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The Best of the Best, Volume 2: 20 Years of the Best Short Science Fiction Novels

par Gardner Dozois (Directeur de publication)

Autres auteurs: Greg Egan (Contributeur), Joe Haldeman (Contributeur), James Patrick Kelly (Contributeur), Nancy Kress (Contributeur), Ursula K. Le Guin (Contributeur)8 plus, Ian R. MacLeod (Contributeur), Ian McDonald (Contributeur), Maureen F. McHugh (Contributeur), Frederik Pohl (Contributeur), Alastair Reynolds (Contributeur), Robert Silverberg (Contributeur), Michael Swanwick (Contributeur), Walter Jon Williams (Contributeur)

Autres auteurs: Voir la section autres auteur(e)s.

Séries: Mammoth Science Fiction, The Best of the Best (1983-2002, novellas)

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2019134,646 (3.9)3
For more than twenty years "The Year's Best Science Fiction "has been recognized as the best collection of short science fiction writing in the universe and an essential resource for every science fiction fan. In 2005 the original "Best of the Best" collected the finest short stories from that series and became a benchmark in the SF field. Now, for the first time ever, Hugo Award-winning editor Gardner Dozios sifts through hundreds of stories and dozens of authors who have gone on to become some of the most esteemed practitioners of the form, to bring readers the ultimate anthology of short science fiction "novels" from his legendary series. Included are such notable short novels as: "Sailing to Byzantium" by Robert SilverbergIn the fiftieth century, people of Earth are able to create entire cities on a whim, including those of mythology and legend. When twentieth-century traveler Charles Philip accidentally lands in this aberrant time period, he is simultaneously obsessed with discovering more about this alluring world and getting back home. But in a world made entirely of man's creation, things are not always as they seem on the surface. "Forgiveness Day" by Ursula K. Le GuinLe Guin returns to her Hainish-settled interstellar community, the Edumen, to tell the tale of two star-crossed lovers who are literally worlds apart in this story of politics, violence, religion, and cultural disparity. "Turquoise Days" by Alastair ReynoldsOn a sea-wold planet covered with idyllic tropical oceans, peace seems pervasive. Beneath the placid water lurks an ominous force that has the potential to destroy all tranquility. Contributors include: Greg Egan; Joe Haldeman; James Patrick Kelly; Nancy Kress; Ursula K. Le Guin; Ian R. MacLeod; Ian McDonald; Maureen F. McHugh; Frederick Pohl; Alastair Reynolds; Robert Silverberg; Michael Swanwick; Walter Jon Williams With work spanning two decades, "The Best of the Best, Volume 2" stands as the ultimate anthology of short science fiction novels ever published in the world.… (plus d'informations)
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Despite the fact that it is riddled with typos, this book has some of the best SF novellas I have ever read. ( )
  burritapal | Oct 23, 2022 |
There's a list near the front of this book of other "Mammoth Book of..." titles. I find some of them hilarious:

Extreme Fantasy. What is that?
The Kama Sutra. Why not just buy the Kama Sutra?
On the Edge. I've less idea what this is than I have about the Extreme Fantasy...

Paranormal Romance. I want "Sub-normal Romance." The romance to be sub-normal, not the protagonists.

Women who Kill. What demographic is this marketed towards?

Moving on...first up is Sailing to Byzantium by Robert Silverberg. My experiences with Silverberg have been few and not great. I tried one of his novels in my early teens and gave up within 30 pages...twice. Last year I read a short alternative history novel in which plague had destroyed Europe as a power and South America and Asia were the dominant continents. It was really just a not overly exciting adventure, though - almost a waste of an idea. I started Sailing to Byzantium with a prejudice against it - I didn't want to like it at all.

In fact I did like it by the end, but still thought it was flawed - a ** effort. In the far future, apparently immortal citizens, of which there may be a few million at most, live a life of leisure, visiting re-creations of historical cities. There are also "visitors" from history and the protagonist, inevitably is one of these, a New Yorker from 1984. The tale is about a romance between the protagonist and a citizen and about mortality. It's main flaw is its very slow start. It feels very much like it needed to be a short story rather than a short novel. I was reminded of Moorcock's Dancers at the End of Time, although Silverberg's Citizens do not have the same level of individual creative powerin their hands. There is the same sense, though, of history having stalled - nothing changes at a cultural level anymore.

One of the advantages of an anthology is that it is a low risk way of trying authors you are not familiar with because they are mixed with people you trust already - you are almost certain to like some proportion of the content. The second novella in the volume is Surfacing by Walter Jon Williams who is an author I had previously not read. I will be keeping my eyes open for him in future, however - if I can retain his eminetly forgettable name! The story is one in which communicaion with ceteceans has become possible. How many of those have there been? This one is much more credible than any previous one I've read as it suggests that the process is difficult and somewhat uncertain at best. Humpbacked whales are alien, it transpires. (Not from another planet, just different.) The characters presented are all flawed, scarred by their upbringing but utterly convincing. The theme of identifying more with one's objects of study than the rest of humanity fascinated me, the plot gripped me despite its primary twist being guessable and the end left me wanting more. More time with these characters, more time in that world, more knowledge of the Dwellers in the Deep. ****

The Hemingway Hoax - Joe Haldeman
Another writer new to me and another excellent story. I started off just being irritated by another American writer paying homage to the massively over-rated, ridiculously macho drunkard whose redeeming feature (in my eyes) is his love of cats. But this story takes the influence of Hemmingway so far and makes a story that builds up to being riveting and then just goes crazy with a denouement that boggled my mind - I think it makes sense...
In this story, Hemingway is so influential and so macho that he causes the destruction of humanity - and something more than human has a vested interest in ensuring this - in every dimension of the Omniverse where Hemingway ever lived. A thwarted would-be author and Hemingway expert in need of money, a con-man and a wife much more cynical and demanding than Lady McBeth are not going to mess things up - are they? ****

Mr. Boy - James Patrick Kelly
Apparently everybody should grow up sometime.
This look at what the super-rich might do to themselves if humanity ever completely mastered genetic manipulation is imaginative in its details but its plot is a bit weak - a thriller plot that goes almost nowhere, a family drama that doesn't seem to pack quite enough emotional punch and a revelation that doesn't shock or even surprise. Somehow the whole thing adds up to nearly zero. **

Beggars in Spain - Nancy Kress
This is one of those SF stories where one discovery is postulated and its consequences for individuals and societies are explored as the story develops. In this case, other discoveries have been made but their impact has already largely absorbed by the world. The new discovery is a genetic modification that eliminates the need for sleep. Kress writes a compelling story about convincing characters and examines a number of questions about the basis of society and the nature of social responsibility. The story ends abruptly with many plot threads still unravelled and the question of what to do about the beggars in Spain hastily and not too clearly answered and it is obvious that a novel of 2 or 3 times the length is required to handle the material properly. There are also one or two extra questions related to the fact that only at least moderately wealthy parents can afford the genetic treatment that deserve examination that are not tackled. I beleive Kress has published an expanded version and I look forward to reading it any her other works. The best discovery of the anthology so far. ****

Griffin's Egg - Mike Swanwick
This is another well-written work by an author new to me. It, like Beggars in Spain, needed more space to do justice to the material, but this time perhaps only 50% extra. The ideas presented seem to be only an extreme extrapolation of the current trend towards greater numbers of drugs intended to treat mental health problems...however, a community trapped on the moon after a "limited nuclear exchange" on Earth, it seems like human nature itself is one big mental health problem, liable to wipe-out the species. What can be done?

Outnumbering the Dead - Frederick Pohl
Here's another writer new to me, though he has been a Big Name in SF seemingly forever. And living forever (or not) is the theme of this story, as it has been of a number of others in this anthology. As in Sailing to Byzantium, the protagonist is a mortal in a world of immortals (barring accidents, murder or suicide). He's a dancer, a star, a real Lovey and approaching the end of his life far faster than he knows, despite being aware of his mortality.

This story starts somewhat irritating, with its superficially shallow characters getting ready for a comical dance version of Sophicles' Oedipus but as it slowly advances becomes a poignant story of a man who finds love, happiness and most of all contentment and peace as he recognises that time is very short for him and he joins a habitat going in search of exoplanets around Tau Ceti.

It seems to me the message is that humans need a purpose in order to be genuinely content - and immortal humans need one even more because it is too easy to postpone everything when you have forever. ***

Forgiveness Day - Ursula K. leGuin
The introduction to this story by the editor of the anthology says that it is a return to a setting LeGuin has used before - two planets colonised by South Africans. What ever that previous work is, it's not one I've read. That didn't detract in the slightest from my enjoyment of this work which shows LeGuin's usual strengths; character development, deep empathy, wonderful prose. Fierce anger at injustice and inequality are on display again in a story about the meaning of freedom and the strength it takes to overcome one's own cultural background and upbringing and see their faults clearly.

Most of the issues raised in this novel are tackled more thoroughly in the recent Annals of the Western Shore, the exception being gender equality. This work did not seem superfluous, however, as the story itself is completely different and arises so naturally out of character and context. Only on reflection does it become clear just how much skill and effort it must take to create such an apparently natural, inevitable story. I think LeGuin works out almost every last detail of her characters' lives in order to fit the tale she wants to tell and often most of this background ends up in the finished work. This can cause the imbalance between character and incident, evident in some of her fiction, that is probably her biggest weakness as a writer. In this case, however, the urge to tell the author to cut to the chase was never very strong. ****

The Cost to be Wise - Maureen F. McHugh
This starts badly with a title that surely needs to be "The Price of Wisdom". It doesn't really get much better from there. A tale of intervention by technologically advanced humans in a lost colony of of iron age humans wends slowly to a violent conclusion without being overly clear about who might be wiser at the end or at what cost.

Oceanic - Greg Egan
Here's a pro-atheist propaganda piece. It postulates that "religious experiences" have a bio-chemical explanation. The story is not as much fun as the only other patently pro-atheist novel that springs to my mind, Crow Road by Iain Banks. The aspect of the work that really caught my attention was the background context which has some significance to the story but is only ever discussed obliquely. Understanding exactly how and why humans arrived on the alien planet in Oceanic is largely surmise and inference and that mystery was much more intriguing than why drowning people there undergo a religious conversion... ***

Tendeleo's Story - Ian McDonald
I read this in a seperae volume and did not read it again here. Unusually for an SF novel, it is set in Africa. I remember it as slow to get to the point and a bit of a let down. **

New Light on the Drake Equation - Ian R. McLoed
Here's a story about SETI. It's slow, predictable and unoriginal. Read Contact by Carl Sagan instead - that's clever, thought provoking and has some surprises. *

Turquoise Days - Alastair Reynolds
Wales' very own composer of Space Opera with brains is represented by a story that is somewhat a-typical. It isn't space opera, for a start, though the brains are all present and correct. This is a story about the Jugglers and humans who research them. If you don't know what the Jugglers are, this story will probably serve reasonably well as an introduction. It's a good story but the thing I find odd is that it was originally published together with Diamond Dogs, which is of similar length and just brilliant. How did Dozois end up choose the lesser of those two? *** ( )
  Arbieroo | Jul 17, 2020 |
Sailing to Byzantium by Robert Silverberg
A 'visitor' experiences life in the far distant future amongst the immortal race that humans have become. The ennui of an endless life is mitigated for the citizens by their exploration of cities from the past that are continually torn down and remodelled. Charles Phillips - the visitor from the twentieth century - drifts with the crowd that have adopted him and forms an attachment that becomes love.

There - that's the plot (apart from the twist in the tail). Sounds pretty inconsequential when you boil it down to the bare bones, but Silverberg creates a great atmosphere and I was given a real feeling of space by a number of scenes being set in high vantage points. The writing is very good indeed and this is certainly worthy of inclusion in this 'Best' collection.
3.5 stars

Surfacing by Walter Jon Wiliiams
A xenobiologist is researching the ocean on a planet and trying to untangle the language of its abyssal inhabitants. The entanglement of a love interest; a warped childhood; and a mysterious puppet-master make this a tale with lots of threads.

I quite enjoyed this: a very different setting and some interesting ideas are pulled together to pad out quite a slight story. The writing is very good, so I might keep my eye open for more works by Williams, who is a new author to me. Whether the work qualifies for inclusion in this 'Best of' collection, I'm not sure.
3.5 stars

The Hemingway Hoax by Joe Haldeman
A scholar enticed into the hoax of the title becomes mixed up with some n-dimensional creatures who aim to stop him doing whatever it was he was going to do. Except things don't turn out as expected, and in the end something else happens. I'm not sure what, though. If anyone knows, can they drop me a note?

A very strange story that gets stranger as it goes on, to the point where I had no idea what was going on: that left me pretty cold. Not my cup of tea at all. Couldn't recommend it.
3 stars

Mr. Boy by James Patrick Kelly
This story about rejuvenation techniques and extreme body modification and AI was written in a pretty conventional style. Well actually, rather than being about the science fiction motifs that I just mentioned, perhaps the story is really just about growing up?

The story flowed nicely and kept me involved. I'm not familiar with James Patrick Kelly, but he certainly deserves further inspection.
3.5 stars

Beggars in Spain by Nancy Kress
Genetic experiments lead to a new race of humanity with no need to sleep and the added boost to intelligence that is a side-effect. It doesn't take long for the down-sides to become apparent, and for the masses to start assessing where they stand now.

I've seen the story mentioned many times before (although that might be the full novel version), and I'm pleased to say that it lived up to its reputation. I'm quite happy to recommend this as the best of the short novels in this collection so far.
4 stars

Griffins Egg by Michael Swanwick
4 stars

Outnumbering the Dead by Frederik Pohl
4 stars

Forgiveness Day by Ursula K. Le Guin
4.5 stars

The Cost to Be Wise by Maureen F. McHugh
4 stars

Oceanic Greg Egan
4.5 stars

New Light on the Drake Equation Ian R. MacLeod
A SETI-obsessed recluse is the last one of his kind left after substantial numbers of the science fiction tropes (that he remembers from his childhood reading) have come to pass. Still no signals picked up in spite of the advances in technology, but those advances have also altered the terms in the Drake Equation to make success even more unlikely. Will alcohol and a lost love change his attitude?

4.5 stars

Tendeleo's Story by Ian McDonald
Not read - will read as part of Chaga series

Turquoise Days by Alastair Reynolds
Not read - already read

to be continued ( )
  Noisy | Dec 27, 2011 |
A mixed bag of stories, some of which I really enjoyed and some of which left me feeling cold. A few themes are recurrent - longevity or immortality and contact between advanced and non-advanced civilisations being amongst them. Some mood pieces would have been better short stories; others teem with ideas that deserve the space of a novel; and others suit this length perfectly. Surfacing, Turquoise Days and Forgiveness Day stick in the memory for me. Summaries of all the stories (without spoilers) are below. One irritating factor is the voice of the editor in the introductions to each story - his voice is a little overbearing.

Sailing to Byzantium (Robert Silverberg): A man from 20th century New York is transported to a far future Earth where the only cities are ones created temporarily and then destroyed; they function as amusement parks for the few humans left. As he tries to make sense of their existence, he makes discoveries about them and about himself.

Surfacing (Walter Jon Williams): A xenobiologist studies deepwater creatures that noone has ever seen, with the help of some imported humpback whales. Someone else joins in - and then more than he expected. An unlikeable anti-hero, who isn't much redeemed by the end, but an intriguing setting and well-written.

The Hemingway Hoax (Joe Haldeman): Haldeman revisits the broad themes of the Forever War with people who exist outside time and can travel through it to alter events to produce or thwart particular outcomes. But the setting is quite different; the travellers aren't a military outfit, and it's never clear what outcomes they are concerned with. What's clear is that a 20th-century scholar of Hemingway, his wife and their associates are central to something that worries them a lot. One of Haldeman's better stories for me.

Mr. Boy (James Patrick Kelly) A future in which the rich can indulge in endlessly self-indulgent body modification (the lead character's mother, for instance, is an immobile life-size statue of liberty) and the prolongation of childhood. But there are the ppor as well, and this is a different sort of rich-boy-poor-girl story and a coming of age tale wrapped up into one.

Beggars in Spain (Nancy Kress) At one level, an exploration of the potential good and bad in genetic enhancement, and particularly of the possible changes that result from removing the need to sleep. But it's also a story about a family, about daughters who aren't treated equally and about discrimination.

Griffins Egg (Michael Swanwick) A moon with a large-enough population that it begins to have its own politics, secret police and machinations. And then it is cut off from Earth and plunged into civil war.

Outnumbering the Dead (Frederik Pohl) In a world where everyone lives just about forever, one or two do not. One, who begins as a spoilt diva-like entertainer learns about other forms of human endeavour and learns to love life and to acknowledge death.

Forgiveness Day (Ursula K McGuin) Set in her Hainish universe, an envoy struggles on a world awaiting admittance to the Ekumen, where slavery and sex discrimination are still part of everyday life. The writing conveys well the difficulty facing the diplomat, who cannot truly understand the society in which they must operate and can cause offence in many ways and never know they have done so.

The Cost to Be Wise (Maureen F McHugh) A tale of human contact with more primitive people and the unfortunate consequences of interfering with things that aren't understood. But also of the need to break the rules and interfere just a little. Bleak.

Oceanic (Greg Egan) A tale of religion, orthodox and heretic in a far-off world with two groups of people - freelanders and firmlanders - who live on the ocean and on land. They know they're descended from settlers of some form, whom they call Angels. Scientific research, love and politics are woven into an atmospheric story of the maturation of an individual.

Tendeleo's Story (Ian McDonald) It's the early 21st century and we're in Africa, where a mysterious something is consuming the landscape and everything on it slowly and relentlessly, leaving behind an alien ecology. The Chaga is present elsewhere on Earth, and international efforts are underway to monitor it and move the refugee populations out of its way. Tendeleo is one of those affected. But this refugee's story becomes one of hope, born out of despair.

New Light on the Drake Equation (Ian R Macleod) The Drake equation relates to the likelihood that other planets in our galaxy are populated with intelligent life. In a story that's dreamlike and yet barren, we follow a broken individual who has spent his life in pursuit of evidence from distant radio emissions, giving up love and friendship in the process. In the end, we're never sure if it returns.

Turquoise Days (Alastair Reynolds) On the seaworld of Turquoise, investigation of the perplexing vegetable-like lifeform called Jugglers is possibly about to break new ground. A visit from a starship from a more advanced world might bring promise or threats. It takes many twists and turns of the always-tense plot before we find out which it might be. Some really inventive ideas in a well-written story that aches to be expanded to a full-length novel. ( )
  kevinashley | Jul 11, 2011 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Dozois, GardnerDirecteur de publicationauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Egan, GregContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Haldeman, JoeContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Kelly, James PatrickContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Kress, NancyContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Le Guin, Ursula K.Contributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
MacLeod, Ian R.Contributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
McDonald, IanContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
McHugh, Maureen F.Contributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Pohl, FrederikContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Reynolds, AlastairContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Silverberg, RobertContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Swanwick, MichaelContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Williams, Walter JonContributeurauteur secondairetoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Roberts, JoeArtiste de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé

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For more than twenty years "The Year's Best Science Fiction "has been recognized as the best collection of short science fiction writing in the universe and an essential resource for every science fiction fan. In 2005 the original "Best of the Best" collected the finest short stories from that series and became a benchmark in the SF field. Now, for the first time ever, Hugo Award-winning editor Gardner Dozios sifts through hundreds of stories and dozens of authors who have gone on to become some of the most esteemed practitioners of the form, to bring readers the ultimate anthology of short science fiction "novels" from his legendary series. Included are such notable short novels as: "Sailing to Byzantium" by Robert SilverbergIn the fiftieth century, people of Earth are able to create entire cities on a whim, including those of mythology and legend. When twentieth-century traveler Charles Philip accidentally lands in this aberrant time period, he is simultaneously obsessed with discovering more about this alluring world and getting back home. But in a world made entirely of man's creation, things are not always as they seem on the surface. "Forgiveness Day" by Ursula K. Le GuinLe Guin returns to her Hainish-settled interstellar community, the Edumen, to tell the tale of two star-crossed lovers who are literally worlds apart in this story of politics, violence, religion, and cultural disparity. "Turquoise Days" by Alastair ReynoldsOn a sea-wold planet covered with idyllic tropical oceans, peace seems pervasive. Beneath the placid water lurks an ominous force that has the potential to destroy all tranquility. Contributors include: Greg Egan; Joe Haldeman; James Patrick Kelly; Nancy Kress; Ursula K. Le Guin; Ian R. MacLeod; Ian McDonald; Maureen F. McHugh; Frederick Pohl; Alastair Reynolds; Robert Silverberg; Michael Swanwick; Walter Jon Williams With work spanning two decades, "The Best of the Best, Volume 2" stands as the ultimate anthology of short science fiction novels ever published in the world.

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