for Jane Yolen who showed me how to touch magic and pass it on

The Ivory and the Horn 

FATHER, O FATHER, WHAT DO WE HERE

IN THIS LAND OF UNBELIEF AND FEAR

THE LAND OF DREAMS IS BETTER FAR,

ABOVE THE LIGHT OF THE MORNING STAR.

— WILLIAM BLAKE

WE ARE ALL IN THE GUTTER, BUT SOME OF US ARE LOOKING AT THE STARS.

— OSCAR WILDE

Grateful acknowledgments

are made to:

Happy Rhodes for the use of the lines from 'Words Weren't Made for Cowards' from her album Warpaint. Copyright © 1991 by Happy Rhodes; lyrics reprinted by permission. For more information about Rhodes's music, contact Aural Gratification, P.O. Box 86458, Academy Station, Albany, NY 12208.

Kiya Heartwood for the use of a verse of 'Wishing Well' from her album True Frontiers. Copyright © 1993 by Kiya Heartwood; lyrics reprinted by permission. For more information about Heartwood's music, contact Pame Kingfisher at Roaddog Booking & Management, (800) 382-5895.

Copyright Acknowledgments

'Waifs and Strays' first appeared in Journeys to the Twilight Zone, edited by Carol Serling; DAW Books, 1993. Copyright © 1993 by Charles de Lint.

'Mr. Truepenny's Book Emporium and Gallery' was first published by Cheap Street, 1992. Copyright © 1992 by Charles de Lint.

'The Forest Is Crying' first appeared in The Earth Strikes Back, edited by Richard Chizmar; Mark Zeising Books, 1994, Copyright © 1994 by Charles de Lint.

'The Wishing Well' was first published by Axolotl Press, 1993. Copyright © 1993 by Charles de Lint.

'Dead Man's Shoes' first appeared in Touch Wood: Narrow Houses, Volume Two, edited by Peter Crowther, Little, Brown and Company, 1993. Copyright © 1993 by Charles de Lint.

'Bird Bones and Wood Ash' is original to this collection.

'A Tempest in Her Eyes' first appeared in Weird Tales from Shakespeare, edited by Katharine Kerr and Martin H. Greenberg; DAW Books, 1994. Copyright © 1994 by Charles de Lint.

'Saxophone Joe and the Woman in Black' first appeared in Catfantastic III, edited by Andre Norton and Martin H. Greenberg; DAW Books, 1994. Copyright © 1994 by Charles de Lint.

'The Bone Woman' was first published by Triskell Press, 1992. Copyright © 1992 by Charles de Lint.

'Pal o' Mine' first appeared in Christmas Forever, edited by David G. Hartwell; Tot Books, 1993. Copyright © 1993 by Charles de Lint.

'Where Desert Spirits Crowd the Night' first appeared in Worlds of Fantasy and Horror #2, Fall 1994. Copyright © 1994 by Charles de Lint.

'Dream Harder, Dream True' first appeared in Temporary Walls, edited by Greg Ketter and Robert T. Garcia; Dream-Haven Books, 1993. Copyright © 1993 by Charles de Lint.

'The Pochade Box' first appeared in Thunder's Shadow, Vol. V, No. 1, 1994. Copyright © 1994 by Charles de Lint.

'Coyote Stories' was first published by Triskell Press, 1993. Copyright © 1993 by Charles de Lint.

'The Forever Trees' first appeared in Worlds of Fantasy and Horror #2, Fall 1994. Copyright © 1994 by Charles de Lint.

Acknowledgements

As anyone involved knows, contrary to the belief that artists create in the isolation of their workspaces, the act of creation is not a solitary endeavor. Without the inspiration and support I've received over the years, these stories wouldn't exist, so this time out I'd like to thank:

My wife; MaryAnn, for her help in the genesis of many of these stories and in their fine-tuning, always knowing when and where to say the right thing;

My editors at Tor, Terri Windling, Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Donald G. Keller and Greg Cox, for having enough faith in these stories to request a second volume sight unseen, and for making the publishing process so painless;

My agent, Richard Curtis, for finding me the spaces between novels when I could write these stories;

Altan, Tori Amos, Sarah Bauhan, Lisa Germano, Kiya Heartwood, Maria Kalaniemi, Peter Kater, Jon Mark, R. Carlos Nakai, Johnette Napolitano, Happy Rhodes and Ian Tamblyn, whose music keeps me sane;

All those editors who first asked for the stories collected herein: Kurt Busiak, Richard Chizmar, Pete Crowther, Bob Garcia, Marty Greenberg, David Hartwell, Kit Kerr, Greg Ketter, Andre Norton, John and George O' Nale, Kris Rusch, Darrell Schweitzer, Erik Secker, Carol Serling and Dean Smith.

A few notes concerning individual stories:

In 'The Bone Woman,' the idea of La Huesera comes from the folklore of the American Southwest. My thanks to Clarissa Pinkola Estes for making me aware of the tale.

In 'Where Desert Spirits Crowd the Night' the story of Coyote and the Buzzard is based upon traditional Kickapoo folk lore.

'The Wishing Well' was written for MaryAnn, who wanted to know what was in the well, and for Jane Siberry, for her own 'strange well' of songs. Special thanks to Dr. Sean Costello (a fine author in his own right) for technical advice.

— Charles de Lint

Ottawa, Canada

Waifs and Strays

Do I have to prod;

Reach into your chest

And pull your feelings out?

— Happy Rhodes, from 'Words Weren't Made for Cowards'
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