Urban Allies: Ten Brand-New
Collaborative Stories. Edited by Joseph Nassise. Harper Voyager. $16.99.
Well, now, this is just
silly. But it is also a great deal of fun for those in the know – one of those
books in which the in crowd has a great time and everyone else gets left out,
wondering what the heck is going on and what all the fuss is about.
Urban Allies contains 10 stories by 20
authors in the “dark urban fantasy” genre, which basically means a lot of
supernatural stuff, plenty of dramatic fighting and bleeding and conjuring, a
fair amount of cursing, and action of all sorts. In each story, characters from
two authors’ series are thrown together for a mutual adventure, or passing
encounter, or cooperative collaboration, or something. Each story stands on its
own and occurs within the universe of both its authors – even though not all
the universes fit seamlessly together. For that matter, neither do all the
characters: the machinations of getting them together tend to creak almost
audibly, and their respective powers and abilities do not always mesh very well
with each other.
Nevertheless, this is a lot
of fun for readers familiar with the authors and their worlds. In fact, even
when the stories are dark to the point of being dismal, there is an
undercurrent of fun, in much the same way that the jam sessions in jazz are
enjoyable even if the music being made is distinctly on the bluesy side. Or,
perhaps a better example, there are the visual “jam sessions” used by many
underground cartoonists in the 1960s and 1970s, in which one would draw his or
her character in some setting and another would add his or hers to the same
setting or expand the visual canvas to somewhere else, and then yet another
would come in with yet another character to be superimposed on the first one or
two, and everything would become messy and sometimes incoherent – but a great
deal of fun for anybody interested in picking apart the art and determining
just who did what where.
That is the sort of pleasure
to be had in Urban Allies – not
guessing which author wrote what (that is usually clear, and is completely obvious in the tales here
that are told from alternating points of view), but enjoying the twists and
turns of each short story while picking up on the known powers and
characteristics of each tale’s protagonists. However, it is crucial to know who
the characters are and what worlds they inhabit for these stories to make
sense. When Verity Price from Seanan McGuire’s InCryptid series encounters Elena Michaels from Kelley Armstrong’s Women of the Otherworld while both are
investigating a very minor mystery in the woods in a story called Tailed, the enjoyment is not so much in
the thin plot as in the differing ways known characters respond to events. To
repeat, known characters: anyone who
does not know them will not get it. Likewise, when C.E. Murphy’s Joanne Walker
encounters Kat Richardson’s Harper Blaine at a haunted house in Spite House, what is primarily interesting
and enjoyable is the character interaction, not the events. Caitlin Kittredge’s
Ava the hellhound and Jaye Wells’ Sabina, who helpfully explains that she is
“the Chosen of the Dark Races,” along with their respective partners and
hangers-on, track a necromancer in New Orleans in Ladies’ Fight, but it is the Ava-Sabina interaction that is the
main interest in what is otherwise a very clunky tale. In fact, most of the
stories here are clunky: the reasons the characters get together are usually
strained, the way they work together is usually strained, and the forces they
face are more faceless than bad guys usually are in urban fantasy – and generally
have strained reasons for doing whatever bad things they happen to be doing. There
is some gore here and some humor as well, sometimes coexisting uneasily, and
the blending of the authors’ styles is, well, usually strained. This is
essentially a 410-page fanzine, a compilation of characters and authors thrown
together to celebrate many of the dark worlds of urban fantasy – enjoyable for
those who already know the writers and the worlds and characters they have
thought up, but impenetrable (and, yes, simply silly) for readers who come to
the book without prior knowledge of the whos and whats behind it.
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