ALA Booklist
Daniel Nayeri's first young adult novels, including Another Faust (2009), were coauthored with his sister, Dina Nayeri. This solo effort collects four novellas that were written entirely on his iPhone. Despite the "Three Little Pigs" send-up implied in the title, the stories are best suited to older high-school students, who will appreciate the esoteric plots, the sophisticated humor, the robust vocabulary, and the strange stories. Four genres are represented: a bizarre western in which humans and living toys are the crops; an sf offering that will resonate with fans of M. T. Anderson's Feed (2002); a love story narrated by Death; and, in the strongest entry, a delightful criminal mystery centered on the secret Wish Police Department, who try to prevent evil wishes from reaching fruition. Although this uneven collection will probably not find a large audience, the risks it takes make it worth inclusion in larger public or high-school libraries.
Kirkus Reviews
Four novellas representing four narrative styles ponder questions of humanity, technology, wishes and love.
The stand-alone novellas riff, dizzyingly and delightfully, on influences as varied as The Wizard of Oz and westerns, Mad Max and slang-laden teen diaries, The Arabian Nights and police procedurals, "Sleeping Beauty" and the sardonic Death of Terry Pratchett's Discworld. In "Toy Farm," toys grown from the earth wonder, as they fight for their lives: What's the difference between consciousness and humanity? "Wish Police" pulls back the curtain on the secret world of wishes—their varying degrees of strength, worthiness and consequences—as a lonely, world-weary djinn sworn to protect and serve works to prevent deadly wishes from coming true. As its punny title suggests, "Doom With a View" is a sweeping love story, complete with impossibly attractive protagonists, heroic feats of derring-do and a charming narrator in Death himself. Strong and assured, these stories seamlessly merge different styles, teasing out and playing with readers' assumptions about how westerns, fantasy and fairy tales work. Less successful is the second novella, "Our Lady of Villains," a giggling teen diary set in a paranoia-inducing, technology-saturated post-apocalyptic future. The voice is too lightweight to carry the thematic load, but this lone misstep is not nearly enough to ruin the delightful effect of the collection as a whole.
Overall, provocative and deeply satisfying. (Novellas. 14 & up)
Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
This collection of novellas from Nayeri (Another Pan), written entirely on an iPhone, is a mixed bag; each of the four stories represent a different genre and mood, with little to link them. The strongest is the thought-provoking -Wish Police,- starring the detectives of New York City-s Imaginary Crimes Unit. Can a djinn, a leprechaun, and a talking goldfish prevent a boy-s wish from killing his family? -Doom with a View- is a tongue-in-cheek comedy set in -Old Timey Europe,- which deals with star-crossed love, ill-timed death, and a dastardly prince. There-s a narrative resemblance to The Princess Bride, but the story tries a little too hard to be witty. -Our Lady of Villains- is a thriller set in 2062, on the eve of a corporation-s new nanotech-driven campaign. With its reliance on acronyms, -leetspeak,- IM conversations, and futuristic slang, it-s intriguing, though occasionally hard to follow. The weakest offering is -Toy Farm,- a western-themed whimsy filled with living toys; while atmospheric and moody, it-s also distant and hard to relate to. As a literary experiment, Nayeri-s project succeeds more often than not, but the results are uneven. Ages 14-up. (Oct.)