顯示具有 dozois 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章
顯示具有 dozois 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章

2017年7月6日 星期四

"The Year's Best Science Fiction" (20th Annual Collection) edited by Gardiner Dozois (2002)


The 21st annual collection has already been reviewed here.  This anthology is just as big, and features many of the same authors.

This book came out at the same time as Sam Raimi's Spider-Man.  There's a long discussion of that movie in the introduction, and it's amusing to read the author's reflections on a possible superhero movie fad in the context of (only) Spider-Man, the first two X-men films, and Tim Burton's Batman.

1. "Breathmoss" by Ian R. Macleod

Islamic lesbians on another planet.  Really, that's the entire premise.  Beautifully written, but aside from puberty very little happens.  The description of the "gateways" near the end flies in the face of Relativity, and dampened my enthusiasm for the story.  Not so much science fiction as fantasy.

2. "The Most Famous Little Girl in the World" by Nancy Kress 

Two women find themselves at odds after one of them is abducted by aliens during their childhood.  I'm not entirely sure what the author was trying to get at with this story.  Her entry in the following year's anthology was much better.

3. "The Passenger" by Paul J. McAuley 

"Hard sci-fi" story about salvage workers who find a small girl aboard a damaged spaceship.  There's an ambiguity about this one that I really liked.  Hopefully I can track down some of the author's novels. 

4. "The Political Officer" by Charles Coleman Finlay

Political intrigue inside a wormhole.  Reminded me of Frank Herbert's Dragon in the Sea, and also his ConSentiency series.  Masterfully written story by an author new (at the time) to the genre. 

5. "Lambing Season" by Molly Gloss

Kind of a Western with an alien visitation thrown in.  Not very good.

6. "Coelacanths" by Robert Reed

No idea what this one's supposed to be about.  But it's very weird, and as far as I'm concerned that's a mark in its favor. 

7. "Presence" by Maureen F. McHugh

Genuinely moving story about an elderly couple and a temporary cure for Alzheimer's.  One of the best stories I've read in a long time.

8. "Halo" by Charles Stross

Generations and cultures clash in the midst of a "smart solar system."  The ending is bungled, although the story is full of interesting ideas.  I'd be curious to know what the author does with longer narratives.  Would his novels be as overwhelmingly dense?  Or would his ideas find fuller realization in a longer format? 

9. "In Paradise" by Bruce Sterling

Love story set in a surveillance state.  As of 2017 this story isn't quite so science fiction-y, but it's both well-written and entertaining. 

10. "The Old Cosmonaut and the Construction Worker Dream of Mars" by Ian McDonald

Quantum computing, AI, and the colonization of Mars.  There is a point beyond which a wealth of details make a good story tedious, and this story passes far beyond that point.  I'm also doubtful that the VR setup featured in the story would work given the distances involved.  Even at light speed, transmissions in either direction would take about 3 minutes at closest approach. 

11. "Stories for Men" by John Kessel

Quite possibly the best story in this collection.  The battle of the sexes continues in a matriarchal lunar colony.  This one owes a lot to Fight Club (one of the characters is even named Tyler Durden), but the author puts his own spin on the quest for manhood.  Much better than Kessel's entry in the 21st annual collection.

This one also brought John Varley to mind, but it's more subtle than any of Varley's stories.

12. "To Become a Warrior" by Chris Beckett

Not really a science fiction story, but still a solid tale of a young man falling in with the wrong crowd.

13. "The Clear Blue Seas of Luna" by Gregory Benford 

Incredibly pretentious story about the terraforming of the moon.  Could have done with less poetry.  Apparently this author was a "big deal" in 2002, despite the fact that I'd never heard of him.  Is his novel Timescape any good?  If I come across it I suppose I'll give it a go. 

14. "V.A.O." by Geoff Ryman

Cyberpunk story featuring a group of elderly hackers trying to solve a series of crimes.  Very good, though a bit dated now.

15. "Winters are Hard" by Steven Popkes 

A "modified" Montanan goes to live among wolves in a newly created nature reserve.  I liked this one a lot, and there's a truly weird plot development about halfway through.

It seems to me that this is the kind of story that would have made a younger Frank Herbert proud.  A concern for ecology, morally ambiguous characters, and body modification.  All the ingredients are there. 

16. "At the Money" by Richard Wadholm

Forgettable story about Hispanic stock traders in the future.  Half of it's concerned with market fluctuations, and the other half is concerned with made-up commodities.  According to the short intro the author is/was from Seattle, and this was one of his first published stories.

17. "Agent Provocateur" by Alexander Irvine

Well-written entry about the Butterfly Effect, but not really science fiction.

18. "Singleton" by Greg Egan

Damned if this isn't the hardest "hard sci-fi" I've ever read.  Quantum computers, the "Many Worlds interpretation," and artificial intelligence.  It's not a bad story, but the couple that give birth to the "Singleton" are a bit hard to relate to.  What they do is so far removed from natural childbirth (and child rearing) that one wonders how they could get through the average day without suffering some kind of existential breakdown.

19. "Slow Life" by Michael Swanwick 

Three astronauts discover a sentient lifeform on Titan.  More conventional than any other story here, but still very good. 

20. "A Flock of Birds" by James Van Pelt

A man watches birds during the post-apocalypse.  Would he really have that much difficulty identifying that one bird?  No, not if he knew birds.

21. "The Potter of Bones" by Eleanor Arnason

Furry, four-breasted space lesbians learn about Evolution.  It's terrible!

22. "The Whisper of Disks" by John Meaney 

Decent story which, given the short bio that precedes it, is largely autobiographical.  Interesting up until the very end, but the various story threads don't come together the way they ought to.

23."The Hotel at Harlan's Landing" by Kage Baker

Forgettable story about angels doing battle for the fate of mankind.  Brought to mind a number of bad movies and equally bad TV shows.

24. "The Millennium Party" by Walter Jon Williams

3-page long story about people who have brains that are the working equivalent of thumb drives.  About as memorable as story #23 above.

25. "Turquoise Days" by Alastair Reynolds

Humankind comes to terms with an alien life form on another planet.  Reminded me a lot of Frank Herbert and Bill Ransom's The Jesus Incident, although this story has at its center a certain dichotomy between good and evil that, in my opinion, weakens the narrative. 

And no, not every science fiction concept has been done better - and earlier - by Frank Herbert!  I'm sure that other authors have done similar things.  It's just that Herbert is the one that kept popping into my head.

2016年4月3日 星期日

"The Year's Best Science Fiction" edited by Gardner Dozois (2003)


This is a BIG book.  The subtitle promises "more than 300,000 words of fantastic fiction" and I can believe it.  This "twenty-first annual collection" clocks in at well over 600 pages, and the print was so small that I found myself wishing I had a magnifying glass handy.

Not an easy read by any stretch of the imagination, but well worth the effort.  As with any such collection, the stories can be divided into the "terrible," "average," "good," and "great" categories, and I'm thankful to report that most of the stories below can be assigned to the "good" category.  There are even a couple great ones to be found in their midst.

1. "Off on a Starship" by William Barton

A teenager finds himself stranded on the other side of the universe, with only a robot to turn to for companionship.  Definitely the worst story here, by turns boring and juvenile.

2. "It's All True" by John Kessel

A time traveler journeys back to the distant past to make Orson Welles a proposition.  Well written, but fails to do anything interesting with either the time travel premise or Orson Welles.

3. "Rogue Farm" by Charles Stross

Bioengineering leads to an almost unrecognizable future.  This is one of the great stories in this collection.  Gloriously weird.

4. "The Ice" by Steven Popkes

A cloning experiment leads a young hockey player to question his individuality.  An engaging story, though the scientific elements aren't really necessary.

5. "Ej-es" by Nancy Kress

A group of medics travel to a distant planet to heal the sick.  Solidly written and worth seeking out.

6. "The Bellman" by John Varley

A detective story set in space.  A killer is attacking pregnant women, and three police officers attempt to find out why.  Fairly predictable, and not all that good.

7. "The Bear's Baby" by Judith Moffett

A race of extraterrestrials transform the Earth into their private nature reserve for a sinister purpose.  The protagonist is annoying and so is the story.

8. "Calling Your Name" by Howard Waldrop

An aging widower finds a door to another universe.  It's an excellent story that doesn't feel the need to beat you over the head with the concepts involved.

9. "June Sixteenth at Anna's" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch

Another widower finally examines the hologram that was his dead wife's obsession.  Boring and depressing.

10. "The Green Leopard Plague" by Walter Jon Williams

This one was just trying to hard.  The idea of photosynthetic humans is interesting, but the converging narratives don't seem to converge properly.  Two halves of two good stories that don't add up to a convincing whole.

11. "The Fluted Girl" by Paolo Bacigalupi

My favorite story in this collection.  A pair of sisters are transformed into musical instruments by a scheming matriarch.  Like an extremely vivid nightmare that's hard to forget.

12. "Dead Worlds" by Jack Skillingstead

A terrestrial observer uploads his consciousness to a space probe light years away.  It's a great idea for a story, but the romantic elements in it don't amount to a satisfying conclusion.

13. "King Dragon" by Michael Swanwick

One of the weirder stories here - by turns futuristic, by turns medieval.  Not bad, but not great.

14. "Singletons in Love" by Paul Melko

A symbiotic organism falls in love with another organism that isn't.  It starts out well, but the ending feels wrong.

15. "Anomalous Structures of My Dreams" by M. Shayne Bell

An AIDS patient witnesses an outbreak of nanomachines.  An excellent story and probably my second favorite after "The Fluted Girl."

16. "The Cookie Monster" by Vernor Vinge

Several people wake up to the virtual nature of their reality.  This story has some great ideas in it, but it's hard to buy into the fact that they so quickly agree on what is taking place.

17. "Joe Steele" by Harry Turtledove

A fictional labor leader, Joe Steele, wins the election instead of Franklin D. Roosevelt.  Brings to mind the far superior "Man in the High Castle."

18. "Birth Days" by Geoff Ryman

One of the worst stories here.  A homosexual comes to terms with his homosexuality, and along the way devises a way for two men to conceive and give birth.  The author should have better researched the science involved, because many of the ideas he proposes don't make any sense.

19. "Awake in the Night" by John C. Wright

I thought this was brilliant in the beginning - until I found out that the brilliant ideas were borrowed from another author.  As a work of fan fiction, it degenerates quickly into a ponderous story with a predictable ending.

20. "The Long Way Home" by James Van Pelt

Man contemplates his place among the stars, with the broad sweep of history as a backdrop.  Not terrible, but kind of like warmed-over Arthur C. Clarke.

21. "The Eyes of America" by Geoffrey A. Landis

Another alternative history story, along the lines of the above-mentioned "Joe Steele." William Jennings Bryan hires Nikolai Tesla as his science adviser, initiating a grudge match between himself and the other candidate, Thomas Edison.  Seemed like this story needed something more.

22. "Welcome to Olympus, Mr. Hearst" by Kage Baker

Two immortals from the future visit the Hearst Castle on assignment.  Something like an Agatha Christie story with super-powered cyborgs.  Not very good.

23. "Night of Time" by Robert Reed

A human helps an alien remember something it's forgotten.  Also not very good.  Derivative stuff like this is what keep many thinking people away from science fiction.

24. "Strong Medicine" by William Shunn

An unemployed doctor contemplates suicide on the eve of a disaster.  Short but to the point.

25. "Send Me a Mentagram" by Dominic Green

One of the best stories here.  An antarctic expedition encounters the beginnings of a world plague.  Ghoulishly great.

26. "And the Dish Ran Away with the Spoon" by Paul Di Filippo

Another great one.  A surveillance specialist loses his girlfriend to his home appliances.  Yes, that's right.  His home appliances.  Weirdly great along the lines of the above-mentioned "Rogue Farm."

27. "Flashmen" by Terry Dowling

I suppose the author was trying to be enigmatic by leaving out most of the details.  To me it seems like lazy writing.  What's this story about?  I'm still not sure!

28. "Dragonhead" by Nick DiChario

A young man suffers from "information addiction."  That's it.  That's the whole story.

29. "Dear Abbey" by Terry Bisson 

A group of underground environmentalists attempt to solve the world's problems through a combination of time travel and genetic manipulation.  A good story, but not as disarmingly eccentric as some of the other stories in this collection.