Géza A. G. Reilly just published an extremely thoughtful and perceptive review of my debut short story collection, CRYPTOPOLIS & OTHER STORIES, in the latest issue of DEAD RECKONINGS (#35). Entitled "Two Authors, Art, High Weirdness, and Being Down-and-Out on the Streets of California," Reilly's review begins with the following paragraph:
Cryptopolis may end up being a gateway drug into Robert Guffey’s work. I don’t use that term spuriously. So many of Guffey’s stories in Cryptopolis have a hard-bitten edge and gritty feel to them that I could see him crafting a metatext about an author whose books are physically addictive. Across the collection’s twenty-five stories and vignettes, Guffey displays a range of interests and foci with such depth and heart that I wouldn’t be surprised if he became one of my favorite modern writers.
Here's another choice excerpt:
Affect, the experience of emotional response, seems to be at issue in every one of Guffey’s offerings. From the opening eponymous story (which is the only outright Lovecraftian story in the collection), with its resonances of love as a torturous paralytic, to the last, “Esthra, Shadows, Glass, Silence,” a parable of alternate lives and lost possibilities, the emotional response drawn from the reader appears to be the crux of every piece. These stories are engines designed to make the reader feel.
This issue also contains contributions by the likes of Ramsey Campbell, Donald Sidney-Fryer, and Darrell Schweitzer. If you want to buy a copy of DEAD RECKONINGS #35, click HERE.
PRAISE FOR CRYPTOPOLIS:
"The stories in Cryptopolis feel like the bloody, star-filled lovechildren of Burroughs and Delany, with each tale ostensibly one part of a greater whole; abstract limbs and organs tethered together by strained flesh. Cryptopolis will take readers on a hallucinogenic journey through worlds fractured by time and place—slipping through liminal dimensions with seamless abandon to unveil unsettling illusions and heartbreaking realities—and totally worth the trip."
--Philip Fracassi, author of Boys in the Valley
--Publishers Weekly
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