RJ’s Top Ten Favorite Collections and Anthologies
First of all, thanks to Shell for letting me guest-post
today in support of my new release, Darkness with a Chance of Whimsy, my fourth
Seventh Star book and my first collection of short stories. What seemed most
appropriate was to briefly discuss favorite anthologies and short story
collections that I have on my own shelf, that have touched me as a reader in
some personal way. So without any further delay, let’s get to it.
1. Nightfall and Other Stories by Isaac Asimov: The first author I dove into after breaking away from a strict diet of Star Trek and Star Wars media. What can I say, he had me at Nightfall. An incredible idea, told well, in which religion and science clash in theoretical alien society (or not so alien society) on the eve of an apparent apocalypse. If you’ve never read it, I won’t spoil it for you. Suffice it to say there is a reason people still talk about this stories over 70 years after its initial publication. There are other gems in the collection, but Nightfall is worth the price of admission. Runners up from this author include the seminal I, Robot and the Foundation Trilogy (Actually eight collected short stories, novelettes and novellas divided into three parts)
1. Nightfall and Other Stories by Isaac Asimov: The first author I dove into after breaking away from a strict diet of Star Trek and Star Wars media. What can I say, he had me at Nightfall. An incredible idea, told well, in which religion and science clash in theoretical alien society (or not so alien society) on the eve of an apparent apocalypse. If you’ve never read it, I won’t spoil it for you. Suffice it to say there is a reason people still talk about this stories over 70 years after its initial publication. There are other gems in the collection, but Nightfall is worth the price of admission. Runners up from this author include the seminal I, Robot and the Foundation Trilogy (Actually eight collected short stories, novelettes and novellas divided into three parts)
2. Her Smoke Rose Up Forever by James Tiptree Jr. A
career-spanning collection of powerful short stories from the author many
readers and industry leaders presumed at the time was a man with unusual
empathy toward women. The stories, as the world now knows, were penned by a
sensitive recluse named Alice Sheldon. Sheldon’s often apocalyptic visions make
her, in my opinion, one of the earliest
and most successful visionaries to blend SF with horror into a potent
blend of stories that I compulsively revisit. The novelette The Girl Who Was
Plugged In shows us a future in which physical beauty and product marketing are
all that matter to a shallow future society (huh!) and how one plain jane
consumer jumps at an opportunity by a corporation taking unfair advantage of
her. Besides the premise, the story taught me how to find an internal “pulse”
in narrative fiction to drive a story forward. “Houston Houston Do You Read”
and “The Screwfly Solution” are just two chilling possible futures that look at
gender inequality with horrifying consequences.
3. The Martian Chronicle by Ray Bradbury. The classic collection
takes 27 short stories related to Mars and presents them as a loose (and often
contradictory) timeline. Each story is amazing in and of itself. Bradbury stood
as one of the great soft SF authors that stood alongside Clarke, Asimov and
Heinlein. Bradbury looks at human impulses and selfish desires and how those
desires can often get in the way of doing the right thing. It’s been awhile
since I’ve read this one (I will probably remedy that soon) but I still
remember the final moment from ”The Million Year Picnic” that closes the
collection, when little Timmy discovers “Real Martians” for the first time.
4. The Astounding Science Fiction Anthology by Joseph W. Campbell Jr. Before Astounding Magazine under the editorship of Campbell, SF was mostly seen as trashy pulp. This collection documents the change to the more thoughtful genre it became beginning in the 40s, presenting many key works by the authors that helped bring about that change. Blowups Happen by Robert A. Heinlein; Vault of the Beast by A.E. Van Vogt, Nightfall by Isaac Asimov J, plus stories by Murray Leinster, L Sprague DeCamp, Eric Frank Piper, Theodore Sturgeon, Lester Del Rey, and more. While there are other collections perhaps more thorough that look at the same era, this one has a little underappreciated story by an obscure author called Meihem in ce Klasrum by Dolton Edwards, a short spoof essay that looks at English rules and projects “common sense” changes to grammar (and then applies the change to the paragraph that follows) so that by the end of the story, the reader is faced with nonsensical gibberish they can read with perfect clarity. Whether that’s a good thing or not if left up to the reader, but it’s a delightful piece.
4. The Astounding Science Fiction Anthology by Joseph W. Campbell Jr. Before Astounding Magazine under the editorship of Campbell, SF was mostly seen as trashy pulp. This collection documents the change to the more thoughtful genre it became beginning in the 40s, presenting many key works by the authors that helped bring about that change. Blowups Happen by Robert A. Heinlein; Vault of the Beast by A.E. Van Vogt, Nightfall by Isaac Asimov J, plus stories by Murray Leinster, L Sprague DeCamp, Eric Frank Piper, Theodore Sturgeon, Lester Del Rey, and more. While there are other collections perhaps more thorough that look at the same era, this one has a little underappreciated story by an obscure author called Meihem in ce Klasrum by Dolton Edwards, a short spoof essay that looks at English rules and projects “common sense” changes to grammar (and then applies the change to the paragraph that follows) so that by the end of the story, the reader is faced with nonsensical gibberish they can read with perfect clarity. Whether that’s a good thing or not if left up to the reader, but it’s a delightful piece.
5. The Hugo Winners Vols I and II collected by Isaac Asimov.
Another anthology which serves to track the change in SF from its hard science
foundation of the 40s into the 60s and 70s when a new generation of authors
(led by Harlan Ellison to no small degree) challenged the old school to push
the genre further.
6. The Complete Illustrated Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle While you can find plenty of Holmes short story collections, with
many more complete than this, the oversized hardback edition by Castle Books
(still in print, you can it NEW from Amazon at a steal for ten bucks!) collects
the complete Strand Magazine run of
stories. This includes the Hound of the Baskervilles in serialized form and 37
short stories! What makes this collection special is that it reprints the
actual page layouts from the magazine with the Sidney Paget illustrations,
mastheads, the original typography, and more. It must be seen to be believed.
Although I love my Kindle, this makes the strongest argument for me how paper
collections are still a vital part of certain reading experiences.
7. The Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe. I mean....yeah. Do
I really need to explain this?
8. Reel Future. Edited by Forrest J Ackerman and Jean Stine. As a classic movie fan, this is a really nifty set of 16 stories that inspired major motion pictures, including Empire of the Ants by H.G. Wells, Who Goes There by John W Campbell Jr. (The Thing), Farewell to the Master by Harry Bates (The Day the Earth Stood Still) The Sentinel by Arthur C. Clarke (2001: A Space Odyssey) and more.
8. Reel Future. Edited by Forrest J Ackerman and Jean Stine. As a classic movie fan, this is a really nifty set of 16 stories that inspired major motion pictures, including Empire of the Ants by H.G. Wells, Who Goes There by John W Campbell Jr. (The Thing), Farewell to the Master by Harry Bates (The Day the Earth Stood Still) The Sentinel by Arthur C. Clarke (2001: A Space Odyssey) and more.
9. Skull Full of Kisses and Other Stories by Michael West
Yes, I gotta show my publisher and one of the authors I most respect a little
love here, because this was a collection I bought within minutes of meeting Mr.
West (He has that effect on people). As you can probably tell from this list, I
don’t go for much straight-up horror, but this collection, with its theme of
love, relationships, and longing running throughout, is as awesome as you may
have heard. Although I haven’t picked it up in a couple of years, my mind still
frequently returns to moments from Jiki, Trolling, Einstein’s Slingshot, For
Her, and the amazing Goodnight.
So those are ten favorite collections that have touched me in some personal way and that I still love to revisit. Thanks for listening.
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