The Image Fix
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About this ebook
5 Tales of the weird and eerie
These are stories with strange edges. Science fiction, the grotesque, glitchy tales of weirdness!
The Image Fix is is strange science fiction, 5 minutes into the future...
Apocalypse in 7 Scenes combines obsessive advertising with some end of the world scenery...
The Shape of Nature takes us deep into the dark ancient mysteries of South Wales, and the weirdness within...
The Kraken Tapes is a science fiction tale which examines the question of memory and the possibility of losing everything...
Airlines is a surreal journey, a crucible story of loss and obsession in a very weird and eerie airport...
David Rees-Thomas has written many short stories and books in a variety of genres, including horror, mystery, science fiction, and even the occasional literary foray.
He has also worked as an editor and first reader on magazines such as Waylines, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, and Nightmare.
He is currently at work on a new mystery novel series, and also writes under other names. This short story collection as well as others, can be found in most online bookstores.
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The Image Fix - David Rees-Thomas
Table of Contents
Introduction
The Image Fix
Apocalypse in Seven Scenes
The Shape of Nature
The Kraken Tapes
Airlines
About the Author
David Rees-Thomas
Acid Publishing
The Image Fix
and other
Weird and Eerie Tales
A short story collection
Copyright © 2022 David Rees-Thomas
Published by Acid Publishing
This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. All rights reserved. This is a work of fiction. All characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to real people or events is purely coincidental.
This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission.
For Bix.
Ideally, I'd like to be the eternal novice, for then only the surprises would be endless.
Keith Jarrett
Introduction
This volume of short stories is my 14th collection of chapbooks, bringing it to somewhere around sixty published stories. That’s quite a few, perhaps three or four proper traditional sized collections, or one giant collected edition. Maybe one day.
And, yet, I still feel that these stories are just a beginning of sorts, that there is a whole lot more to say around these themes, and within these peculiar worlds.
And, what themes have been explored up until this point? Definitely, the concept of belonging, and of return. Also, the concepts of all ideas and interpretations being in play. This is not a comfortable situational consideration for many people, those who seek to use the slippery language of postmodernism for their own ends, and those who rail against it. The more I think about it, the more I sense that Derrida and a few others have been sorely misunderstood, and willfully misinterpreted for nefarious aims.
Another concept or theme which springs from this is the trace, and how this aspect forms/deforms our concept of place, both physically and metaphorically, and within the imagination.
Here are the stories for this volume, and when you read them, perhaps some of these themes will resonate.
The Image Fix is ostensibly a science fiction story, set in a South Wales, roughly five minutes into the future, as they say. I like the potential world, and I’d like to go back and flesh it out a little more, write a few more stories within. I’ve often wondered about photographs, and how we might discern a difference between the staged and the candid, and where the line might be, if it truly exists at all.
Apocalypse in Seven Scenes could be said to be seven different mini stories which loosely hold to a central idea, or joke, however the reader might feel about it. I like each individual scene, they’re short and make the point. Even for myself, I’ve never been truly clear on where the story finally lands, and maybe that’s fine.
The Shape of Nature is a darker tale, set in South Wales, and is very much of the landscape, never feeling as though it rises that far out of the earth. I fear I may have unconsciously borrowed the title from a popular film of recent times, though I’ve not seen the film. Never mind, it’s done now, and the title suits the story’s mood and character well enough.
The Kraken Tapes deals with weird, inexplicable events afoot in South wales again, this time, an invisible barrier over a town, but it’s not Stephen King, nor The Village of the Damned! It moves between this big event and also the unfolding personal anguish of our main character.
Finally, Airlines is an odd one all of it’s own. It’s one of my favorites because it has elements of wild abandon which I don’t always feel comfortable with in writing, and it’s also trying to unravel complications and surreal absurdities in the manner we all have to face in life if we ever stop for long enough to truly look around. It was also inspired by the b side to a track called, Lawnchairs by American new wave band, Our Daughter’s Wedding, though the story has really nothing to do with the track at all. It’s just a great piece of music!
Enjoy!
Thank you
David Rees-Thomas
Nishinomiya, Japan
June 2022
The Image Fix
Denny stares at a computer screen full of ancient, scanned images of family members, dead friends, people he has never met, in a strange parade until the faces are nothing, and the memories are unstable, undecided.
I don't remember most of this,
he says, taking a large swig of a rum and coke. The glass is infused with a neon glow, the lights at an intensity which makes the world fluoresce, though the cafe has pockets of darkness further back where people wear depths of blackness, and the space is deep, so deep he's never been all the way down.
Gunther squints at the screen. Do you even know all these people?
Not a chance. I mean, maybe I met some of them, right? Hard to remember all the people I've ever met in life.
He points at a particular photo, one in which a woman stands on a hill near a stone pillar, an old car further down the hillside, vivid red, built like a teenage boy's dream. There are others in the photo, but she's the only one looking at the camera.
You see this one?
he says.
Gunther squints again, a pair of glasses in his hand.
She's my grandmother. No idea who the others are.
Denny zooms in, and with some quick editing, he releases the other characters into the digital void, stripping away their history and the scenery that gave the photo context.
There,
he says, and they both stare at a picture of a woman, the top half of her torso and her head, dark hair in a bob just above her shoulders, pretty enough without detail, his digital edit a copy of a digitized image of a scan of a fading photo, left in a box for decades, untouched and unremembered.
Gunther sits back in his seat, the screen around them blocking out all the other residents of the cafe. He sips at a ferrous blue cocktail, laced with sugar and heavy doses of something that smells like pineapple. Your grandmother?
Denny looks at the image, and takes out his phone. I guess so, sort of doesn't look quite like the same now I've cropped all the rest away. Gonna upload it anyway, nothing else going on today, may as well stir up a little nostalgia.
He transfers the image to his phone and accesses his profile, uploading the photo with just one word in the textbox, Gran.
You want to get some AktualBurger?
They head out into the city, the other residents safely encapsulated and insulated from their intrusions, the black spaces at the back murky and dotted with intense faces covered in masks, lit by the dancing fluorescence.
Denny's phone starts pinging even as they exit into the crystal-bright streets of Cardiff. The fact that it is three in the morning making little difference, especially as the cloud rarely dispersed above the semi-artificial sky. But then again, as the joke always went concerning Welsh weather, what was new about that anyway?
##
You gonna check that?
asks Gunther. He points at Denny's phone. Bloody thing hasn't stopped.
They're sitting in an AktualBurger joint, the light bouncing off every surface. There is no escape in this place, anyone and everything is exposed, made brighter by the sparkle. And as the other old joke went, you'd think they'd turn the lights out now that the glaciers had melted and everything that could be burned was either already burned, or was still in the process of burning. But, the lights gave comfort, so they said.
Why'd you post that anyway?
asks Gunther.
Denny shrugs. Connections?
Gunther swallows another mouthful of