
An Agent of Utopia New and Selected Stories
Reviews

I enjoyed this collection of stories very much. Andy Duncan knows how to put a story together. As I was writing up this review and adding links, my admiration grew and grew at how Mr. Duncan could take a grain of truth and wrap a pearl of a story around it. CW: a number of these stories deal with racism and abuse. There's possibly more use of the n- word than we really need. But the author's voice is very Southern. If you can take a deep breath and read past the offensive word(s), the stories are worth it. His stories here often read like tall tales, folk tales, or myths of some kind. I also particularly enjoyed the way he mixes characters from real life into his fiction. In "An Agent of Utopia" the main character is from - surprise! - an actual country called Utopia. He has an encounter with Sir Thomas More (real-life author of a book called Utopia) and More's daughter. The encounter is... strange. "Joe Diabo's Farewell" builds a story from Native American skyscraper steel workers and early 20th century Indian shows into a story about identity, life, and death. In "Beluthahatchie" a blues musician meets (and maybe beats) the devil. "The Map to the Homes of the Stars". I don't know exactly how to characterize this. Maybe a coming of age story? Jess Willard, aka "The Pottawatomie Giant" encounters Houdini and has a dispute with him. Or maybe not. I liked this one. (I liked them all, but we always have favorites, amirite?) "Senator Bilbo" takes an interesting name coincidence and muses on racism and nationalism via orcs. "The Big Rock Candy Mountain" builds from the folk song of the same name. It's a little about being satisfied with what's in front of you vs. looking for something new. This one felt like a tall tale to me. I like tall tales a lot. "Daddy Mention and the Monday Skull": another tall tale/folk tale, this one involving jails and black prisoners, and escapes. Nice. I'd thought, while reading this, that it was just a story. But it turns out that there WAS a Daddy Mention, who may or may not have been a real person. In "Zora and the Zombie", Zora Neal Hurston researches zombies in Haiti (which really happened: see Tell My Horse: Voodoo and Life in Haiti and Jamaica. I just don't know if she actually met Erzulie or a zombie there. Maybe she did. In "Unique Chicken Goes in Reverse", a priest meets a girl named Mary who has a talented chicken. The story has a nice zinger at the end too. And holy cow, here's the newsreel referred to in the story! "Slow as a Bullet" reads like another tall tale. Cliffert Corbett wagers he can outrun a bullet. "Close Encounters" is about UFOs and alien contactees. As far as I can tell, all the contactees and UFO researchers mentioned in the story were real, including the narrator. It's a great story to end the collection.