Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

The Best of World SF

Volume 1

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
Twenty-six new short stories representing the state of the art in international science fiction.'Rare and wonderful' The Times 'The most important anthology of SF short fiction since Dangerous Visions' Adam Roberts 'Fizzes with great ideas and wonderful writing... Now this book exists, it feels absurd it didn't exist sooner' SFXThe future is coming. It knows no bounds, and neither should science fiction.They say the more things change the more they stay the same. But over the last hundred years, science fiction has changed. Vibrant new generations of writers have sprung up across the globe, proving the old adage false. From Ghana to India, from Mexico to France, from Singapore to Cuba, they draw on their unique backgrounds and culture, changing the face of the genre one story at a time.Prepare yourself for a journey through the wildest reaches of the imagination, to visions of Earth as it might be and the far corners of the universe. Along the way, you will meet robots and monsters, adventurers and time travellers, rogues and royalty.In The Best of World SF, award-winning author Lavie Tidhar acts as guide and companion to a world of stories, from never-before-seen originals to award winners, from twenty-three countries and seven languages. Because the future is coming and it belongs to us all.Stories:'Immersion' by Aliette de Bodard; 'Debtless' by Chen Qiufan (trans. from Chinese by Blake Stone-Banks); 'Fandom for Robots' by Vina Jie-Min Prasad; 'Virtual Snapshots' by Tlotlo Tsamaase; 'What The Dead Man Said' by Chinelo Onwualu; 'Delhi' by Vandana Singh; 'The Wheel of Samsara' by Han Song (trans. from Chinese by the author); 'Xingzhou' by Yi-Sheng Ng; 'Prayer' by Taiyo Fujii (trans. from Japanese by Kamil Spychalski); 'The Green Ship' by Francesco Verso (trans. from Italian by Michael Colbert); 'Eyes of the Crocodile' by Malena Salazar Maciá (trans. from Spanish by Toshiya Kamei); 'Bootblack' by Tade Thompson; 'The Emptiness in the Heart of all Things' by Fabio Fernandes; 'The Sun From Both Sides' by R.S.A. Garcia; 'Dump' by Cristina Jurado (trans. from Spanish by Steve Redwood); 'Rue Chair' by Gerardo Horacio Porcayo (trans. from Spanish by the author); 'His Master's Voice' by Hannu Rajaniemi; 'Benjamin Schneider's Little Greys' by Nir Yaniv (trans. from Hebrew by Lavie Tidhar); 'The Cryptid' by Emil H. Petersen (trans. from Icelandic by the author); 'The Bank of Burkina Faso' by Ekaterina Sedia; 'An Incomplete Guide...' by Kuzhali Manickavel; 'The Old Man with The Third Hand' by Kofi Nyameye; 'The Green' by Lauren Beukes; 'The Last Voyage of Skidbladnir' by Karin Tidbeck; 'Prime Meridian' by Silvia Moreno-Garcia; 'If At First You Don't Succeed' by Zen Cho
  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from April 26, 2021
      This excellent anthology proves editor Tidhar’s assertion that science fiction should no longer be thought of as “white, male, and American” with 26 exemplary stories from 21 countries. French author Aliette de Bodard draws on her Vietnamese heritage in the Nebula Award–winning “Immersion” to examine the strain of keeping one’s culture alive within a dominant interstellar civilization. Francesco Verso’s “The Green Ship,” translated from the Italian by Michael Colbert, sees a boatload of refugees crossing the Mediterranean from Benghazi in the near future. In the poignant “Delhi” from Indian author Vandana Singh, a young man copes with a barrage of glimpses into the past, present, and future of that ancient city. Cuban author Malena Salazar Macia shows how post-human technology can recreate the primitive past in “Eyes of the Crocodile,” translated by Toshiya Kamei. “Xingzhou” by Singaporean author Ng Yi-Sheng energetically whips mythic and literary tropes into a witty souffle. And the Hugo-winning “If at First You Don’t Succeed, Try, Try Again” by Malaysian author Zen Cho is an amusing and moving tale of a larval dragon’s millennium-long wait to ascend to its true form. Worthwhile both as a survey of international sci-fi and on a story-by-story level, this wonderful anthology should be a hit with any sci-fi fan.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from June 1, 2021
      The range, inventiveness, and creativity among these 26 tales make a definitive case for why the doors of science fiction should be thrown open to international and translated stories. The stories range from focused and weird to vast and complex, but all of them are grounded in emotional cores and an inventive fervor. An antiquated robot starts writing fan fiction for anime Hyperdimension Warp Record in "Fandom for Robots" by Vina Jie-Min Prasad. An incredible interstellar chess game whirls around a love story in R.S.A. Garc�a's "The Sun From Both Sides"; an imugi is determined to become a dragon in Zen Cho's uplifting "If At First You Don't Succeed." A young woman with dreams of Mars struggles just to pay rent in a dystopic Mexico City in Silvia Moreno-Garcia's novella "Prime Meridian." Refugees settle on a traveling micronation; Ever-Typhoid causes strange delusions; a young boy befriends a man with a hand growing from his back; a survivor returns home to Igbo state New Biafra for her father's funeral; multiple revolutions are fought on a continent made of stars. All of these stories come together to create a rich and well-curated collection full of surprising narratives and vast worlds that will delight any sf fan.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from August 1, 2022
      World Fantasy Award winner Tidhar brings together another outstanding assortment of international sci-fi shorts, showcasing 29 thought-provoking stories written during the past 10 years. His claim that these tales represent the “cutting edge of science fiction” rings true throughout, in selections that range from the near to the far future and cover a wide swath of subgenres. “The Ten-Percent Thief” by Indian author Lavanya Lakshminarayan, transports readers to a relatively gentle dystopia that’s technologically and politically divided between exploitative Virtuals and downtrodden Analogs. From China, “Your Multicolored Life” by Xing He, translated by Andy Dudak, sees disaster strike a society built on slave labor and machine-made materialism. “The Next Move” by Bolivian author Edmundo Paz Soldán, translated by Jessica Sequeira, stingingly denounces dehumanized modern warfare, while in “The Regression Test,” Nigerian author Wole Talabi smartly explores the moral and emotional implications of artificial intelligence. “The Mighty Slinger” by Tobias S. Buckell and Karen Lord, from Barbados and Granada, stands out as a rare optimistic vision, about a futuristic calypso band that “sings truth right to power’s face.” This sweeping survey rewards the time it demands of its readers with a bold and powerful argument for non-Anglophone SF’s potential to push the genre’s boundaries.

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading