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1923. English author and critic, member of Bloomsbury group and friend of Virginia Woolf who achieved fame through his novels, which include: Room with a View, Maurice, A Passage to India, and Howard's End. The Celestial Omnibus is a collection of short-stories Forster wrote during the prewar years, most of which were symbolic fantasies or fables. Contents: The Story of a...more
Published 2005 by Snowbooks (first published 1911)
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E.M. Forster
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May 19, 2015Nancy Oakes rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Much more about this book later, but I finished this book about 3 a.m. this morning and I literally have not stopped thinking about it since. I just ordered Forster's Selected Stories, hoping that the other stories in that book are as good as these are.
Seriously -- super book. My favorite quotation from the entire collection:
'Lasciate ogni baldanza voi che entrate.'
Aug 09, 2014Duane rated it really liked it
Shelves: 2014-book-challenge, english-calssics, rated-books, reviewed-books, short-stories
This is a different side of Forster that we see here. This is a collection of allegorical short stories that he considered fantasy. Very much on the lines of C.S. Lewis with a little Tolkien thrown in. The Celestial Omnibus gets top billing, but they were all quite good.
Free download available at InternetArchive.
Nov 12, 2017Bill rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: british-fiction, fiction-classics, mythic-legendary-fiction, fantasy
A fantasy full of literary allusions (most which I probably missed), The Celestial Omnibus is a rant against snobs, I think. Its villain is named Bots—snob spelled backwards 😀) The Boy exudes innocence which nullifies all snobbery, ans who conquers Bots (with the help of The Boys Immortal friends). Abandon hope...
Apr 10, 2014Tony rated it liked it
THE CELESTIAL OMNIBUS and other stories. (1911). E. M. Forster. ***.
This early collection of stories by Forster represented his forays into the world of the imagination. He called them fantasies, but you should not confuse them with the genre we call ‘fantasy’ today. Each story, with a slightly different twist, tells the story of how one of the characters breaks through the façade of our ‘real’ world into the world of the supernatural. In Forster’s mind, the supernatural is represented by those
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Jan 17, 2015Melissa rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
I received an ARC of this title from Dover Publications through NetGalley.
This brief collection of stories show the true depth of Forster’s literary talent and his ability to infuse fantasy and imagination into his stories. My favorite stories were two in the collection into which Forster incorporates many classical references.
In the Celestial Omnibus, a boy discovers a sign for an omnibus in the lane across from his house. The alley is a very odd place for an omnibus to pass through so the boy
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Oct 01, 2010Cait Poytress rated it really liked it
Shelves: classics, owned, short-stories, read-in-2011
I have to admit that I am still getting used to Forster's style. He's not especially descriptive, which can be a good thing. I've read books that take pages upon pages to describe something as inconsequential as the front porch of a random building, down to the individual hues and intricate pattern of the wood grain. Um, no thanks. That's when I start skimming, in an attempt to keep my eyes from glazing over and drooping shut. However. Forster, in my opinion, goes too far in the opposite directi...more
Nov 15, 2018Mike rated it it was ok
2.5 stars. It’s hard to believe this collection of stories was written by the same man who wrote A Room with a View, A Passage to India, and Howards End -- all of which I love, and the first of which I consider to be one of my favorite novels of all time. I have heard the stories described as “fantasy” (on the back book cover) or speculative fiction, but really they are just allegories with a mythological bent. They contain none of the darkness or creativity of previous Victorian tales of...more
Nov 13, 2010Tocotin rated it liked it
Shelves: ebooks, fantasy, story-collections, early-20th-century, men-writers
A nice collection of stories with fantasy/supernatural element; the main theme seems to be the forces of nature and imagination versus rules of society and reason. Some of the stories were slightly too sublime for my taste, but I liked 'The Story of a Panic' and 'The Road from Colonus'.
Although I read all the stories in this collection in another one of Forster (with other stories), when I saw a 1920 edition of it, I couldn't resist getting it. Some books are just plain sweet to own.
Aug 12, 2016Emily rated it liked it · review of another edition
Apr 05, 2019Charles Sheard rated it it was ok · review of another edition
Shelves: ebooks, literature-british-commonwealth, short-stories
Although Forster was one of my earlier favorites, this collection of short stories is sadly very rough. Despite being written over the first decade of the 20th Century, during the same period during which he gave us Where Angels Fear to Tread, The Longest Journey and A Room with a View, these stories seem juvenile and quite lacking in polish. At times, the language was so in need of an editor that it was unclear what was going on. All the stories include elements of fantasy, but are not convinci...more

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Apr 07, 2019Lamar Latrell rated it really liked it · review of another edition
A wonderful pastoral collection. I've known for a while that he was really into the outdoors, but this was an excellent collection of stories about nature and the desire to connect to it or be a part of it.
Really, it was close to magical realism, between the release of dryad and the creation of a faun. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Nov 28, 2017Radhika rated it really liked it · review of another edition
It is quite an interesting read. Forster has a very important message in it and that is to not be too proud of your knowledge for it may surprise you. The reader is touched by the innocence of the young boy and at certain places wishes to hold the same truthful and pure heart as that of the child.
Nov 05, 2018Annamarie Bustion rated it liked it
Awesome set of short stories. All are chock full of allusions to and lessons from Greek mythology, reframed for modern-ish eyes. My favorites were The Story of a Panic and The Celestial Omnibus; both had mad Peter Pan vibes.
Magical, allegorical short stories, with Forster’s light, sly hand.
Feb 27, 2017Laurel Hicks rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Such a fun story! There are two kinds of readers, two approaches to literature.
Mar 20, 2011Ape rated it really liked it
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Nov 18, 2013Jay rated it really liked it · review of another edition
I find it very difficult to review a short story collection. I don't like to review each story individually, because I don't have enough time, but it seems like I skip too much if I do otherwise. Sometimes I review the collection with a vague conglomeration of what I felt of the stories as a whole, but that really doesn't say much about the stories. In the worst case, I write a review that ends up being potentially off-topic because all it does is talk about how I tend to review short story book...more
The Celestial Omnibus is a delightful (did I just say delightful? ugh! but it really was sheer pleasure to read) short story about a boy who visits heaven and returns with wonderful stories that no one will believe. It's nicely crafted, concise, and highly imaginative... heaven is a sort of literary haven for heros, gods, and good writers. It's only about 15 pages, but lots of fun.
The Machine Stops is another short story that I'd read before. It was included in the Science Fiction Research Assoc
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Nov 28, 2010Bonnie rated it

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it was amazing
Recommended to Bonnie by: Out of the Great Books Vol 1
Shelves: 2010, book-on-books, essays, europe, england, fiction, short-story, spiritual-and-or-inspirational, fantasy
I'm embarrassed to admit that I've never read a book by E.M. Forrester, certainly been meaning to, at the least one of his more well known--A Passage to India, A Room with a View or Howard's End, but never have, and so was thrilled to run across one of his short stories that I knew I could read in a short stint and get a feel for him as a writer. And what better topic than what I might call a Book on Books even though in this case it would be a short story on books or something to that effect.
Th
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Jun 18, 2016Collin rated it liked it · review of another edition
The 3-star review is a little misleading - I really did enjoy most of these little stories, more than your average 3 stars express. I guess it's another 3 1/2.
I'd previously read the eponymous story for a speculative fiction course, and that was fun, so I was pleasantly surprised to see that all of the stories were in the same vein of not quite fantasy, but definitely not just plain fiction. I might even come close to calling it a sort of magical realism. (Well, 'The Curate's Friend,' I think, i
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Nov 25, 2016Ruth rated it liked it · review of another edition
Prior to reading these short stories by E. M. Forster, I'd only been familiar with his work through watching 'A Room with a View' all those years ago. I wasn't sure what to expect from these stories (a gift from a friend). In the end, I would say that the author's approach was part whimsy, part oddity. My two favorites were the story about the curate who meets a faun ('The Curate's Friend') and the story in which a young boy takes a bus ride to heaven ('The Celestial Omnibus'). The others were e...more
The Celestial Omnibus was intriguing to say the least. I was drawn in to this story and curious to see what would happen to the main character, but as others have stated E. M. Forster does not use many details so I had to reread certain sections to try to figure out where they were or I would be lost for a bit of reading until something clicked. I liked that short story better than The Road to Colonus. The Road was more detailed and I was able to start predicting what might happen next (unlike O...more
This is a curious collection of short-stories, all centered on encounters with supernatural being or events. Greco-Roman mystic creatures such as Pan and Faun, as well as re-worked stories such as Apollo and Daphne, Dante's Paradiso, Oedipus at Colonus, all worked into the curate-aunt-country-side setting of middle class English vignettes. The Story of a Panic is the best of the lot, while the rest seems to be rather skimpily developed in characters. It is enjoyable to read but not in the same p...more
Review of just the title story:
The allegory here is in the beat-'em-over-the-head-with-it school, but I still really enjoyed this tale of a small boy who discovers a carriage that conveys him to the Heaven that all true lovers of literature can find (the return ticket is free). Yes, the story is 100% about the wonders of reading and scathing about both those who disrespect the sense of wonder, and those who treat literature as a didactic tool to be put on a pedestal - and that's just wonderful.
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Jan 20, 2015Melissa rated it really liked it
I'd previously read a couple of Forster's novels- A Room with a View and A Passage to India, so I assumed this collection of short stories would be similar. Boy, was I wrong. These stories are really quite bizarre and seem to be inspired by Victorian ghost/ supernatural stories. I can't really call them ghost stories, but supernatural elements are at play in several of the stories.
My favorite in the bunch is the title story, The Celestial Omnibus, which tells of a carriage that can take its pas
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Aug 21, 2014Hope rated it liked it
This book repeats the themes of several other Forster titles (Room with a View, Passage to India, and Howard’s End) about how social conventions can stifle true living. In these short stories, he mocks those who are educated and dignified and glorifies those who give themselves over to the pleasures of the natural world. Each tale is beautifully written and yet somehow they leave the reader with an uneasy feeling. Yes, something is definitely lacking in a life of “just following the rules,” but...more
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'Please, is that an Omnibus?'
My first encounter with E.M. Forster, after starting the first of this collection's stories in a used bookshop, which also happens to be Forster's first published story 'The Story of a Panic'. 'The Celestial Omnibus' compiles a smattering of Forster's other delightfully peculiar short stories. His writing is very English, and his stories full of classic Hellenization, ancient literary allusions and paganistic elements. They're mostly enigmatic and perhaps somewhat im
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A thoroughly delightful collection of short stories all having elements of the fantastic. Some of the stories are almost lighter versions of Arthur Machen who was an inspiration to Lovecraft. The horrors here aren't cosmic, but often nature itself in subtle degrees. And make no mistake, there are elements of horror in these stories.
Most delightful of all, this collection is in the public domain and can be downloaded to any device. Next time you're stuck waiting somewhere, instead of surfing the
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Edward Morgan Forster, generally published as E.M. Forster, was an novelist, essayist, and short story writer. He is known best for his ironic and well-plotted novels examining class difference and hypocrisy in early 20th-century British society. His humanistic impulse toward understanding and sympathy may be aptly summed up in the epigraph to his 1910 novel Howards End: 'Only connect'.
He had five
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“But they did not chatter much, for the boy, when he liked a person, would as soon sit silent in his company as speak.” — 1 likes
“Oh, fence me out if you like! Fence me out as much as you like! But never in. Oh Harcourt, never in.” — 0 likes
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