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Francesca Lia Block

Biography (from her website).

Francesca Lia Block is renowned for her groundbreaking novels and stories—postmodern, magic-realist tales for all ages. Her work transports readers through the harsh landscapes of contemporary life—to magic realms of the senses where love is always our saving grace.

Born in Los Angeles, where she still lives with her husband and children, Block writes fiction and non-fiction that pulsates with the language and images of the city's sprawling subculture. Many of her books including Weetzie Bat take place in L.A., a "Jasmine-scented, jacaranda-purple, neon sparked city," that Block likes to refer to as "Shangri-LA." Lauds a reviewer for the New York Times Book Review, "Block writes about the real Los Angeles better than anyone since Raymond Chandler."

Though grounded in the realities of L.A. and urban life—at both its grittiest and most beautiful—Block's work is otherworldly and almost transcendent in its reach. The daughter of a poet and a painter, Block has been influenced by the visual arts, by her childhood love of Greek myths and fairytales, as well as by music and dance. While at the University of California, Berkeley, Block's early influences expanded to include the magic-realist fiction of Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Isabel Allende, as well as the modernist poetry of H.D. (Hilda Dolittle).

Block described her work as "contemporary fairy tales with an edge," where the real world and its trouble find solace through the alchemy of creative expression and love. She has received numerous awards, including citations from the American Library Association, the New York Times Book Review and the School Library Journal, and her work has been published around the world, translated into many languages.



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WEETZIE BAT INFLUENCES

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Mythology : Timeless Tales of Gods and Heroes
by Edith Hamilton


Warner Books · 1999 · 352 pages
Classic retellings of Greek and Roman myths, from Jason and the Argonauts to Zeus and his many conquests.

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One Hundred Years of Solitude
by Gabriel García Márquez


Perennial · Reprinted 1998 · 464 pages


The story of the Colombian village of Macondo and the Buendía family, who live in a world where magic is commonplace and reality is unbelievable.

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The House of the Spirits
by Isabel Allende


Bantam · Reissued 1986 · 448 pages
The lives of the Trueba family and their home from the early 20th century through the upheavals of Chilean politics in the 1970's. Strange happenings abound. This family saga echoes Allende's own experience as the niece of Chile's Socialist president, Salvador Allende, who was killed in a CIA-backed coup in 1973.

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Collected Poems, 1912-1944 (H.D.)
by Hilda Doolittle, edited by Louis Martz


New Directions Publishing Corporation · 1986 · 668 pages


Collects all of Doolittle's poetry from her early efforts to her wartime collection "Trilogy." Works about love, death, Greece and its culture, mothers and daughters, and more.

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Green Fairy Book
by Andrew Lang


Dover Publications · 1965 · 366 pages
Just one of Lang's exhaustive "colored" fairy tale books, this one collects stories from China, Russia, Scotland, Spain and other countries.
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The Girl in the Flammable Skirt
by Aimee Bender


Anchor · 1999 · 192 pages
Sexy stories about strange happenings; lip amputees, devolving boyfriends, and Mozart aficionados are just a few of the denizens of these stories.

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Saints and Strangers
by Angela Carter


Penguin · Reissued 1987 · 128 pages


A master of poetic British fantasy explores subjects from Lizzie Borden to Peter and the Wolf to the mysterious women of ancient Samarkand in this magical story collection.

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Stranger Things Happen
by Kelly Link


Small Beer Press · 2001 · 266 pages
Neil Gaiman says "Kelly Link is the exact best and strangest and funniest short story writer on earth that you have never heard of at the exact moment you are reading these words and making them slightly inexact." Stories about ghosts, cannibals, and girl detectives, walking the line between humor and horror.

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