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The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year Volume Ten

von Jonathan Strahan (Herausgeber)

Weitere Autoren: Paolo Bacigalupi (Mitwirkender), Elizabeth Bear (Mitwirkender), Greg Bear (Mitwirkender), Jeffrey Ford (Mitwirkender), Neil Gaiman (Mitwirkender)22 mehr, Nalo Hopkinson (Mitwirkender), Simon Ings (Mitwirkender), Gwyneth Jones (Mitwirkender), Caitlin R. Kiernan (Mitwirkender), Ann Leckie (Mitwirkender), Kelly Link (Mitwirkender), Usman T. Malik (Mitwirkender), Ian McDonald (Mitwirkender), Vonda N. McIntyre (Mitwirkender), Sam J. Miller (Mitwirkender), Tamsyn Muir (Mitwirkender), Robert Reed (Mitwirkender), Alastair Reynolds (Mitwirkender), Kim Stanley Robinson (Mitwirkender), Kelly Robson (Mitwirkender), Geoff Ryman (Mitwirkender), Nisi Shawl (Mitwirkender), Nike Sulway (Mitwirkender), Catherynne M Valente (Mitwirkender), Genevieve Valentine (Mitwirkender), Kai Ashante Wilson (Mitwirkender), Alyssa Wong (Mitwirkender)

Weitere Autoren: Siehe Abschnitt Weitere Autoren.

Reihen: Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year (10)

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
503509,400 (3.75)4
Fantasy. Fiction. Science Fiction. Short Stories. HTML:

Featuring

  • Paolo Bacigalupi
  • Elizabeth Bear
  • Greg Bear
  • Jeffrey Ford
  • Neil Gaiman
  • Nalo Hopkinson
  • Nisi Shawl
  • Simon Ings
  • Gwyneth Jones
  • Caitlin R. Kiernan
  • Anne Leckie
  • Kelly Link
  • Usman T. Malik
  • Ian McDonald
  • Vonda McIntrye
  • Sam J. Miller
  • Tamsyn Muir
  • Robert Reed
  • Alastair Reynolds
  • Kim Stanley Robinson
  • Kelly Robson
  • Geoff Ryman
  • Nike Sulway
  • Catherynne Valente
  • Genevieve Valentine
  • Kai Ashante Wilson
  • Alyssa Wong

Jonathan Strahan, the award-winning and much lauded editor of many of genre's best known anthologies is back with his 10th volume in this fascinating series, featuring the best science fiction and fantasy from 2015. With established names and new talent this diverse and ground-breaking collection will take the reader to the outer-reaches of space and the inner realms of humanity with stories of fantastical worlds and worlds that may still come to pass.

.
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****“Black Dog”, Neil Gaiman
This story features one of the characters from 'American Gods,' but it works perfectly well as a stand-alone - and actually, I liked it better than the novel.
Shadow Moon is an American travelling through rural Britain. We know he's suffering after the death of his wife, but other than that small tidbit of information, he's laconic and keeps details about himself close to his chest.
He's planning on just passing through one seemingly unremarkable small town, when a medical emergency keeps him in the home of the couple who run the local pub. Soon, he's drawn into an ominous tangle of depression, old secrets and ancient magic.

*****“City of Ash”, Paolo Bacigalupi
Previously read at: https://medium.com/matter/city-of-ash-94255fa5d1a9#.ees3gdwuz
The short story is a companion piece to ‘The Water Knife.’
To quote Bacigalupi: “Based in the same universe as THE WATER KNIFE. A bit from Maria’s perspective, before the novel starts.”
Here, Maria Villarosa, a young refugee from drought-stricken Texas, is still hopeful. her father has recently landed a good job working on the Taiyang arcology, and there’s the possibility, dangled before them like a cool drink of fresh water, that the position might lead to being able to emigrate to China.
If you liked the novel, this is a must-read. If you haven’t read the novel, this works both as a great introduction to the premise, and as a fully-realized stand-alone story. Like ‘The Water Knife,’ the story is a terrifyingly believable vision of the near future, and terribly heartbreaking. Great stuff.

****“Jamaica Ginger”, Nalo Hopkinson & Nisi Shawl
Cute and enjoyable steampunk story. The ending wrapped up a bit quickly and felt a bit unrealistically upbeat, but if the story was continued into a novel, I'd definitely read it. Our young heroine is the underpaid worker of a clockwork-manufacturer. Little do his customers know that she's the one that does nearly all of the work, and comes up with all the innovations. Her pay certainly doesn't reflect her contributions. With her Pa ill, her family situation is getting more and more desperate. Will she have to give up on the boy she's sweet on, and become her boss' mistress out of financial considerations?
We end on the brink of what is sure to be an adventure.

***“A Murmuration”, Alastair Reynolds
This is science fiction, in the sense that it is fiction about science. Specifically, it's about the stresses of cold hard research and the scientific process on the all-too-human people doing that science.
The specifics - an investigation into the physics of birds' flock formations - is interesting, but it's mainly an exploration of a mental breakdown.

****“Kaiju maximus®: ‘So Various, So Beautiful, So New’”, Kai Ashante Wilson
Available for free, here: http://www.fantasy-magazine.com/new/new-fiction/kaiju-maximus-so-various-so-beau...
"Kaiju," of course, refers to the Japanese film genre featuring battles between giant monsters. (I used to work at a club where the band "Kaiju Big Battel" played frequently, so I can't see the word without thinking of their shows.)
Here we meet a family, one of whom is a Hero, travelling out of humanity's safe dwelling caves to do battle against a destructive alien monster.
The story is intercut with a couple of different kinds of texts. Some are notes from a geneticist, talking about the project to change some humans into "heroes" in order to fight the alien menace.
The others are like video game strategy notes, talking about how much XP and power a character can get from their companions.
The story seems to have been inspired by the idea of "lending strength" to someone, and how one might "take strength" from their family bonds - here the idea is taken quite literally.
I liked the story, and thought it got quite a lot of complex and fascinating ideas into a short amount of space. However, I wished that the main narrative had been clear enough to dispense with the need for the 'genetics notes,' and I also thought that the 'video game notes' weakened the story rather than strengthening it.

****“Waters of Versailles”, Kelly Robson
Previously read at: http://www.tor.com/2015/06/10/waters-of-versailles-kelly-robson/
New author Kelly Robson has been getting quite a bit of buzz for this novella, as well as the short stories which she recently had published, and I think it's very well deserved. This is going to be an author to watch - she's got a way with words!
Sylvain is an ingenious man with an eye for the main chance. He's willing to do whatever it takes to get ahead - whether that's a carefully planned seduction or sucking up to a well-placed aristocrat. In this alternate-18th century Versailles, his efforts have so far had good results. Sylvain has introduced the flush toilet - and the associated plumbing - to the court, and his facilities have become the hottest new thing.
However, his water lines have a disturbing tendency to spring leaks, and his efforts to keep everything running become more and more frantic. It turns out that Sylvain isn't an engineer or plumber at all. Rather, his entrepreneurial vision depends on magic - and a captive.

*****“Capitalism in the 22nd Century, or AIr”, Geoff Ryman
Previously read in Horton's 'Year's Best.'
The anthology this originally appeared in was dedicated to Samuel Delany, which is why I skipped it – I’ve just never been able to become a fan. I’m not sure how this story relates to Delany, though. Rather, it seems to be a sequel, of sorts, to Ryman’s short story/novel, “Air: Or, Have Not Have.” The novel shows us the inception of a totally wireless Internet. In this story, we jump ahead and see where that innovation has taken the world. The theme: The artificial intelligences that humans create to serve us will eventually become our masters. It’s an arguably over-done theme, but this is a very well-done, excellent iteration of it.
Two Brazilian women have scrimped and saved and had irreversible medical procedures done in order to be able to join a secret, illegal colony mission to a distant planet. The story itself follows their frantic, fearful journey to the spacecraft. Along the way, though, we explore power structures, interconnectivity, and cost/benefit relations. The most obvious is that between human and the AI networks that they depend on. The second is more traditional, political power structures, between a dominant economy and the smaller ones surrounding it. And finally, we also find out that the relationship between two individuals that we initially saw as cooperative equals are not quite that, either. Subtle and thought-provoking… I thought it was excellent.

***“Emergence”, Gwyneth Jones
In a future where AIs are fully sentient beings, a cop who happens to be one of the oldest born-humans still alive tracks down a petty criminal you happens to be a young AI. But things go unexpectedly wrong, and she must re-evaluate her life expectations. The brief summary makes it sound like a crime story, but it's really more of an exploration of a potential post-humanist society.

****“The Deepwater Bride” by Tamsyn Muir
Previously read in Horton's 'Best...'
There’s been quite a bit of work coming out lately with Lovecraftian influences updated for a modern setting. For example, Daryl Gregory’s ‘Harrison Squared.’ I think that this story would definitely share an audience with that one.
Hester has never been one of the ‘cool’ girls – she’s always been a bit peculiar, and it shows, even though the kids at school might not know that she’s part of an ancient family of seers and chroniclers, and that he life’s destiny is to document the coming of a leviathan horror which will lay waste to the land (including demolishing WalMart.) But when Hester meets a girl named Rainbow who’s a disturbing but alluring combination of trendy and sociopathic – and who may be doomed in the coming upheaval – her objective standpoint as observer and documentarian may change.

***“Dancy vs. the Pterosaur”, Caitlin R. Kiernan
I've read more than one of Kiernan's stories featuring Dancy Flammarion, the albino drifter who's guided by an angel to do battle with various supernatural beings. Here, she has a brief encounter with what seems to be a dragon - and also, an encounter with a scientifically-minded young girl with an ambition to become a herpetologist. Unfortunately, I didn't think it was the best of these stories: it was barely the equivalent of a chapter in Dancy's saga; the science-vs.-religion debate didn't really cover any new or interesting angles, and it was missing both climax and resolution. I still really enjoy Kiernan's writing, but didn't find this to be the strongest example of it.

*****“Calved”, Sam J. Miller
While this story has a future setting, the setting - while extremely well-drawn - is not essential to the plot. It really a story about a father's relationship with his son. The father - the narrator - is forced by poverty to work a job that takes him away from home for months at a time. His now-teen son is growing away from him during those absences, becoming more and more distant. The father wants nothing more than to recapture their closeness - but isn't sure how to go about it.
It's heartbreaking - and utterly believable. Reminded me a bit of the excellent Maureen McHugh.

***“The Heart’s Filthy Lesson”, Elizabeth Bear
Previously read in 'Old Venus.'
I’m not getting the connection to the David Bowie song referenced in the title…
Other than that, this is a pretty good sci-fi adventure. An exo-archaeologist goes on a dangerous solo mission in an attempt to find a lost city: and, in the process, ‘prove’ herself to her over-achieving lover. A fight with alien megafauna features prominently. I loved all the details here – the setting, the ‘throwaway’ details about technology, future social attitudes, plant and animal life. However, the central psychodrama involving the main character and her lover didn’t really grab me.

***“The Machine Starts”, Greg Bear
Previously read in 'Future Visions.'
Experimental quantum computing leads to unforeseen side effects among the team of physicists working on the project. More ‘cautionary’ than I expected.

****“Blood, Ash, Braids”, Genevieve Valentine
Previously read in 'Operation Arcana.'
Historically interesting, AND a rousing good tale. A group of Russian WWII fighter pilots, all women, are assigned horribly dangerous missions. A bit of witchcraft may help them stay alive…

*****“Hungry Daughters of Starving Mothers”, Alyssa Wong
Yes, the vampire genre has been done to death, but every so often we still get a twist on it that is fresh & original. Here we are given a tale of love and predation among Asian women in present-day New York City. (Bret Easton Ellis meets Amy Tan? ;-) I also think this would appeal to fans of Tanith Lee).
I liked the nuanced treatment of relationships between the characters, and the idea that a vampire might be irrevocably affected by the person whose essence they consume. Wong is definitely an author I'll be keeping my eye out for in the future.

*****“The Lily and the Horn”, Catherynne Valente
Previously read at: http://www.fantasy-magazine.com/podcasts/the-lily-and-the-horn/
In a fairytale-like future, wars were eschewed as pointless, wasteful exercises of violence. Battlefields merely resulted in mass death - why not instead settle conflicts by a contest of poison?
Thus began the tradition of wars fought at a dinner table. Of course, human nature being what it is, it wasn't long before these toxic dinners no longer involved merely two rival leaders. Soon, the leaders sent proxies in their stead. Then, many proxies. So - mass death of the innocent is still bound to occur, but some things have changed. Since poison has always been the traditional realm of women, he now have schools where some women train to be well versed in the uses of exotic poisons - and others who become experts in ways of combating poison's effects and knowing the antidotes.
In this world, Valente tells us a tragic love story.
Lush and lyrical language encases fascinating and well-developed ideas - and a plot which is moving and lovely in itself. Loved it.

***“The Empress in Her Glory”, Robert Reed
Our new alien overlords prefer a hands-off approach. To manage affairs on Earth, they quietly select the best candidate: a widow who works at an insurance company, who writes an obscure blog in her spare time. Well-crafted.

***“The Winter Wraith”, Jeffrey Ford
While his wife's out of town, a man has the task of dismantling the Christmas tree and putting away the ornaments. It's always more fun putting up the tree than taking it down, but this time the endeavor becomes more difficult - and creepier - than one would expect.
The buildup here is done really well, a classic 'home alone' horror scenario with unexplained and threatening noises and clues, as well as a quite humorous aspect... but the ending really just fizzles out.

*****“Botanica Veneris: Thirteen Papercuts by Ida Countess Rathangan”, Ian McDonald
Previously read in 'Old Venus.'
Ian McDonald has been very hit-or-miss for me. Some of his works I've loved; others have left me cold. But - this one's a hit! A well-known & wealthy artist has embarked on a tour of Venus with her dear companion, ostensibly with the goal of creating artworks inspired by the alien flora. But it gradually becomes clear that the Countess has another agenda: she's trying to find her long-lost brother. Against a fascinating but seemingly-innocent background of lovely flowers emerges a welter of conflicts involving jewel thefts, dynastic marriages, bloody conflicts, power struggles, and the fomenting of revolution. The richly detailed and gorgeous worldbuilding and the compelling characters made me completely forgive the unanswered question the reader's left with.

*****“Little Sisters”, Vonda McIntyre
Previously read (purchased from Book View Cafe).
Boy, did this one squick me out.
I think that's why I started out with 4 stars, but after letting it coagulate, I think it deserves 5. The fact that's it's truly disturbing is a good thing.
At the outset, we see a soldier, retrieved and brought back home long after a dangerous and successful solo mission. He anticipates congratulations, honor, and tangible reward for his accomplishments... but not everything transpires as he expects.
Saying too much would be spoiling the well-crafted way in which McIntyre reveals the deeper aspects of the story, but with lean and concise prose, she conjures a strikingly original alien species with a social agenda, power structure and ideals that a reader is likely to find both troubling and believable.
Vonda McIntyre, in my opinion, is an author who has not received the prominence she deserves - and this story shows that she's still at the top of her game.

****“Ghosts of Home”, Sam J. Miller
In this alternate reality, it's an accepted fact that every house has its own spirit - a spirit which can manifest in different ways, but which must be propitiated. This hasn't stopped this reality from having a subprime mortgage scandal very similar to our own. Houses are being foreclosed everywhere, inhabitants forced out and whole neighborhoods left vacant. It's our narrator's job (an underpaid, underappreciated job) to go leave offerings to try to calm down the spirits of these empty homes. She's not supposed to actually talk and converse with the spirits... but of course, one day she does - and that's the fulcrum point upon which everything will change.

**“The Karen Joy Fowler Book Club”, Nike Sulway
Previously read in Horton's 'Year's Best.'
Perhaps I’d have appreciated this more if I was more familiar with the work of Karen Joy Fowler? I’m not, so I can’t say how it comments on her oeuvre.
As it was, I didn’t really enjoy this story of doomed-to-extinction rhinoceroses puttering about, planning book club meetings, buying things on eBay, checking facebook, and trying to find comfort in each other. Rhinos or no rhinos, this felt like the sort of supposedly-meaningful banal and quotidian chick-lit that I just don’t care for.

***“Oral Argument”, Kim Stanley Robinson
Presented as a one-sided conversation. (Is there a specific name for this writing technique? I feel like there is, and that I've forgotten it.) The voice we hear is that of a lawyer/spokesperson who's been subpoenaed by the Supreme Court for questioning regarding a patent case. Apparently, the scientists he's representing discovered a technique allowing humans to photosynthesize. And apparently, this technique has caused quite a lot of chaos in society - or has it really?

**“Drones”, Simon Ings
Previously read in Horton's 'Best of.'
In a near-future where we’ve wiped out the bees, British society has reshaped itself in strange and disturbing forms. Because, oh yes, the bee plague pretty much wiped out women, too… and men have learned to get along (although, arguably, not ‘well’) without bees or females.
I liked the dystopic, Handmaid’s-Tale-esque feel to the story, but its intentional opacity didn’t really work that well for me.

*****“The Pauper Prince and the Eucalyptus Jinn”, Usman T. Malik
I'd heard good things about this story before reading it, and it lived up to all of them. Our narrator grew up hearing stories from his grandfather about the dethroned Mughal princess he knew, living in poverty, running a tea shop in Pakistan which has protected by a jinn. Those tales didn't seem significant to him until his grandfather dies, and he goes back to Florida for the funeral, from his job as a professor in the Northeast. Among his grandfather's effects he finds a journal which will lead him to Lahore, in search of a mysterious and secret treasure.
The story seamlessly melds Indiana Jones-style adventure with philosophical speculation on the nature of the universe, and with a sharply-drawn, contemporary depiction of the relationships between lovers, communication between generations, and the difficulties of the immigrant experience. Yes, it's a lot to take on in one short story, but it all works perfectly.
My one quibble? I've always had a fundamental objection to stories where the magical quest object or secret knowledge must be destroyed because it's just too much for humanity to take, too dangerous for the world. I prefer the burden of curatorship or guardianship to the finality of destruction. This story does that with acknowledgement of this problem - but it does it anyway. And I still didn't love that aspect. But I still loved the story. It's amazing. Read it!

*****“Another Word for World”, Anne Leckie
Previously read in 'Future Visions.'
Leckie features a piece of new technology as an intrinsic and essential element to the story, discusses insightfully both the pros and cons of the ramifications of that technology – AND couches the discussion seamlessly within a tense, action-filled plot featuring two well-drawn, believable characters
Two ethnic groups, the Gidanta and the Raksamat, are approaching a state of war. Territorial tensions on a colonized planet have grown, with both sides claiming that the treaty that Ashiban Xidyla’s mother negotiated has been breached. Now, Ashiban was on the way to talks with the Sovereign of Iss, hoping to smooth over the dissension and maintain peace. However, their flyer was shot down – and now Ashiban, elderly and suffering from a concussion, and the Sovereign, who turns out to be an untried teenager – are the only survivors. Their only means of communication is through an automatic translation gadget, and it nearly immediately becomes clear that the gadget – equipped with the very software that made the famous treaty possible, a generation earlier – has some significant flaws.

Out of space! Last review in the comments... ( )
1 abstimmen AltheaAnn | Aug 4, 2016 |
Twenty-seven stories, some fairly lengthy. While published as a best-of selection, there are a few I'd have left out, but there are also some which I thought were among the most entertaining reading I've done in the field.

Probably my favorites were "The Lily and the Horn" by Catherynne M. Valente, and "The Empress in her Glory" by Robert Reed. "Lily" describes the preparations for a war: lords and kings have all married mistresses of either the art of poisoning or that of counteracting poisons. The two antagonists meet at a banquet at which food is prepared by the poisoner and antidotes by her counterpart. In this story, the two women are best friends, trained together as girls but no longer allowed to talk lest they betray their arts accidentally (although they have their ways of communicating). Beautifully portrayed, and what a way to wage war: none of the 99% dies.

In "The Empress in her Glory", an alien race secretly guiding humankind chooses a middle-aged take-no-prisoners office worker and feeds her information for her to use in her blog to push humanity to the next level.

Other stories to check out include "A Murmuration" by Alastair Reynolds; "Capitalism in the 22nd Century, or A.I.R." by Geoff Ryman, "Emergence" by Gwyneth Jones; "The Machine Starts" by Greg Bear; "Blood, Ash, Braids" by Genevieve Valentine; and "Oral Argument" by one of my favorite authors, Kim Stanley Robinson. ( )
  auntmarge64 | Apr 26, 2016 |
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» Andere Autoren hinzufügen

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Strahan, JonathanHerausgeberHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Bacigalupi, PaoloMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Bear, ElizabethMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Bear, GregMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Ford, JeffreyMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Gaiman, NeilMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Hopkinson, NaloMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Ings, SimonMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Jones, GwynethMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Kiernan, Caitlin R.MitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Leckie, AnnMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Link, KellyMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Malik, Usman T.MitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
McDonald, IanMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
McIntyre, Vonda N.MitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Miller, Sam J.MitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Muir, TamsynMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Reed, RobertMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Reynolds, AlastairMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Robinson, Kim StanleyMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Robson, KellyMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Ryman, GeoffMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Shawl, NisiMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Sulway, NikeMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Valente, Catherynne MMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Valentine, GenevieveMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Wilson, Kai AshanteMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Wong, AlyssaMitwirkenderCo-Autoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Harman, DominicUmschlagillustrationCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
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Fantasy. Fiction. Science Fiction. Short Stories. HTML:

Featuring

Paolo Bacigalupi Elizabeth Bear Greg Bear Jeffrey Ford Neil Gaiman Nalo Hopkinson Nisi Shawl Simon Ings Gwyneth Jones Caitlin R. Kiernan Anne Leckie Kelly Link Usman T. Malik Ian McDonald Vonda McIntrye Sam J. Miller Tamsyn Muir Robert Reed Alastair Reynolds Kim Stanley Robinson Kelly Robson Geoff Ryman Nike Sulway Catherynne Valente Genevieve Valentine Kai Ashante Wilson Alyssa Wong

Jonathan Strahan, the award-winning and much lauded editor of many of genre's best known anthologies is back with his 10th volume in this fascinating series, featuring the best science fiction and fantasy from 2015. With established names and new talent this diverse and ground-breaking collection will take the reader to the outer-reaches of space and the inner realms of humanity with stories of fantastical worlds and worlds that may still come to pass.

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