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Juniper Wiles and the Ghost Girls (2022)
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Newford Stories: Crow Girls (2015)
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Out of This World (2014)
Over My Head (2013)
The Cats of Tanglewood Forest (2013)
Under My Skin (2012)
The Painted Boy (2010)
The Very Best of Charles de Lint (2010)
Muse and Reverie (2009)
Eyes Like Leaves (2009)
The Mystery of Grace (2009)
Woods and Waters Wild (2009)
Yellow Dog (2008)
What the Mouse Found (2008)
Dingo (2008)
Little (Grrl) Lost (2007)
Old Man Crow (2007)
Promises to Keep (2007)
Widdershins (2006)
Triskell Tales 2 (2006)
Make A Joyful Noise (2006)
The Hour Before Dawn (2005)
Quicksilver & Shadow (2005)
The Blue Girl (2004)
Medicine Road (2004)
Refinerytown (2003)
Spirits in the Wires (2003)
A Handful of Coppers (2003)
A Circle of Cats (2003)
Tapping the Dream Tree (2002)
Waifs and Strays (2002)
Seven Wild Sisters (2002)
The Onion Girl (2001)
The Road to Lisdoonvarna (2001)
Triskell Tales (2000)
Forests of the Heart (2000)
The Buffalo Man (1999)
The Newford Stories (1999)
Moonlight and Vines (1999)
Someplace to be Flying (1998)
Trader (1997)
Jack of Kinrowan (1997)
The Ivory and the Horn (1995)
Memory & Dream (1994)
The Wild Wood (1994)
Into the Green (1993)
The Wishing Well (1993)
Dreams Underfoot (1993)
I'll Be Watching You (1992)
From a Whisper to a Scream (1992)
Merlin Dreams in the Mondream Wood (1992)
Spiritwalk (1992)
Paperjack (1991)
Our Lady of the Harbour (1991)
Hedgework and Guessery (1991)
Death Leaves an Echo (1991)
Ghosts of Wind and Shadow (1991)
Uncle Dobbin's Parrot Fair (1991)
The Little Country (1991)
The Dreaming Place (1990)
Angel of Darkness (1990)
Ghostwood (1990)
Drink Down the Moon (1990)
The Fair in Emain Macha (1990)
Philip José Farmer's The Dungeon: The Hidden City (1990)
Westlin Wind (1989)
Berlin (1989)
Philip José Farmer's The Dungeon: The Valley of Thunder (1989)
Svaha (1989)
Wolf Moon (1988)
Greenmantle (1988)
Jack the Giant-Killer (1987)
Ascian in Rose (1987)
Yarrow: An Autumn Tale (1986)
Mulengro: A Romany Tale (1985)
The Harp of the Grey Rose (1985)
Moonheart: A Romance (1984)
The Riddle of the Wren (1984)
De Grijze Roos (1983)
Waifs and Strays
Waifs and Strays
Viking

Book Launch

Waifs and Strays (Viking, hardcover, October 2002) is my first Young Adult collection, gathering stories written throughout my career that feature teenage protagonists. Here you'll find tales set in Newford and in Ottawa, in high fantasy and near future settings, and in Bordertown, too. Some have appeared in other collections, but many of them are from more obscure YA anthologies and magazines, with one new novelet, "Sisters." The cover art is by John Jude Palencar.

For readers who don't live in North America, there are no plans for a foreign edition of this collection at the moment. But happily with the Internet, it can be readily ordered and shipped anywhere in the world.

Waifs and Strays was nominated for a 2002 World Fantasy Award.

"Tamson House, Ottawa, Ontario" [from Chapter Three: Mystical Buildings and Other Structures; Moonheart] Mysterious North America, ed. Christy Riddell, East Street Press, 1989
"Merlin Dreams in the Mondream Wood" [Moonheart] Pulphouse: The Hardback Magazine Issue 7, ed. Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Pulphouse, 1990
"Ottawa and the Valley"
"There's No Such Thing" Vampires, ed. Jane Yolen & Martin H. Greenberg, HarperCollins, 1991
"Sisters" original to this collection
"Fairy Dust" A Wizard's Dozen, ed. Michael Stearns, Harcourt Brace, 1993
"A Wish Named Arnold" Spaceships & Spells, ed. Jane Yolen, Martin H. Greenberg & Charles G. Waugh, Harper & Row, 1987
"Wooden Bones" Things That Go Bump in the Night, ed. Jane Yolen & Martin H. Greenberg, Harper & Row, 1989
"Otherworlds: Past and Future"
"The Graceless Child" Halflings, Hobbits, Warrows and Weefolk, ed. Baird Searles & Brian Thomsen, Warner, 1991
"A Tattoo on Her Heart" Pulphouse: The Hardback Magazine Issue 8, ed. Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Pulphouse, 1990
"Bordertown"
"Stick" [Borderland] Borderland, ed. Terri Windling & Mark Alan Arnold, Signet, 1986
"May This Be Your Last Sorrow" [Borderland] The Essential Bordertown, ed. Terri Windling & Delia Sherman, Tor, 1998
"Newford: In and Out of the City"
"One Chance" Werewolves, ed. Jane Yolen & Martin H. Greenberg, Harper & Row, 1988
"Alone"
"But for the Grace Go I" [Newford] Chilled To the Bone, ed. Robert T. Garcia, Mayfair Games, 1991
"Ghosts of Wind and Shadow" [Newford] Triskell Press, 1990
"Waifs and Strays" [Newford] Journeys to the Twilight Zone, ed. Carol Serling & Martin H. Greenberg, DAW, 1993
"Somewhere in My Mind There Is a Painting Box" The Green Man: Tales from the Mythic Forest, ed. Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling, Viking, 2002

Reviews
School Library Journal:
Mythic fiction is at its best in this anthology of stories of memorable heroines, rooted not in a secondary world but in an urban environment. The author introduces each selection, providing insight and interesting biographical information. The subject of two stories is a 16-year-old vampire named Apples who receives "the Gift" from a stranger during a Bryan Adams concert. She hopes to "turn" her sister Cassie when she is older, if she agrees, so they can live together forever. Poking fun at the television version of a teenage vampire, the heroine offers a more pragmatic view of her lot in life as she avenges evil doings in her neighborhood.

In the section "Bordertown," where magic and reality coexist, an elf named Manda saves the life of a Harley-riding black man who is the neighborhood peacekeeper in a city rife with prejudice and violence. Elements of Robin Hood, Merlin, Native American mythology, and Celtic music weave through each story. Some of the heroines are humans who briefly tiptoe into a magical realm or are skeptical about its existence.

De Lint'scharacters are often lonely and intelligent misfits whose self-discovery triumphs over plot. Described as "urban fantasy," these stories represent a hybrid genre for readers who only want one arm through the door into another world.-

Booklist, October /02:
Whether set in Ottawa, Bordertown, or the made-up city of Newford somewhere in North America, de Lint's 16 stories evoke a sense of magic just beyond the ordinary world. His well-drawn characters are mostly outsiders whose lives are touched and changed by that often-elusive magic. In choosing the stories, de Lint went through all his short fiction, setting aside tales with teen protagonists. The only original piece here is "Sisters," a sequel to a story about teenage vampires that is also included in the collection. The other selections have been previously published in magazines or anthologies; one recently appeared in a slightly different form in The Green Man: Tales from the Mythic Forest, edited by Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling. A showcase for the diversity of a popular fantasy writer, this will draw de Lint's fans and also serve as a good introduction to his work.—

Rambles:
In Terri Windling's introduction to Charles de Lint's new short story collection, Waifs & Strays, she draws attention to de Lint's work as "a celebration of the creative process," this time more strongly aimed toward a young adult audience. Yet in the author's note, de Lint is quick to point out that these stories are not stories written for young adults, but rather stories written about young adults. Other than that, these stories are pure de Lint—"a love of language, music, and myth," Windling writes, melded with "the potent real-world magic that is born from friendship and compassion."

Each set of stories is divided into sections according to geography; the stories' settings range from the familiar streets of Ottawa to the more imaginary realms of Bordertown and Newford. "Merlin Dreams in the Mondream Wood" begins the collection, followed by a pair of stories that don't seem like de Lint material at first glance. Charles de Lint? Teenage vampires? Excuse me? But keep on reading and you'll soon find that "There's No Such Thing" and "Sisters" fit perfectly with de Lint's urban fantasies. "Sisters" espcially follows the form of many of de Lint's short stories, interspersing action with character thoughtshots.

"The Graceless Child" is a beautiful foray into secondary-world fantasy, while "A Tattoo on Her Heart" takes the reader into a futuristic city—or what's left of one. From there, de Lint carries the reader into the more familiar territory of the Borderlands and Newford. Readers new to de Lint's work will find these short stories—and the individual introductions that grace each opening—grant easy access to these fictitious worlds. Although several of these stories are reprinted from other short story collections, this collection also gathers stories that can't be found elsewhere. The cover art is another evocative painting by John Jude Palencar, featuring the floating-person-and-tree imagery found on other de Lint covers (Forests of the Heart and The Onion Girl).

At the center of almost every de Lint story is the "outsider," the character relegated to the edges. Nowhere is that theme more fitting and appropriate than in a collection of short stories for young adults—an age period where "fitting in" or having somewhere to belong, someone to understand, is of the utmost importance. De Lint treats these characters—and his audience—with care, compassion, good humor and the reassurance that there is a place for everyone.

VOYA (Voice of Youth Advocates), Nov. '02:
An acclaimed author brings his best orphaned stories home into one excellent volume of urban fantasy in which faeries give music lessons, a girl finds her totem, a vampire strikes back at child molesters, a wish is personified, and half-human half-animal creatures reveal themselves to the right seers. De Lint's mastery at realistically blending present-day life with elements from fantasy and myth is showcased in the Bordertown story "Stick," in which humans in a gang modeled after Robin Hood and his Merry Men take on a pack of faeries that beat up a halfling. "Merlin Dreams in the Mondream Wood" conveys a history lesson when the myth of the Green Man is deftly incorporated in the tale set in 1969.

Fans and new readers alike will appreciate the prefaces that set each story in context or provide some anecdotal explanation. Many pieces are significant as the first time de Lint used a particular character or setting that went on to become popular or define the new genre. The writing is honed so that each story hangs in the delicate balance of just enough detail without going into extraneous information. De Lint's combination of sensory detail and magic make the reader believe in the possibility that everything is taking place just one town over, if not in one's own hometown. Protagonists struggling with poignantly adolescent issues such as bullying, identity, and loss give the collection strong appeal to teens. It is a fine addition to any fantasy collection.

Kirkus Reviews, August 15, 2002:
Sixteen short stories by the noted urban fantasist capture both the wistful sadness of epic ballads and the lingering beauty of summer dreams. These tales (most published previously) were not originally written for teens, but all feature adolescent female protagonists, usually runaways, orphans, or those otherwise cast adrift. Organized by their shared settings, they reveal the transformation caused by discovering the mythic currents that flow beside, under, and through contemporary life. It can be two sisters who encounter vampires with a most unusual agenda ("There's No Such Thing" and "Sisters"); or a half-breed runaway who runs afoul of an elfin biker gang, only to gain a champion with his own scars ("Stick"); or a rebellious rag-picker who creates her own family among the stray dogs and throwaway people ("But for the Grace Go I" and the title story); or a misunderstood music student, whose tales of faerie lead to accusations of drugs and devil-worship, until her mother admits to hiding from her own ("Ghosts of Wind and Shadow"). De Lint's (Onion Girl, 2001, etc.) pen is ever graceful and evocative, his heroines simultaneously earthy and evanescent. Like the young artist of "Somewhere in My Mind There is a Painting Box," most of them learn to tread the delicate balance between "fairies and fancies" and "the everyday magic all around." But in the classic paradigm of adolescence, what they gain in wisdom and insight they lose in innocence; and they, like the reader, will always feel "the small ache that carries in it a seed of wonder." (Short stories. YA)

Green Man Review:
When I read Charles de Lint, I don't just pay attention to the words. I slow down and listen to the rhythms the words make. I look for the underlying patterns of color and music that so thoroughly insinuate themselves throughout each new story or book. I go back again and again, watching as connections are formed between characters, as continuing themes run rampant from one book to another.

A Charles de Lint story is a multimedia affair, created and worked on so many levels, it's easy to miss something on a first, second, even third reading. With some of his stories, I'm still discovering something new after a dozen visits. I'm terribly jealous of him. His works both inspire and intimidate me. I come away with the undeniable urge to write, and yet the sinking comprehension that it would take me years of practice and millions of words, before I came close to capturing what he does. But I try.

His works cover the spectrum from high fantasy to urban fantasy (or mythic fiction), detouring into romance, daytripping into mystery, dropping by poetry, visiting the relatives over in psychological thriller, and even sending Christmas cards to the folks back home in classic myth and folktales.

He doesn't whitewash the truth, or hide from the ugliness of the world. He confronts it head-on. Open a de Lint story, and you're as likely to find the pimps and murderers and abused children as you are to find the cop with the heart of gold, the selfless social worker, or the irrepressible artist. His 'happily ever afters' are balanced out by the broken love stories, where people suffer real-world hurts and losses just like we do.

The magic in his world is good and bad, capricious and whimsical. Like fire, it can warm; get too close and it burns, at its worst consuming the unwary. De Lint's characters are real, with the same flaws as the rest of us, and believable problems. They struggle with doubt and belief, have to pay the bills and make ends meet, and for the most part, they're grounded in the same world we are, but for that one small difference: in their world, magic happens in more overt ways.

While we've seen a number of de Lint's stories collected before, such as in the three Newford anthologies (Dreams Underfoot, Moonlight and Vines, and The Ivory and the Horn and his chapbooks (Triskell Tales), Waifs and Strays is the first to collect stories from across the spectrum. In it, we're treated to stories set in Newford, Ottawa, Bordertown and Tamson House, as well as traditional fantasy, and futuristic fantasy with a science fiction twist. Of these sixteen stories, one is original to this collection; the rest have appeared in other collections, assorted magazines and chapbooks, even a convention program book. All that they have in common is that the protagonists are young adults or children.

Waifs and Strays refers to several things in the course of the book. Not only are these short stories compared to waifs and strays, short stories with a naturally short lifespan, collected from a wide variety of appearances, but they also evoke the spirit of the characters themselves. Some lost, some abandoned, some making their way in the world, some having their first—or last—brush with magic, all dealing with very real issues of life, love, abandonment, and a search for something better.

The stories have helpfully been sorted out into categories based on setting. Thus, the first story is "Merlin Dreams in the Mondream Wood," which originally appeared in Pulphouse, before being incorporated into one of the Tamson House novels, Spiritwalk.

Moving to a more general setting of Ottawa and the surrounding valley, we're introduced to five stories, including the aforementioned original story. Both "There's No Such Thing" and "Sisters" deal with a subject rare to de Lint's works, vampires, and his particular twist on the genre. Appoline "Apples" Smith is your average sixteen-year-old going on nineteen, who'll do anything to protect her little sister, Cassandra, from the dangers of the world, be it child molesters, or nature's own ravages (Cassie suffers from a deformed leg, and acute asthma). But when the baby-sitter turns out to be worse than any supernatural predator, what can she do? And when someone related to one of Apples' past problems comes back to haunt her, where will she turn to for help? Either way, the two sisters have some hard choices to make about life, death, and the grey areas in between.

"Fairy Dust" is a poignant story of loss and regret. What happens when you trap a fairy, and it can't stand to be imprisoned? How do you make amends?

"A Wish Named Arnold" is a clever twist on the old matter of making wishes, and of granting them. When Marguerite meets a wish named Arnold, she hangs on to it, wanting a friend more than a wish. But sooner or later, we all have to let go, right? If you love something, set it free, so it can move on or not, as it wishes. But is a wish ever truly free?

"Wooden Bones" tells of Liz, a city girl sent to live with her relatives in the country for a while. She most definitely doesn't fit in, or feel like part of them. But that may change when she meets a rabbit-headed musician.

The next section contains two stories, and is appropriate entitled "Otherworlds: Past and Future." The first of these stories, "The Graceless Child," is inspired by Shetland folklore, with a bit of Scandinavian myth mixed in for good measure. Tetchie is a half-breed, her mother human and her father one of the deadly trows. Her father died, turned to stone by the sunlight without ever knowing he had a child. Her mother died some time back, leaving the poor girl to make her own way in a society that hates and fears and mocks her. Desperate for family or friends, she makes a dangerous, unwise bargain with a tattooed man in the woods who turns out to be much more than she ever expected. Before the night is through, she'll deal with the lords of Dream and Nightmares, learn the power of blood, meet her father for the first and last time, and make a fateful decision that will shape her life. Both sad and hopeful, it's a touching story of a child's need and an adult's courage.

"A Tattoo On Her Heart" is set in roughly the same sort of setting as de Lint's other science fiction offering, Svaha, though in a different city if indeed that world. It's an odd story of totems and sacrifices.

Next, we move on to Bordertown, where de Lint shares two stories. The first is a long one, entitled "Stick." Though the title character is older and wiser, the girl he rescues from trouble certainly is not. And Amanda Woodsdatter will certainly shake up his life before all is said and done. "May This Be Your Last Sorrow" appeared in the most recent Bordertown collection, The Essential Bordertown. It's a short, introspective piece about a girl who could never live up to the expectations of her famous, talented parents, and the unresponsive gargoyle who is her only confidante. In just a few pages, de Lint captures the essence of a lonely life.

Finally, we end up in Newford itself, where a vast amount of de Lint's output over the past decade and more has been set. A full six stories represent this mythical North American city.

In "One Chance," several unhappy children have a chance to leave behind the world they dislike and travel to a much better place, heralded by the appearance of a strange wolfman. Though this doesn't actually take place in Newford, it features a character who does, eventually, move to that city. This isn't uncommon in de Lint's works. You never know when someone will decide to move and show up where they're not expected. After all, Cerin and Meran Kelledy, protagonists of at least one traditional fantasy book and numerous short stories, appeared in Newford one day and still haven't explained how or why.

"Alone" has Susanna, not much happier than before but satisfied with her family, in a new school in a new city. When she meets a young man with a dangerous secret, she'll be in a position to help or destroy him. What matters in the end will be if anyone cares. Sometimes, all we need in the world is one person to care about us.

"But For The Grace Go I" is one of several stories to feature independent Maisie Flood, who moved onto the streets when she was twelve, and forged her own destiny despite the many dangers. Now older and wiser, she's responsible for a pack of neurotic dogs and a mentally deficient man twice her age named Tommy. They live in a squat, and make ends meet, barely. But who will the stubborn Maisie turn to when an ominous letter turns up in her Post Office box, and how will it change the way she approaches her life?

"Ghosts of Wind and Shadow" features the aforementioned Kelledys, who've found a niche as musicians and teachers in Newford. When one of their promising students gets in trouble for believing in fairies, her mother comes to enlist Meran's help in bringing Lesli Batterberry back to the straight and narrow. But Lesli has other ideas, which start with running away. It's up to Meran and her husband Cerin to enlist some help and rescue Lesli from a horrible fate on the streets. However, Lesli isn't entirely helpless or ready to give up either. The true question is, will Lesli's mother be able to cope with the events, and the fact that magic exists?

"Waifs and Strays," which lends its name to the title of the collection, is another story about Maisie Flood. She's moved up in the world to a real apartment, a real job, and night classes, thanks to the encouragement of the Grassi Street Angel, all in an effort to better provide for Tommy and the dogs. But the strain is wearing her down and tearing her apart. When the ghost of her mentor shows up, Maisie must be going insane, right? Or is this a sign to rethink her choices and find a better way of doing things? Maisie's never been one to take advice willingly, or admit when she needs help, but if she doesn't, it may destroy her.

"Somewhere In My Mind There Is A Painting Box" is the rather long title for a short story featuring young Lily, also a protagonist in the forthcoming Seven Wild Sisters, as well as A Circle of Cats. This is an extended version of a story also appearing in the Terri Windling and Ellen Datlow anthology, The Green Man: Tales from the Mythic Forest. Lily has a talent for art, and an affinity with nature. But one day she discovers a lost painting box that belongs to a painter who disappeared over twenty years ago. When said painter's also-missing companion turns up, not a day older, Lily has to wonder if the stories of people vanishing into Faerie are true. And if so, how might she get there?

This collection also features a preface by longtime de Lint editor and noted artist, anthologist, and folklorist in her own right, Terri Windling. In it, she explains why these stories are magical, drawing upon comparisons between de Lint and the great Trickster himself. It's an intelligent, easily approached essay that really does boil down the appeal and the magic. De Lint, like the Trickster, crosses boundaries and takes us with him. He celebrates the creative process by embracing both sides of the coin: family and community vs poverty, illness, fear, despair, and more. His stories focus on the outsiders of society, all of whom have been touched and changed by Mystery.

De Lint's own introduction to the book explains why he loves short stories, including the fact that you can take a chance with them. Make the wrong choice, you've only lost a few weeks. You can't afford to be that risky with a novel. Short stories are perfect to experiment with expression and themes, though the downside is the short lifespan. Unless, of course, they're collected like they are here. He finishes by hoping that his stories will inspire others to pursue their own creative processes, not least so he himself will have more to read. I think we can all applaud that sentiment. Mr. de Lint, you had me at hello. He goes on to give each story and section in the book introductions, explaining where they came from, or why they in particular were chosen for this collection. The origins of stories are often just as fascinating as the tales themselves.

One can hardly finish talking about Waifs and Strays without noting that the cover is absolutely gorgeous. Done by the same man who did the cover art for The Onion Girl, John Jude Palencar, it bears that same mythic, dreamy quality. That same girl who's sitting in the tree for The Onion Girl has moved on to stand, impossibly, in the thinnest branches of a much smaller tree, where she's playing the pipe. If it's not the same character, it's one very close. I suspect there's a series in progress, and I look forward to seeing where it leads.

How can I describe this book? Brilliant seems overdone, and magnificent an understatement. It's absolutely representative of de Lint's finest works, a sampler of the worlds he's created or borrowed, bringing in some of his finest, best-loved, best-remembered characters. In his stories, you'll find worlds within worlds, and magic around every corner. This is the sort of collection which will assure you that while yes, the world's not always nice or fair or pretty, it's seldom unchangeable if you hold true to your heart and don't give up. The characters making the difference, learning the lesson, growing and changing and living, are all children and young adults. The grown-ups don't come in and wave a hand to save the day. No, these children make all the hard choices, and live with them. Tetchie chooses between safety and what she knows to be right. Maisie will do anything to live up to her responsibilities, even if it destroys her own peace of mind. Susanna refuses to take the easy way out when life gets rough. Lesli stands her ground when all is bleak, rather than wait passively for a rescue. Apples and Cassie both weigh the options, and do what their hearts tell them is right for each other. Marguerite overcomes selfishness to help a friend. These are inspiring examples, and ones that stem from the real world. The magic that appears in every story isn't always overt and recognizable; sometimes it's the magic of the heart or the creative spirit.

I recommend Waifs and Strays without reservation. Perhaps I'm predisposed towards liking de Lint's works; after all, I've seen many of the stories before and enjoyed them then. But there's enough here to win over any new reader. For those who like Harry Potter, these are the grown-up, more complex, more realistic, cooler siblings, the ones without the safety net of Hogwarts or the cackling villainy of Valdemort. This is a book no de Lint fan will want to miss, as undoubtedly there's something new in it for everyone.

Editions
Viking; hardcover, 2002

If you find any errors, typos or anything else worth mentioning, please send it to rturner@arctera.com.
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