M John Harrison. Tourists.
Originally in : Amazon
A story notable for its appearing on Amazon as a teaser for a novel. And the story reads as such, a short vignette, with an interesting trio of characters (bar owner, fat alien barfly, man who provides a service taking tourists into a mostly unexplained strange part of the city).
Carol Emshwiller. All of Us Can Almost...
Originally in : SCI FICTION - online
A nominee for the James Tiptree Jr Award (for addressing gender issues), which suggests a paucity of good short SF in that milieu this year, as this story does't really push the boundaries in addressing such issues.
The protagonist is a female bird, exact genus not divulged. Eagle or vulture perhaps, although the basis of the story is that the species has grown so large as to be unable to fly (chicken, Ostrich?). However, as the species can splint broken legs, then presumably we are not to look too closely at that issue. The bird in hand is finally worn down by a younger bird to go flying, and sets out on a major trek to higher ground to attempt to rediscover this lost art. However, they are followed by a large male of the species, who has his eye on the little one for something to eat, and has other plans for her.
The presence of the male leads the female to a scrabbling attempt at flight, down a slope, and she ends up there with the baby and the injured male, encouraged to take steps to change the dead-end path of the species.
Rather than the gender issue, I was minded of a political angle - a large, indolent eagle, bloated and used to others feeding and supplying them, suddenly having a wake-up call and finding a need to take to the skies once more. Hmm, I wonder...
The third in what is evidently a connected series of shorts on SCI FICTION, so maybe the story loses a little on being taken out of its setting.
Walter Jon Williams. The Tang Dynasty Underwater Pyramid.
Originally in : SCI FICTION - online
Williams adds substantially to the milieu of stories involving Andean secret agents doubling as street musicians who are operating in tandem with a water ballet company operating on a passenger ship disguised as a Tang Dynasty Palace, who find that the salvage that they are after is threatening to pollute the sea. Heck, he virtually rewrites the whole milieu.
The sfnal bits come at the conclusion of a wryly humorous story, which is fine without, to my mind, being a Year's Best.
Conclusion.
One of the beefs with previous volumes has been addressed, as this year we have introductions to the stories, which improves the reading experience immeasurably. Next thing for ibooks to address is to have the author/title of each story appearing on each page, rather than simply giving the title of the book on each page. Also necessary is sorting out of typos - I'm not altogether clear as to how typos get in when the originals are in electronic format - one example : in Williams' story, the sentence starting 'Out of deference to me' which is correct on the SCI FICTION website, becomes 'Our of deference to me'. Just how does that happen when presumably an electronic original is given to the publisher to layout?
9 of the 13 stories in the volume in hand appeared in the four major SF sources (Asimovs, Analog, F&SF, SCI FICTION), which doesn't leave a whole lot of room for surprises. Fortunately, as I had been somewhat remiss in my reading of SCI FICTION's output, there was more new content for me than might have been the case.
None of this volume's 4 stories from Asimovs/Analog/F&SF duplicate the 12 from those sources in Hartwell/Cramer's 'Years Best SF 10' collection. Similarly none of the 4 from SCI FICTION duplicated the 2 from that source in Hartwell/Cramer. And the three anthologies sampled for this collection were different from the six anthologies Hartwell/Cramer drew upon, leaving no overlap at all in the stories selected by these competing volumes. So you could glue the two volumes together and make a more Dozois-sized anthology.
My feeling with this volume, as in previous years, is that the selections seem somewhat arbitrary, as if the rush to get the volume out so early (the initial publication date of February).
This Haber/Strahan volume has few stories than the Hartwell/Cramer volume, and unless you are looking for the shortest possible Year's Best read, I would put the latter volume ahead of the one in hand, as being the better buy of the two pocket sized collections this year. Now for the Dozois 22nd...
copyright Mark Watson 18th August 2005