Angela Carter (1940-1992) wrote nine novels and numerous short stories, as well as nonfiction, radio plays, and the screenplay for Neil Jordan's 1984 movie The Company of Wolves, based on her story of the same name. She won numerous literary awards, traveled and taught widely in the United States, and lived in London. Kelly Link is the author of the story collections Get in Trouble, Stranger Things Happen, and Magic for Beginners. She has won the Nebula and World Fantasy awards and has had stories published in The Best American Short Stories, the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, and Prize Stories: The O. Henry Awards. Born in Miami, Florida, she now lives in Northampton, Massachusetts.
"Since I first came across The Bloody Chamber, I have kept a copy
with me wherever I have been living. . . . The things that I
needed, when I was beginning to think about writing short stories,
were the things that I found in The Bloody Chamber. . . . Reading
Carter, each time, [is] electrifying. It [lights] up the readerly
brain and all the writerly nerves. . . . What we don't have, of
course, is any more Angela Carter stories. And how I yearn for
exactly this." --Kelly Link, from the Introduction "Her masterpiece
. . . Sex isn't a subtext in The Bloody Chamber, but the text
itself. . . . Eroticism hangs heavy in the air here . . . like an
expensive, drugging perfume. . . . Carter produced . . . fiction
that was lavishly fabulist and infinitely playful, with a crown
jeweler's style, precise but fully colored. . . . Her books are . .
. revered by fans of speculative fiction stateside and have
influenced writers as diverse as Rick Moody, Sarah Waters, Neil
Gaiman, Jeff VanderMeer, Jeanette Winterson and Kelly Link. Salman
Rushdie, who became her friend, described her as 'the first great
writer I ever met.' Yet her legacy has been a slow and stealthy
one, invisible to many of the readers who have benefited from it. .
. . Most contemporary literary fiction with a touch of magic, from
Karen Russell's to Helen Oyeyemi's, owes something to Angela
Carter's trail-blazing. . . . If our personal and literary spaces
feel more wide open now, she's one of the ones we have to thank."
--Laura Miller, Salon
"A deluxe edition of her masterpiece, a bold collection of short
stories tinged with the supernatural . . . just in time for the
75th anniversary of Carter's birth." --Entertainment Weekly
"The Bloody Chamber is such an important book to me. Angela Carter,
for me, is still the one who said: 'You see these fairy stories,
these things that are sitting at the back of the nursery shelves?
Actually, each one of them is a loaded gun. Each of them is a bomb.
Watch: if you turn it right it will blow up.' And we all went: 'Oh
my gosh, she's right--you can blow things up with these!' " --Neil
Gaiman, The Daily Telegraph
"A wonderfully written book, ironical, cerebral, elegant . . .
distinguished by bold, inflected language and ornate, indeed often
bloody, imagery." --Joyce Carol Oates, The New York Times Book
Review
"The tales are retold by Angela Carter with all her supple and
intoxicating bravura." --The New York Review of Books
"She was, among other things, a quirky, original, and baroque
stylist, a trait especially marked in The Bloody Chamber--her
vocabulary a mix of finely tuned phrase, luscious adjective, witty
aphorism, and hearty, up-theirs vulgarity." --Margaret Atwood, The
Observer
"She writes a prose that lends itself to magnificent set pieces of
fastidious sensuality . . . dreams, myths, fairy tales,
metamorphoses, the unruly unconscious, epic journeys, and a highly
sensual celebration of sexuality in both its most joyous and
darkest manifestations." --Ian McEwan
"The Bloody Chamber retains its power because there will never be
enough writing this perceptive--or just plain beautiful."
--Flavorwire
"The best horror writer of the 20th century you've probably never
heard of . . . Her most celebrated book is a high gothic collection
of short stories called The Bloody Chamber that you should read
immediately if the genre holds any appeal for you." --New York
magazine's Vulture
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