In the last several years a movement has been underway to declare May the month of the short story. As there are no governing bodies deciding what months mean — and that itself would be a hair-too-whimsical of a short story plot — this is a grassroots movement. To contribute to that movement, I hereby present, every day this month, a short story link.
TODAY: The Belonging Kind, by William Gibson and John Shirley
In 1981, William Gibson’s Sprawl mythology was yet to be written and this collaboration with John Shirley (the author who put the punk in Cyberpunk; pictured on the left above, with Gibson) is unique in Gibson’s oeuvre as it’s more of a surreal fantasy piece. Shot through with melancholy, The Belonging Kind is about a social misfit figuring out that the confident and the popular, those people who seem to fit in anywhere, may be members of a shape-shifting species that survives by metabolizing alcohol from free drinks. A nerd’s lament.
