Rag and Bone, by Priya Sharma, is about Tom, who buys unwanted household items and scavenges other materials (including bones) and resells them in an alternative 19th century Liverpool in which the wealthy use the poor for parts from the inside out, should they need them. Colorful, disturbing, and moving as Tom maneuvers warily between the masters he serves and the poor from whom he scavenges. At the publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management software (DRM) applied.
Priya Sharma’s fiction has appeared venues such as Interzone, Black Static, Nightmare, The Dark and Tor. “Fabulous Beasts� was a Shirley Jackson Award finalist and won a British Fantasy Award for Short Fiction. Priya is a Shirley Jackson Award and British Fantasy Award winner, and Locus Award finalist, for “All the Fabulous Beasts�, a collection of her some of her work, available from Undertow Publications.
“Ormeshadow�, her first novella (available from Tor), won a Shirley Jackson Award and a British Fantasy Award. It was a 2022 Grand Prix de l’Imaginaire finalist.
"Pomegranates", her second novella (from Absinthe, an imprint of PS Publishing) is a Shirley Jackson Award, British Fantasy Award finalist and won a World Fantasy Award.
Her stories have been translated into Spanish, French, Italian, Czech, and Polish.
I leave Gabriel in the yard and go into town, taking my bag with the vials of skin and bone, flesh and blood, my regular delivery to Makin. The Peels are looking for body parts.
a second excellent free tor short by this author. i didn't like it quite as much as , but it was still pretty damn good.
it's an alt-historical set in a 19th century liverpool in which the wealthy elite treat the underclass as a spare parts marketplace, and rag and bone men like our narrator tom acquire not only scraps of everyday odds and ends to sell and trade but also the above-quoted 'skin and bone, flesh and blood' from the desperate poor, for the benefit of the few wealthy ruling families. it's a living, and it's better and safer than most, but it's also not without its moral conflicts, even in a scrabbling world like this one, where options are very limited.
despite enjoying more freedom and respect than is typically afforded to those of his class by his wealthy boss on the strength of his character, despite the wisdom handed down to him by his father, Do whatever you need to survive, Dad would say. Do whatever you need to be free,when presented with the opportunity to risk it all for the sake of a woman he admires, tom does not hesitate to make the sacrifice.
there be consequences.
there's a twist here, but it's a twist so common in these tor shorts that i wonder sometimes if there's some sort of drinking game going on with the tor editors, or some plot-wheel authors have to spin before they submit their pieces where they have to incorporate certain elements into their tales if they land on 'em. i didn't predict it happening this time, which is preferable to seeing it coming a mile away, and there was definitely a dramatic payoff and a purpose for it, but you encounter the same twist in enough stories and there can't help but be diminishing returns on the old element of surprise.
apart from the twist, the real strength of this piece lies in her descriptions - the atmosphere really comes alive with strong characters and a vivid and bustling location. i also really liked the ending, although that opinion may be a lonely one.
still, this is definitely an author i hope will write many more tor shorts, or, you know - anything. i'm officially a fan.
Oh, to wield so much power that you don’t have to exert it.
Some stories read like protest songs, and this is one. Set in an uncertain time period, though it reads either Victorian or retro dystopian future, Tom the rag and bone man makes his rounds and gathers volunteers for a kind of spare parts program - spare parts in the Repo: The Genetic Opera sense.
Absolutely great short story, and available free from Tor here:
I want to say, Look at me. Look me in the eye. I'm a person not a piece of meat, but then I realize I just might as well be. A piece of meat. Rag and bone.
Y'all know I love a well written short story. When I don't feel up to reading much, or I need to shake off a book hangover, a Tor short is often the way to go. They're the perfect little snack sized read.
And damn, this is a satisfying snack.
Read Sharma's as well if you haven't yet, especially if you enjoy having your emotions shredded. I wish she would write a full length novel; these gorgeous short stories only leave me wanting more.
I was very much looking forward to reading this Tor short. Why?
1. The Cover Please, someone somewhere, just publish all the Tor covers in one volume. These are terrific.
2. The Reviews Everyone seems to like it.
My experience ended up like a three-act play.
ACT ONE Yay! I have waited as it wended its way up my book pipeline and now I am reading it. Woohoo! Ooooh, spooky weird! Great start, very involved.
ACT TWO Slowing down a bit. But boy, that cover sure is something. Yes, still reading, still involved, just not as much as before.
ACT THREE Is this over yet? Let me guess, there will be a twist at the end, ya-ya. But what a cover.
Alas, I fall out with the other reviewers. There's nothing exceptionally wrong with the story, but I just lost interest. It was well-written, but it just lost some steam along the way. Or maybe I was just upset that Liverpool had lost the Europa League.
Oh, this one is creepy. Think: Ishiguro's 'Never Let Me Go' meets Thompson's 'Divided Kingdom' in a Dickensian alternate England. A bit of a steampunk feel to it (think George Mann's 'Affinity Bridge') - minus the steam. But it's also a wonderful story in which humanity and compassion come to the fore, even in the face of complete and utter callousness. It illustrates both the best and the worst that people are capable of. I hope to read more from Sharma in the future.
“All they ask is a chance to speak to you. No one’s forcing anyone.� It’s what I’ve been told to say, but the rich always have their way.
This was okay. Well, it was good until it wasn’t. I didn’t understand the ending, so it made me feel stupid.
read it for yourself here:
My 24 Days of Shorts 1. by 2. by 3. by 4. by 5. by 6. by 7. by 8. by 9. by 10. by 11. by 12. by 13. by 14. by 15. by 16. by 17. by 18. by 19. by 20. by 21. by 22. by 23. by 24. by
A bleak story of the lengths people will go to in order to survive and protect others. The setting is a dystopian Liverpool, where the ruling class sometimes farm the populace for parts. Middle managers use every heavy-handed tactic they can to keep the threat of an uprising at bay. Tom the Rag and Bone Man gets inadvertently embroiled in the search for a missing girl who they suspect might incite a revolution, and Tom has to make some difficult choices and sacrifices. There is an amazing plot twist I did not see coming at all that made me marvel once again at Priya Sharma's talent. Across multiple genres, she excels at drawing the reader into the worlds she creates, revealing just enough to keep you hooked until the satisfying but sometimes horrifying conclusion. Bravo, once again.
Too short, it felt rushed and underdeveloped even for a novella. It's an interesting theme, the rich feeding off the poor in a way that's more literal than metaphorical, and strangely relevant even more than a century later. I liked the concept, but the execution left me feeling mainly annoyed that it wasn't explored further.
This story took a couple of turns I did not expect, and that really made me love it. Desperate and malevolent, a fantastic industrial-age dark fantasy.
Rag and Bone by author Priya Sharma is a short story you can read for free on the Tor.com site
Tom scavenges and buys unwanted household items and other materials (including bones) and resells them in an alternative 19th century Liverpool in which the wealthy use the poor for parts from the inside out, should they need them. Colorful, disturbing, and moving as Tom maneuvers warily between the masters he serves and the poor from whom he scavenges.
My ongoing quest to get current with the Tor short stories. My second Priya Sharma story and I love this author more and more. She captures the desolation and squalor of this alternate universe Victorian Liverpool so well. I will look for more of her books.
A well written short. I was unsure of this writer after reading , but this is an interesting dystopian fantasy. The writing style is terse and may take a little getting used to. The plot twist was a little predictable, but the story is not worse for it.
Priya Sharma's latest story was an intriguing read as it had an unexpected twist on the end, making the experience all the more exciting. Although it wasn't quite as compelling as her other works, the few pages she used were able to paint a vivid picture, making it a pleasant read overall.
História alternativa que pode não ser tão alternativa assim. Não achei os riscos tão arriscados, talvez porque não os entendi muito bem, mas temi sim pelos personagens e queria que eles ficassem bem no final.
(Shudders) Rag and Bone is a very terrifying dystopic world where the poor sell pieces of themselves to the rich. There's also some interesting gender commentary that I don't want to spoil. All in all, it's a chilling little tale that would be a good foundation for a larger piece, but stands well on its own.
At first I wasn't liking it but soon it engagend me. The reveal at the end was, even if a common theme, still a surprise. The open ending also fit with the themes, I think.