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Like Smoke, Like Light

Stories

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Publishers Weekly Best Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror title of 2023!

"Ogawa's debut collection of 17 speculative shorts stuns with its delicacy ... Harkening back to the oldest folk and fairy tales and raising pointed questions about how humans value and devalue each other, this is a showstopper." —Publishers Weekly, starred review

"Her work is unexpected, often horrific, and always enthralling." —Thea James, Tor.com

A monster wearing the stolen dress of a deceased mother agrees to help the woman's orphaned son. A girl whose blood can cause hallucinogenic visions makes a daring escape from the merchants who traffic her. In a society where people are prized for their jewel-hued skins—indigo, silver, amber, emerald—one girl endures brutal bruises to shine brightest of all, while another, her eyes sealed inside a featureless helmet, risks death to retrieve colors from the outside world. In the future of that culture, one where androids serve with brimming resentment and artificially altering one's skin color can be a crime, the most ordinary in appearance can prove the best detectives, and the most subtly effective rebels. On a far distant space station, another android encounters a goddess humans forgot.

"At pure surface level, these works appear rooted in the fantastical and magical, but as soon as you think you've found your footing and understand where you are, Ogawa warps your perception almost imperceptibly until the world is completely unfamiliar again." —Haralambi Markov, Tor.com

Like Smoke, Like Light, the debut collection of short fiction from Japanese author Yukimi Ogawa, gathers seventeen tales that Locus Magazine has described as constructed in a "wild—but still grounded, feeling more like SF than fantasy—fashion." As novelist and poet Francesca Forrest writes in her introduction, "Ogawa is a remarkable light in the science fiction and fantasy firmament," who "writes unsettling stories that are by turns horrifying and touching." This book "give us space and time to think about how we really feel about tricky questions—like what makes a monster" and how loving families can be found when one accepts "the forms they choose to wear."

Cover and interior illustrations by Paula Arwen Owen

More praise for Like Smoke, Like Light

"Inventive, fantastical, and original; Ogawa transforms mythology, ghost stories, and the tropes of science fiction into fresh, new visions."
—A. C. Wise, World Fantasy Award-nominated author of The Ghost Sequences

"Yukimi Ogawa's first collection reveals her as a superb talent. These unsettling, sometimes harrowing journeys lead always toward grace and strange beauty."
—C. C. Finlay, winner of the World Fantasy Award and author of the Traitor to the Crown series

"These luminous stories—playful one minute, tragic the next—feel like the folklore of some alternate reality world. Often, they explore themes of how our identity is linked with our physicality ... how others perceive us, and the ways in which that outside perception affects how we perceive ourselves. Yukimi Ogawa's tales are as enchanting, heartbreaking, and gorgeous as the characters they revolve around."
—Jeffrey Thomas, author of Punktown and The Unnamed Country

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 15, 2023
      Ogawa’s debut collection of 17 speculative shorts stuns with its delicacy. In the eponymous story, a woman is punished for her attempt to cut ties with her powerful family, sentenced to work for a man who refuses to do the same, clinging to the ghosts of his relatives. “The Colorless Thief” introduces a sideshow performer whose act is allowing patrons to hit her and witness the brilliant beauty of the bruises. A 14-year-old who bleeds out a narcotic, opalescent substance in “Taste of Opal” is sold to a protective crew of merchants who she believes only keep her safe so as not to sully the value of her blood. “Blue Gray Blue” follows an eyewear salesman on a tourist island whose own ultramarine eyes occasionally dull to a stormy gray. It’s a fact that embarrasses him until a woman who calls herself a “collector of blues” helps him see the beauty he possesses. There’s a gorgeous fluidity to these tales that makes them hard to pin down, as they often end somewhere very different from where they began. Harkening back to the oldest folk and fairy tales and raising pointed questions about how humans value and devalue each other, this is a showstopper.

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  • English

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