<b>Praise for <i>The Art of Space Travel and Other Stories</i>:</b><br /><br />"Nina Allan is a writer of rare talent. <i>The Art of Space Travel</i> addresses life’s biggest questions with such delicacy and tenderness that you won’t fear staring into the abyss." - Alma Katsu, author of <i>The Hunger </i>and <i>The Deep</i><br /><br />"Nina Allan is a great writer of the fantastic, here to remind us how weird it is to be alive. Her stories have a quiet urgency to them; they are moving and gripping and wholly themselves. Their strangeness helps us make sense of our own. This is a rare collection, to read, to ponder, to treasure." - Francesco Dimitri, author of <i>The Book of Hidden Things</i><br /><br />"I’m in awe of Nina Allan’s storytelling. Each richly detailed tale hints at a far wider world, and many contain stories with stories, realities within realities, warping genre boundaries yet retaining a focus on entirely believable characters and, often, the contemplation of loss. Put simply, these are some of the best modern short stories I’ve read." - Tim Major, author of <i>Hope Island</i><br /><br />"One of the most able SF talents in science fiction." - <i>The Times</i><br /><br />"Like Allan’s other tales, it has tendrils extending well beyond its borders, and we come away from <b>The Art of Space Travel</b> with the odd but exhilarating feeling that we’ve encountered a lot more stories than the 14 listed in the table of contents, as impressive as those are." - Locus <br /><br /><br /><b>Praise for Nina Allan:<br /></b><br />"A captivating exploration of community, tragedy and memory. Nina Allan's writing is enthralling". - Irenosen Okojie, on <i>The Good Neighbours</i><br /><br />"A fantastic book" - Andrew O'Hagan, on <i>The Dollmaker</i><br /><br />"Her literary sensibility fuses the fantastic and the mundane to great effect" - <i>The Guardian, </i>on <i>The Dollmaker</i><br /><br />"A subversive writer…playing with both the familiar protocols of genre and with the nature of the reading experience itself" - <i>Locus, </i>on <i>The Rift</i><br /><br />"Brilliantly ambiguous" - Tor.com, on <i>The Rift</i><br /><br />"One of the best books published this year in any genre" - Strange Horizons, on <i>The Rift</i>