Contents

Title Page

Dedication

Introduction

The Muffin Migration

Chauna

At Sea

The Killing of Bad Bull

Rate of Exchange

Wait-a-While

The Short, Labored Breath of Time

A Fatal Exception Has Occurred at…

Basted

Serenade

Redundancy

Panhandler

The Last Akialoa

Growth

Also by Alan Dean Foster

Copyright

For Boris Dolingo, on the line between Europe

and Asia, who knows a good story can be

found on either side

Introduction

There was a time when writers of short fiction used to be able to make a living at it. Back in the heyday of the slicks and pulps, the 1930s and ’40s, magazines vied with radio, sports, and going out to the movies as a major arena of popular entertainment. Nowadays magazines containing fiction are an endangered species. Shifting short fiction to websites has not proven the savior of the genre some thought it might be. It may yet turn out to be the case, perhaps when soundtracks and illustrations are added. But at present the auguries are not good, the entrails being read less than sanguine.

While novels remain highly popular, the market for short fiction of every kind appears to be on the wane. I find this surprising. Today’s denizens of planet Earth, raised on ever-briefer and more compacted bursts of information delivered via the Net and the ever-accelerated editing of the visual image, would seem ideally conditioned to accept their printed fiction in equivalently more concise packages. Yet the fantasies that sell best have mutated into gargantuan doorstops spanning multiple volumes. As for science fiction, it largely continues to resist the trend toward obesity, though the spawning of sequels (an inclination to which I, too, must plead guilty) continues unabated.



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