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DANCE ON SATURDAY by Elwin Cotman

DANCE ON SATURDAY

by Elwin Cotman

Pub Date: June 9th, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-61873-173-9
Publisher: Small Beer Press

A collection of six stories that bridge fantasy and realism, with a focus on the supernatural and the unexpected.

The stories in this inventive collection take familiar premises from fantasy—a king's precocious son gets into trouble, immortal beings pine for prior centuries and invigorate them with elements of black and African American cultures: The king rocks multicolored kente robes, and the undying crack up at BET's ComicView. The result is a refreshing take on favorite tropes, and the stories are fun and full of humor. In "Among the Zoologists," a narrator dressed in a wizard's robe en route to a convention is intercepted by sex-obsessed scientists: "They weren't going to the comic show." "Seven Watsons," the opening story and perhaps the best, unfolds in black vernacular and slides easily into the perspective of the narrator, Flexo, a young man doing his best to get by in the crowded, tumultuous world of the Job Corps. Flexo and his bunkmates welcome Chris, a new member whose tattoo of a goose lifting away from cattails earns him the nickname Duck, a misnomer. Additional, tiny details accumulate like breadcrumbs, making an unexpected turn to the otherworldly totally surprising and yet absolutely fitting. While not every cultural reference lands perfectly ("She waited for a bolt of confidence to dive like the Tuskegee Airmen and rescue her from timidity"), most are stunning, subtle details, seamlessly woven into the texture of each story, as when the king plans a "feast of yam and rice, goblin liver and suckled unicorn" or when the immortal women "adorned their colossal church hats with feathers and sequins and leaves."

Fun, inventive fiction that refreshes the fantasy genre with elements of black heritage and culture.