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Gifts With Humanity

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Tuesday
Aug182009

The Blue Fairy: and other tales of transcendence

Dedicating this book to his dear aunt who passed away in 1992, Dempsey has written a collection of short stories on the subject of death. Thinking about death tends to make people uncomfortable, for obvious reasons, I would assume. Because of this, I was very curious about what I would find inside these pages. I was actually quite impressed. While the subject is about death, the stories actually led me to develop some thought-provoking questions about life. It is the living who has to deal with the loss of their loved ones, not the dead.

In several of the stories, people vainly try to hold on to something that will connect them with the deceased love one. Sometimes the only thing that they can keep is a memory, other times it might be something that the person had with them when they died. Dempsey adds plenty of twists to the stories to keep them thought-provoking and sometimes a little twisted. That’s what made reading "The Blue Fairy" so fun.

In several of the stories in "The Blue Fairy" by Ernest Dempsey, I found myself feeling discomfiture for the characters, especially when they were asked to do something or had to deal with an issue regarding someone’s death. It definitely calls to mind my own mortality. I think that readers will really enjoy burying themselves in this book. No pun intended of course.

The Blue Fairy
Ernest Dempsey
Modern History Press (2009)
ISBN 9781932690927
Reviewed by Paige Lovitt for Reader Views (7/09)

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