24
Mar
First up in Challenging Destiny #24, “The Dao of Stones” by Ian McHugh is a strangely compelling tale. Centered in a planetary world where two intelligent species coexist remarkably well, one creature seeks enlightenment through study of the humans. McHugh manages to not only make the Way and enlightenment frustratingly vague, complicating it with differences in species and language, but to also make it a universal truth by showing how it spans planets and words. The tale would have worked better with smoother prose to compensate for the language and philosophical barriers which are essential parts of the tale.
“Like Water in the Desert” by Hayden Trenholm is a science fiction tale set in the thirties, starring a man wandering the U.S. who finds someone, or perhaps something, far past ordinary. There’s an unexpected deepness to the story, and it serves as a nice ending point for this issue.
Original posted at Tangent Online.
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