To judge by the paragraph on moi, that's not the same review -- not sure without checking further if he's just substantially copyedited it or if it's a rewrite. But the para I so vainly quote above has become:
In the closing story, “The Life Business”, the fantasy master who writes as John Grant draws upon his [. . .] real-life teenage stint as a British cadet. He integrates disturbing and emotional reveries into his shape-shifting characters. His story rattled me the most. Grant eerily channels otherworldly senses into a psychological study of identity.
no subject
Date: 2010-08-02 01:19 pm (UTC)In the closing story, “The Life Business”, the fantasy master who writes as John Grant draws upon his [. . .] real-life teenage stint as a British cadet. He integrates disturbing and emotional reveries into his shape-shifting characters. His story rattled me the most. Grant eerily channels otherworldly senses into a psychological study of identity.