Jane Yolen has been called the Hans Christian Andersen of America and the Aesop of the twentieth century. She is the author of over three hundred and sixty five books, including children's fiction, poetry, short stories, graphic novels, nonfiction, fantasy, and science fiction. Her publications include Owl Moon, The Devil's Arithmetic, Briar Rose, Sister Emily's Starship and Sister Light, Sister Dark. Among her many honors are the Caldecott and Christopher Medals, multiple Nebula, World Fantasy, Mythopoeic, Golden Kite, and Jewish Book awards; as well as the World Fantasy Association's Lifetime Achievement Award, and the Science Fiction Poetry Grand Master Award. Yolen is also a teacher of writing and a book reviewer. She lives in Western Massachusetts and St. Andrew, Scotland.

For The Emerald Circus
•2018 World Fantasy Award for Best Collection

Jane Yolen's career awards
•1968Caldecott Medal(forThe Emperor and the Kite, illustrated byEd Young)
•1987 Special World Fantasy Award (forFavorite Folktales From Around the World)
•1988Caldecott Medal(forOwl Moon, illustrated byJohn Schoenherr)
•1992 The Catholic Library Association'sRegina Medal(for her body of children's literature
•1999 Nebula Award for Novelette (for "Lost Girls")
•2009World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement
•2017Damon Knight Memorial Grand Master Award

Yolen's Short Fiction 2: The Midnight Circus by Jane Yolen

Welcome to the Midnight Circus—and watch your step. The dark imaginings of fantasy icon Jane Yolen are not for the faint of heart. In these sixteen brilliantly unnerving tales and poems, Central Park becomes a carnival where you can—but probably shouldn't—transform into a wild beast. The Red Sea will be deadly to cross due to a plague of voracious angels. Meanwhile, the South Pole is no place for even a good man, regardless of whether he is living or dead.

Wicked, solemn, and chilling, the circus is ready for your visit— just don't arrive late.

 

REVIEWS

  • "Jane Yolen is, simply, a legend. The powerful fairy godmother of every writer working in mythic fantasy today. In these dark and wonderful stories, that legend proves itself true over and over again, a sure hand pulling aside black and gauzy curtains to reveal a blaze of genius that will light up all the secret places of your heart."

    – Catherynne M. Valente, author of The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making
  • "Jane Yolen's stories are pure magic! They draw you in, beguile your senses, and paint the world in richer hues than you've ever seen. Her tales will haunt you in the very best way. I loved every word!"

    – Sarah Beth Durst, author of Race the Sands
  • "Look this way, look that; blazing her consummate imagination against the shadows of human sorrow, Jane Yolen has done it again. She has produced a set of spectacles designed to keep us awake in the darkness. The Midnight Circus delights, confounds, and challenges. We read all the night long; we are not the same come dawn."

    – Gregory Maguire, author of Wicked and A Wild Winter Swan
 

BOOK PREVIEW

Excerpt

From "The Weaver of Tomorrow"

Once, on the far side of yesterday, there lived a girl who wanted to know the future. She was not satisfied with knowing that the grass would come up each spring and that the sun would go down each night. The true knowledge she desired was each tick of tomorrow, each fall and each failure, each heartache and each pain, that would be the portion of every man. And because of this wish of hers, she was known as Vera, which is to say, True.

At first it was easy enough. She lived simply in a simple town, where little happened to change a day but a birth or a death that was always expected. And Vera awaited each event at the appointed bedside and, in this way, was always the first to know.

But as with many wishes of the heart, hers grew from a wish to a desire, from a desire to an obsession. And soon, knowing the simple futures of the simple people in that simple town was not enough for her.

"I wish to know what tomorrow holds for everyone," said Vera. "For every man and woman in our country. For every man and woman in our world."

"It is not good, this thing you wish," said her father.

But Vera did not listen. Instead she said, "I wish to know which king will fall and what the battle, which queen will die and what the cause. I want to know how many mothers will cry for babies lost and how many wives will weep for husbands slain."

And when she heard this, Vera's mother made the sign against the Evil One, for it was said in their simple town that the future was the Devil's dream.

But Vera only laughed and said loudly, "And for that, I want to know what the Evil One himself is doing with his tomorrow."

Since the Evil One himself could not have missed her speech, the people of the town visited the mayor and asked him to send Vera away.

The mayor took Vera and her mother and father, and they sought out the old man who lived in the mountain, who would answer one question a year. And they asked him what to do about Vera.

The old man who lived in the mountain, who ate the seeds that flowers dropped and the berries that God wrought, and who knew all about yesterdays and cared little about tomorrow, said, "She must be apprenticed to the Weaver."

"A weaver!" said the mayor and Vera's father and her mother all at once. They thought surely that the old man who lived in the mountain had at last gone mad.

But the old man shook his head. "Not a weaver, but the Weaver, the Weaver of Tomorrow. She weaves with a golden thread and finishes each piece with a needle so fine that each minute of the unfolding day is woven into her work. They say that once every hundred years there is need for an apprentice, and it is just that many years since one has been found."

"Where docs one find this Weaver?" asked the mayor.

"Ah, that I cannot say," said the old man who lived in the mountain, "for I have answered one question already." And he went back to his cave and rolled a stone across the entrance, a stone small enough to let the animals in but large enough to keep the townspeople out.

"Never mind," said Vera. "I would be apprenticed to this Weaver. And not even the Devil himself can keep me from finding her."

And so saying, she left the simple town with nothing but the clothes upon her back. She wandered until the hills got no higher but the valleys got deeper. She searched from one cold moon until the next. And at last, without warning, she came upon a cave where an old woman in black stood waiting.

"You took the Devil's own time coming," said the old woman.

"It was not his time at all," declared Vera.

"Oh, but it was," said the old woman, as she led the girl into the cave.