Vermilion Sands

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Vermilion Sands
Vermilion Sands bookcover.jpg
First edition
Author J. G. Ballard
Cover artist Richard Powers
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
Publisher Berkley Books
Publication date
1971
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Pages192
ISBN 0-425-01980-2
Ballard's Vermilion Sands story "The Singing Statues" was omitted from the first American editions. Fantastic 196207.jpg
Ballard's Vermilion Sands story "The Singing Statues" was omitted from the first American editions.
In 1963, another Emshwiller cover illustrated the Vermilion Sands story "The Screen Game". Fantastic 196310.jpg
In 1963, another Emshwiller cover illustrated the Vermilion Sands story "The Screen Game".

Vermilion Sands is a collection of science fiction short stories by British writer J. G. Ballard, first published in 1971. All the stories are set in an imaginary vacation resort called Vermilion Sands which suggests, among other places, Palm Springs [1] in southern California. The characters are generally the wealthy and disaffected, or people who make a living off them, as well as parasites of various kinds.

Contents

In the preface, Ballard himself wrote: "Vermilion Sands has more than its full share of dreams and illusions, fears and fantasies, but the frame for them is less confining. I like to think, too, that it celebrates the neglected virtues of the glossy, lurid and bizarre."

A Times Literary Supplement review describes the collection's surrealist mood : "J.G. Ballard is … one of the most accomplished creators of evocative landscapes in modern fiction … he achieves this effect partly by painting his desert in the manner of Dali, a mixture of appalling clarity and the exotic."

The collection

Stories

Vermilion Sands contains the following stories:

Exotic technology

Each story concentrates on different media – in some cases more than one – and most of them focus on a particular innovative, usually rather decadent/baroque twist on an existing artistic medium. For instance:

Although the characters themselves often exhibit the same obsession, anomie and psychological disintegration typical of Ballard's characters, the emphasis on elaborate and sometimes humorously imagined art forms gives these stories a playfulness unusual in his other stories. A few other stories not set in Vermilion Sands are comparable because of their similar artistic games, especially "Sound-Sweep" (1960, on music/opera) and "Passport to Eternity" (1962, full of decadent trends and live fashions).

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References

  1. "SECOND THOUGHTS / Sculptors who carve the clouds: J G Ballard on the". Independent.co.uk . 22 October 2011.
  2. "SECOND THOUGHTS / Sculptors who carve the clouds: J G Ballard on the". Independent.co.uk . 22 October 2011.
  3. Vermilion Sands band website
  4. "Vermillion Sands".
  5. "Move over, Green Walls: Living Canopy Comes to West Vancouver". 28 August 2014.
  6. Róisín Murphy – The House , retrieved 2023-11-15