Short Story
“Empty Planets”, by Rahul Kanakia (Interzone, January/February)
“Red in Tooth and Cog”, by Cat Rambo (F&SF, March/April)
“Red King”, by Craig de Lancey (Lightspeed, March)
“That Game We Played During the War”, by Carrie Vaughn
(Tor.com, March)
“All That Robot Shit”, by Rich Larson (Asimov’s, September)
“Openness”, by Alexander Weinstein (Beloit Fiction Journal, Spring)
“Between Nine and Eleven”, by Adam Roberts (Crises and Conflicts)
“Gorse Daughter, Sparrow Son”, by Alena Indigo Anne Sullivan
(Strange Horizons, August 1st
and 8th)
“In Skander, for a Boy”, by Chaz Brenchley (Beneath Ceaseless Skies, January 16)
“Laws of Night and Silk”, by Seth Dickinson (Beneath Ceaseless Skies, May 26)
“Ozymandias”, by Karin Lowachee (Bridging Infinity)
“A Fine Balance”, by Charlotte Ashley (F&SF, November/December)
“Rager in Space”, by Charlie Jane Anders (Bridging Infinity)
“Innumerable Glittering Lights”, by Rich Larson (Clockwork Phoenix 5)
“Dress Rehearsal”, by Adrian Tchaikovsky (Now We Are Ten)
“Something Happened Here, but We’re Not Quite Sure What it
Was”, by Paul McAuley (Tor.com, July)
“I’ve Come to Marry the Princess”, by Helena Bell (Lightspeed, November)
“A Non-Hero’s Guide to the Road of Monsters”, by A. T.
Greenblatt (Mothership Zeta, July)
“Things With Beards”, by Sam J. Miller (Clarkesworld, June)
“The Magical Properties of Unicorn Ivory”, by Carlos
Hernandez (The Assimilated Cuban’s Guide
to Quantum Santeria)
Lots of stories listed there, and they are all good stuff.
Noticeable is, of course, Rich Larson, who really had an excellent year. I
think there’s a nice mix, too, af fantasy and SF, some funny stories, some
quite dark, hard SF, far future SF, action, philosophy. I’m leaning towards the
top five listed stories (though, really, as with the other categories, all
these stories are worthy) for my nomination ballot. To consider those a bit
further:
“Empty Planets” is an achingly beautiful and rather
melancholy story set in the very far future, with a diminishing human race
realizing it is alone in the universe. The story focuses on two people from the
younger generation, one of who, a “recontactee” from a generation ship, looks
for evidence of intelligence among distant gas clouds.
“Red in Tooth and Cog” is a sometimes whimsical, clever, and
also quite affecting, story about abandoned robots in a city park who have
created their own ecology. The combination of sweetness and sharp imagination
really grabbed me.
“RedKing” tells of the title computer game, that causes its
users to become killers, and a “code monkey” whose job is to analyze the
software, both to understand what makes is dangerous, and to find evidence
against the maker – but that job is by its nature dangerous. It’s a slick,
exciting, and scary story.
“That Game We Played During the War” is a moving piece set in the aftermath of a war between a telepathic
race and non-telepaths, and two people who met during the war, and played chess
together, working out how to play even while one is a telepath, and how they
try to come to terms with peace.
“All That Robot
Shit” is (I believe) Rich Larson’s preferred title for the story published in Asimov’s
as “All That Robot …”. It’s about a robot and a human after an apocalypse of
some sort which means there probably aren’t many more humans – and about the
robot’s cooperation with the human – but more importantly his love for another
robot.
I think you mean Mothership Zeta, not Mothership Zero.
ReplyDeleteIs the Beloit Fiction Journal available online at all?
Oh, thanks, obviously I did mean Zeta. (Alas, it looks like Zero might represent the number of future issues, however.)
DeleteI read "Openness" in Weinstein's collection CHILDREN OF THE NEW WORLD (which I highly recommend), and I credit Beloit Fiction Journal because it appeared their first, but I've never seen a copy. (One of my college roommates had transferred from Beloit (to the University of Illinois, where I went), and he had a teeshirt reading "Harvard, Beloit of the East". I think most good small liberal arts colleges have teeshirts like that, mind you.)
...or the one I had, which said "Harvard: Stanford of the east".
ReplyDeleteI realize I've read just two (2) of the stories you list. Good grief!