From as early as the 1970s, Michael Shea (1946-2014) distinguished himself as one of the most compelling writers of weird fiction of his generation. Now that his classic story "The Autopsy" has been adapted for television for Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities, the time is right for a full-scale assessment of Shea's work as a writer of tales of terror and the supernatural.
"The Autopsy" is one of several tales that mingles gruesomeness and science fiction. Others include "Polyphemus," where the members of a spaceship encounter the titanic eye of some unthinkably vast and hostile entity. "The Angel of Death" exhibits the battle of two alien entities as they successively inhabit hapless human beings in their quest for supremacy.
Shea's sensitivity to the downtrodden is exhibited in such tales as "The Horror on the #33," "Water of Life," and "Tollbooth," populated by homeless people, prostitutes, drug dealers, and other disdained members of society. Shea's affinity for California is shown in "Fill it with Regular," "Upscale," and other tales that bring his native state to life. As a bonus, two unpublished stories are included: "Feeding Spiders," evoking the work of a writer who adopted California as his home-Ray Bradbury; and "Ghost," where a vengeful ghost stalks the tough streets of South Boston.
Michael Shea was the author of dozens of novels and tales of horror, fantasy, and science fiction. This volume shows why his vibrant work deserves to live in the hearts and minds of weird fiction devotees.
Indie/horror/LGBT/classics. 2021 HWA Specialty Press Award. 'Valancourt's publications may be just what you're looking for.' - Michael Dirda, Washington Post
Finishing up work on Michael Shea's POLYPHEMUS, originally published as a limited Arkham House hardcover of his best tales, including "The Autopsy", recently adapted for Netflix by @RealGDT. The reprint will feature an intro by @LairdBarron. Coming later in 2023.
Scott Edelman is a Stoker Award-nominated writer and Hugo Award-nominated editor of SF, fantasy & horror. And host of the Eating the Fantastic podcast! (He/Him)
This afternoon's treadmill TV — Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities Episodes 2 and 3 — the latter being the one I most wanted to see, as it's an adaptation of Michael Shea's "The Autopsy." And now I'm off to do what all adaptations make me want to do — read the original.
Award-winning editor, writer, teacher. Possibly a ghost. It was fun here while it lasted. He/they.
Based on "The Autopsy" by Michael Shea, originally published in the December 1980 issue of @fandsf. This is a great adaptation of one of the best horror stories ever written. https://t.co/U4nLug7QUf