Travel Reads: “Three Messages and a Warning” by Eduardo Jiménez Mayo and Chris N. Brown

What makes Mexican tales of the fantastic Mexican? What differentiates them from American, British or even Russian speculative fiction? If you let the ambiance of the stories in Three Messages and a Warning wash over you, you’ll have a pretty good chance of finding out.

Three Messages and a Warning by Eduardo Jiménez Mayo and Chris N. Brow

Specs

Title: Three Messages and a Warning: Contemporary Mexican Short Stories of the Fantastic
Editors: Eduardo Jiménez Mayo and Chris N. Brown
Paperback: 300 pages
Publisher: Small Beer Press
ISBN-10: 1931520313
ISBN-13: 978-1931520317
Available on Amazon in paperback.

Summary of Three Messages and a Warning

If you’re expecting a Taco Bell view of what is Mexican literature, you’ll need to look elsewhere. These stories beat with an auth, ntic pulse. They touch on topics common in speculative fiction – regardless of which culture it comes from – such as ghosts, mermaids, aliens and other creatures of the supernatural. But they come to these topics with a unique perspective, sensibility and style.

Bruce Sterling, in his introduction to this anthology phrased it this way, “Mexican SF is a science fiction with no popular mechanics, no problem-solving stories, and very little ideational extrapolation. ‘Hard SF’ never took root in that soil.” This collection is filled with ghost stories, futures that feel like fantasy, and souls that long for things they can never quite have.

The anthology’s editors, Eduardo Jiménez Mayo and Chris N. Brown, collected in this book a selection of 34 original contemporary Mexican fantasy and science fiction stories, none of which have been published in the U.S. before. All were originally written in Spanish and were translated for this book … a project that took two years.

What Worked for Me

The thread that connects these stories is a uniquely Mexican sensibility. These stories were written in a culture where the veil between the physical world and the spirit world is often expected to be a mere suggestion, rather than a barrier.

This is most evident in the ghost stories where the supernatural element is taken in stride, rather than with shock or surprise. You can feel this difference when alien vampire bats search for new land to conquer. You can sense it in when a woman uses magic to go back in time to find her true love. You know it when mutant fireflies make people disappear like a bubble of soap.

When reading a translation, it can be difficult to tell if what you are responding to is the author’s intent or the translator’s interpretation of that intent. This is particularly true when you read something that has only one author and one translator. But this book not only has multiple authors, but multiple translators, as well. You may not be able to tease the nuances between author and translator in any individual story, but the over all experience of what makes these tales quintessentially Mexican shines through, a result of the averaging of many voices.

What Didn’t Work for Me

I was so enthralled by each tale, I didn’t think to look for something I didn’t like. If I had to come up with something, it would be the title. It is long and I’m not sure how it connects to the book.

Recommendation

As with any anthology, the true strength of this book is the quality of the stories themselves. If you judge a short story by how it leaves you feeling when you are done, by how long that feeling lasts and how often you find yourself reliving your reading experience, then you will be pleasantly rewarded by this collection.

There is an underlying emotional quality to these stories that sets them apart from those written by Americans, Canadians, Brits and the like. And yet, they are accessible, entertaining and all together human … just like those other tales. If you’re looking for something familiar and yet different, you can’t go wrong with this collection of stories.

Score for Three Messages and a Warning: 5 out of 5 Palm Trees

colored palm tree
colored palm tree
colored palm tree
colored palm tree
colored palm tree

Pick up your copy on Amazon.com here.

NOTE: I received a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. If you’ve read past book reviews, you’ll know that I don’t pull my punches when I believe they are warranted. I also try to provide balanced information so you can make your own decision to read or not read the book, even if you disagree with my opinion.

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About the author

As The Genre Traveler, Carma Spence loves to view the world through Genre-Coloured glasses. In other words, she sees the world through a lens of science fiction, fantasy, and horror, where trash cans can be Daleks in disguise and neighborhood forests can harbor faeries and sprites. Magic realism is real! Or at least you can choose to see the world that way to add to the fun and awe of life.

1 comments on “Travel Reads: “Three Messages and a Warning” by Eduardo Jiménez Mayo and Chris N. Brown”

  1. einerschreitimmer

    Carma Spence, thanks! And thanks for sharing your great posts every week!

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