut novel, The Grace of Kings, taking the literary world by storm, Ken Liu now shares his finest short fiction in The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories. This mesmerizing … Menagerie and Other Stories. This mesmerizing collection features many of Ken’s award-winning and award-finalist stories, including: “The Man Who Ended History: A Documentary” (Finalist for the Hugo, Nebula, and Theodore Sturgeon Awards), “Mono No Aware” (Hugo Award winner), “The Waves” (Nebula Award finalist), “The Bookmaking Habits of Select Species” (Nebula and Sturgeon Award finalists), “All the Flavors” (Nebula Award finalist), “The Litigation Master and the Monkey King” (Nebula Award finalist), and the most awarded story in the genre’s history, “The Paper Menagerie” (The only story to win the Hugo, Nebula, and World Fantasy awards).
Insightful and stunning stories that plumb the struggle against history and betrayal of relationships in pivotal moments, this collection showcases one of our greatest and original voices.
more
Before I start buzzing about The Paper Menagerie, everyone should read the short story “Folding Beijing” by Hao Jingfang: http://uncannymagazine.com/article/folding-beijing-2/
Which just won a Hugo Award for Best Novelette and is available in English thanks to the Ken Liu translation machine! It’s a really smart/whimsical/poignant take on the inequality that’s resulted from how quickly China’s economy has grown and all the people who have been left behind as a result.
(Also on a personal note, practically my entire life is books and sort of inaccessible to my parents who don’t read in English — but they read this story in Chinese, and then we were able to talk about it, and that was the most exciting thing ever.)
—–
The Paper Menagerie was my plane book for traveling to WorldCon this year. Ken Liu was also on my plane (sitting directly in front of me?!) So that was kind of overwhelming.
I love how the stories borrow from different traditions and genres (not just SFF, but detective fiction and mythology!) and multiple stories made me cry. I haven’t read through all of them yet, but so far I think the title story is my favorite — I sent a Chinese translation over to my parents, so maybe they’ll read that one too??
It took me a while to finish The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories because reading it straight through would have been like gobbling up 20 truffles in one sitting–the stories in it are rich enough I had to take breaks in between to digest.
The stories range pretty widely from hard scifi to near future noir to historical fiction with a fantastical twist–and many are hybrids of all of the above. Some of my favorites experimented with form: one is made up of a catalogue of alien species’ ways of making books, while another is written in the style of a documentary. Almost all of them carry heavy emotional weight. Liu can write about particles in distant space in a way that’ll make you tear up on the bus to work, and his time travel narrative about atrocities committed by Japan during the Second World War was complex and gut wrenching.
I’m struggling to convey just how great this book was so I’ll just say that overall, I’d highly recommend it! Kudos to @merrycoin for buzzing about it being on sale recently! Has anyone read Liu’s other books?
Megan Reynolds recommends 8 next-level beach reads, including The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories by Ken Liu: “Even if genre fiction and short stories aren’t your style, Ken Liu’s short stories will enchant you. The worlds he creates toe the line between magical realism and speculative fiction, yet are just close enough to reality to feel possible.”
http://www.elle.com/culture/books/a38104/beach-reads-2016/
I think part of why I enjoyed Ken Liu’s The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories so much is that his collection of science fiction and fantasy short stories isn’t just about technological and magical wizardry (although there’s plenty of both). The true through-lines are the related themes of identity and memory.
Liu alludes to this in the preface by suggesting that “We spend our entire lives trying to tell stories about ourselves—they’re the essence of memory. It is how we make living in this unfeeling, accidental universe tolerable. That we call such a tendency ‘the narrative fallacy’ doesn’t mean it doesn’t also touch upon some aspect of the truth. Some stories simply literalize their metaphors a bit more explicitly.” The rest of his foreword borders on being overwrought, but the ensuing tales—and the metaphors he brings to life in them—make his point more eloquently.
The first selection, “The Bookmaking Habits of Select Species,” deals with memory by describing how various alien races write their books. More a series of encyclopedia entries than a true story, this brief piece held my attention through sheer inventiveness. Liu adopts a similar technique in “An Advanced Readers’ Picture Book of Comparative Cognition” to relate how other alien races remember the past, but he intersperses these mini-lectures with a compelling plot. “Simulacrum” plays with the consequences of creating physical manifestations of intimate moments.
Liu weaves in a fair amount of actual history as well. “The Litigation Master and the Monkey King” features a lawyer for the poor—a “litigating hooligan”—helping to preserve a suppressed record of the 1645 Yangzhou Massacre. “All the Flavors” speculates about how Guan Yu, the Chinese God of War, might have adapted to life in 19th-century Idaho. “The Literomancer” looks at the power of words while giving us a glimpse of Taiwan after the Chinese Civil War. And the titular “Paper Menagerie” uses origami to touch on the tragedies of the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution.
Inevitably, these stories grapple with identity too, but “State Change” foregrounds the concept with its exploration of what might happen if our souls were embodied in (and represented by) physical objects. In “The Perfect Match,” Liu examines how our data-driven lifestyles are creating new versions of ourselves. “We are now a race of cyborgs,” a skeptic says. “We long ago began to spread our minds into the electronic realm, and it is no longer possible to squeeze all of ourselves back into our brains. The electronic copies of yourselves that you wanted to destroy are, in a literal sense, actually you.” In contrast, “Good Hunting” follows a fox spirit who adapts to a steampunk version of Hong Kong by employing technology to regain her lost magic.
The final story, “The Man Who Ended History: A Documentary,” ties these threads together by debating the implications of a destructive form of time travel. The focus is on Pingfang, the “Asian Auschwitz” where “Unit 731 of the Japanese Imperial Army performed gruesome experiments on thousands of Chinese and Allied prisoners throughout” World War II “as part of Japan’s effort to develop biological weapons and to conduct research into the limits of human endurance.” But the Kirino Process—a technique that allows a single witness to see a particular moment in history before erasing that vantage forever—leads to international arguments about who owns the past when controlling it becomes “a literal, rather than merely a metaphorical, issue.”
I didn’t love every piece in this collection. And it wasn’t a quick read, especially when I was in the cluster of stories about humans journeying to new worlds—I could have done with one less of those. But they all made me think. I also appreciated how personal Liu’s selections felt. Born in China, he immigrated to the United States when he was 11. Defining his own identity must have been (and probably still is) a complicated process. It certainly made for some excellent fiction.
(For more reviews like this one, see http://www.nickwisseman.com)
What a great collection of stories! I loved the magic combined with myths and folklore. As someone who doesn’t know much about Chinese culture, this book taught me a lot.
Some of the stories are fantastical and light. My favorite was probably the first one, which explains how the different species in the universe gather, curate, use, and pass along knowledge. It’s a not so subtle allegory to the differences within our own (single) species.
Some are pretty graphic and difficult to get through, depicting the horrors of war and tyrant governors. They did make me want to research and learn more about China’s history, though, which I deem the result of a good story.
Beautiful speculative stories by a smart, humane and gifted writer.