The Year's Best Science Fiction: Third Annual Collection

, #3

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Gardner Dozois: The Year's Best Science Fiction: Third Annual Collection (Hardcover, 1986, Bluejay)

Hardcover, 626 pages

English language

Published April 1986 by Bluejay.

ISBN:
978-0-312-94486-5
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ISFDB ID:
33434

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(13 reviews)

13 • Introduction: Summation: 1985 • essay by Gardner Dozois 27 • The Jaguar Hunter • (1985) • novelette by Lucius Shepard 50 • Dogfight • (1985) • novelette by William Gibson and Michael Swanwick 69 • Fermi and Frost • (1985) • short story by Frederik Pohl 84 • Green Days in Brunei • (1985) • novella by Bruce Sterling 129 • Snow • (1985) • short story by John Crowley 144 • The Fringe • [The Mormon Sea] • (1985) • novelette by Orson Scott Card 166 • The Lake Was Full of Artificial Things • (1985) • short story by Karen Joy Fowler 178 • Sailing to Byzantium • (1985) • novella by Robert Silverberg 232 • Solstice • (1985) • novelette by James Patrick Kelly 265 • Duke Pasquale's Ring • [Doctor Eszterhazy] • (1985) • novella by Avram Davidson 304 • More Than the Sum …

19 editions

reviewed The Year's Best Science Fiction by Gardner Dozois (Year's Best Science Fiction (14))

Best My Undercarriage

The first half of this book was a massive trial, a showcase of the worst tendencies of back-in-the-day science fiction (a nerdy boyscout attitude to science, grim attitudes to women, a disturbing eagerness to sentimentalize "primitive" cultures, and above all the length, the length, my god the way some of these buggers just go ON.) The concise and darkly ironic "The Last Homosexual" by Paul Park was the only good bit.

Things do pick up in the second part, with some good stories by Gwyneth Jones (I mean, I've yet to read a bad story by her), Steven Utley and Cherry Wilder. Stephen Baxter, who I'd come to associate with long-winded "hard" sci-fi impresses with a very short, very hard-hitting and emotional story called "MSOB", and the long final story, "The Robot's Twilight Companion" by Tony Daniels, was also quite engrossing. It's very jargon-heavy - if stories were bags and …

reviewed The Year's Best Science Fiction by Gardner Dozois (Year's Best Science Fiction (10))

None

Twenty-four science fiction stories, a collection made in 1993, so most of them were first published in 1991 or 1992. As with any anthology, it's a mixed bag, some long, some short, some good, some mediocre.

Like a lot of science fiction stories they are set in the future, and in some cases, reading them 30 years after publication, the future has become present, and the envisaged social, technological or medical changes have not followed the predicted direction. Many of these are based on the extrapolation of contemporary trends, so that i one read them thirty years ago, one would think "This could happen,", but when one reads them thirty years later, one things, "but this didn't happen."

More than one of the stories concerns identity, how a clone of a person relates to the original, and whether clones or originals are disposable. Such, for example, are "Dust" by Greg …

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Subjects

  • American Science fiction
  • English Science fiction