Rating: Not rated
Tags: Science Fiction, Lang:en
Summary
"It was a time of pause, a time between planting and
harvest when the air was heavy, humming with its own slow
warm music." So begins an extraordinary fantasy of the rural Midwest by
a winner of the John W. Campbell, Jr., Award for best young
science fiction writer. One summer day in the 1920s, Haverstock's Traveling
Curiosus and Wondershow rides into a small Midwestern town.
Haverstock's show is a presentation of mysterious wonders:
feats of magic, strange creatures, and frightening powers.
Three teenage girls attend the opening performance that
evening which, for each, promises love and threatens death.
The three girls are drawn to the show and its performers-a
lusty centaur, Angel the magical albino boy, the rowdy stage
hands-but frightened by the enigmatic owner, Haverstock. The
girls at first try to dismiss these marvels as trickery, but
it becomes all too real, too vivid to be other than nightmare
reality. Each feels the force of the show and its power to
alter everyday lives: Francine is drawn embarrassingly to the
centaur, Rose makes an assignation with one of the hands and
gets in trouble, and Evelyn is fascinated by the pathetic,
mysterious Angel, The Boy Who Can Fly, and together they plan
escape. No stranger or more disturbing vision of the dark
side of carnival life has been handled with such grace or
conviction since Bradbury's vintage period. With a poet's
mastery of language Reamy brings his circus of characters to
a startling, fantastic conclusion.