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The Cleaners: Faraway collection di Ken Liu
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The Cleaners: Faraway collection (edizione 2020)

di Ken Liu (Autore), Kate Rudd (Narratore), Amazon Original Stories (Publisher)

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiConversazioni
708387,269 (3.48)Nessuno
Utente:UndeadWookiee
Titolo:The Cleaners: Faraway collection
Autori:Ken Liu (Autore)
Altri autori:Kate Rudd (Narratore), Amazon Original Stories (Publisher)
Info:Amazon Original Stories (2020)
Collezioni:Audiobooks
Voto:***1/2
Etichette:Audiobook, Fairy Tales & Folk Lore, Fantasy, Fiction, Faraway Collection, Short Story, Fantasy & Magic, Memories

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The Cleaners di Ken Liu

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In a Nutshell: The best story of the Faraway collection for me, though this isn’t really saying much. Would have worked far better were it lengthier. Doesn’t work much as a retelling though. Literary fiction readers might enjoy this better.

Story Synopsis:
Gui runs a special cleaning shop where he clear off memory deposits from objects, thereby making their owners feel no pain on touching them. As Gui is memory-insensitive, he doesn’t feel any physical pain while doing his job.
Clara can sense memories to some extent, and hence she wants her objects to be scrubbed clean by Gui. But after a meeting with her sister Beatrice, who is super-sensitive to memories, shows her a memory that change’s Clara’s perception of that event, Clara wonders if she took the right decision in hiring Gui.
The story comes to us in the third person perspectives of Gui, Clara and Beatrice.


This standalone short story is a part of the Faraway series, described on Amazon as “a collection of retold fairy tales that take the happily-ever-after in daring new directions.”

I have long heard of Ken Liu’s astounding imagination in Sci-Fi works, and hence I picked up this little story despite not having great luck with this series. Surprisingly, the story worked decently for me, but not for the reasons it should have.

Officially, this is supposed to be based on ‘The Princess and the Pea’, but to be honest, the link between the two works is minimal. The only common point is that the princess’ super-sensitivity to a pea twenty mattresses below is transposed to the extent of sensitivity humans have to memory deposits on inanimate objects. As such, this story doesn’t work as a fairy tale retelling at all.

However, were you to forget the fact that this is supposed to be a fairy tale retelling, and instead, read it as a sci-fi story that is more character-driven than plot-driven, you have a fair chance of liking it better.

To me, the stand-outs of this tale were:
✨ A triple character perspective, so rare in short stories. The story begins with Gui, goes to Clara, then Beatrice, and then cycles back to Clara and finally Gui. It was an unusual short-fic experience.

✨ The character-driven proceedings, where the entire flow of the narrative is governed by the decisions made by the central trio. Plot-loving readers wont enjoy this aspect as the plot details are relatively vague. But as a lover of literary fiction, I enjoyed this experience.

✨ The central trio are very interesting characters. With their varying levels of sensitivity to memories, they display a wide range of reactions to the memories, making their experiences distinct.

✨ This is the most mature story of the four Faraway stories I read, with the characters behaving realistically than going over the top. It is hence also the only story that doesn’t feel YA.

✨ I enjoyed the concept of memories being retained by objects and hence affecting those who touch the same. So creative! It’s farfetched, of course, but then again, it’s fantasy, so it can go wild in its imagination.

✨ Some interesting aspects raised by the plot – would you erase painful memories or would you rather retain them to learn from them? How would you feel if others could touch your possessions and relive your personal memories?


The story could have done better though. Its tiny length didn’t allow enough page space for a detailed exploration of the characters. The story would have been mind-blowing had it been lengthier and hence allowed enough time for its characters and its creative concept to pack a punch.

The Faraway Collection has five stories. I’ve read four of them, and my journey through the series ends here as the fifth one ([b:Hazel and Gray|55817030|Hazel and Gray (Faraway Collection)|Nic Stone|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1604005427l/55817030._SY75_.jpg|87027574], the Hansel & Gretel retelling) has too many triggers I am not fond of. Of the four I read, this was the best story for me, followed closely by Gayle Forman’s The Wickeds. The remaining two don’t even deserve a mention.

At the same time, I must stress upon the fact that I forgot to read this as a retelling once the magic of the plot took over. If you are looking for a fairytale-like magical experience, or if you don’t enjoy character-driven tales, this isn’t for you.

I liked it enough, but I do wish it had been a novella so that it could have filled in some of those interesting missing blanks.

3.5 stars.


This is the fourth standalone story from the Faraway Collection, and is currently available for free to Amazon Prime subscribers.




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Connect with me through:
My Blog | The StoryGraph | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter ( )
  RoshReviews | Jul 26, 2024 |
Genre: short story
Age: ya and up
Series/Standalone: part of a series by many authors, read as standalone
Content: Nothing

Beginning: fantastic
Middle: didn’t make sense
End: even better than the beginning

Rating: 3/5 Stars ( )
  libraryofemma | Apr 18, 2024 |
Winter 2021 (January);

This was probably the most compelling concept I found in the Faraway Collection, but it's so drug out and family entrenched and I found myself nearly bored before the endings finally pulled everything together sadly. ( )
  wanderlustlover | Dec 26, 2022 |
This was a very fascinating story about memory - the importance of remembering both the good and bad stuff, and how sometimes we forget some of them but being reminded of them later might give joy again. And how unfortunate it is for those who don’t have a lot of memories. ( )
  ksahitya1987 | Aug 20, 2021 |
This is perhaps my favorite short story in the Faraway collection, but it's also the one that has the least to do with fairy tales. I think it's a great, thought-provoking story... but it doesn't belong in a collection of "fairy tales for the here and now"—it would do better in a SFF collection discussing memory or history or even personal agency.

Basically, this story is set in an alternate world that is just like this one *except* that we leave "memory deposits" on everything, and people can revisit those memories by touching the memory deposits. Some people get a general impression of the memory, some get a vivid picture of exactly what was happening, and some are "memory blind" and can't access the memories at all. Naturally, this story follows one of each of these kinds of people as Liu takes a look at what it might mean to be able to revisit memories—or scrub items completely clean of memories for a fresh start. ( )
  ca.bookwyrm | Mar 2, 2021 |
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Now they knew that she was a real princess because she had felt the pea right through the twenty mattresses and the twenty eider-down beds. Nobody but a real princess could be as sensitive as that.
—"The Princess and the Pea," Hans Christian Andersen, translated by H. P. Paull
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Gui's father ran the cleaning shop for twenty years before Gui was born, and hen another twenty after.
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