October 16

The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year: Volume 2

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*I am splitting this review into two parts, 12 stories to be posted today and the other 12 will be posted to tomorrow, to make the review more reader friendly. This is part one.

Impressive and, honestly, intimidating this tome of stellar science fiction and fantasy features masters of the genres at their best in twenty four dazzling tales of other worlds. If readers want some of the most impressive recently published tales of the SF/F genres without having to hunt them down through the multitude of anthologies and magazines printed this year this is an excellent buy.

If the first tale, Ted Chiang’s “The Merchant and the Alchemist’s Gate”, is any indication then this anthology is one to savor like a fine box of chocolates. When a merchant stumbles upon a strange shop in Baghdad that is home to a gateway between the past, future and present he is treated not just to a triad of tales about what other visitors have found inside the gateway, but he also gets the opportunity to travel back to his own past, to find closure to the one event in his life that haunts him. A rare gem of a story it expertly straddles the line between fantasy and science fiction as well as tragic and hopeful.

“The Last and Only, or Mr. Moskowitz Becomes French” by Peter S. Beagle seems to be more of a philosophical study on identity than a tale that’s recognizable fantasy. No one knows why, but Mr. Moskowitz began (“from the bones out”) to turn French. So much so that even those born in France sought out his approval. Strange and well written, it still didn’t capture my interest as much as I’d hoped.

Charles Stross’ “Trunk and Disorderly”, as one might guess is a humor piece. Completely out of control (much like its lead, “Ralph MacDonald Suzuki… a genuine Japanese Highland Laird from old Scotland…”) “Trunk and Disorderly” is a hilarious adventure of debauchery, nobility and robots gone wrong that’s best read without any drinks nearby.

“Glory” by Greg Egan sums itself up with a line from its own prose, “There’s more to life than mathematics…but not much more.” A hard science fiction love note to math, and the sciences that heavily rely upon them, this tale of alien exploration and archeology is at times mind boggling in level and at other times, perfection down to the last little atom. Despite the heavy importance of the math the story is told in the characters’ actions, allowing the story to reach the reader and not be lost under the weight of technicality.

Daryl Gregory’s “Dead Horse Point” is very personal, heart wrenching and incredibly interesting. Julia is a special woman. Incredibly brilliant she’s breaking new ground in science and on the verge of something world changing. But her brilliance comes with a downside. She lives an autistic-like life, completely aware, capable and down right normal one moment and mentally gone, incapable of even the simplest of tasks, completely lost in a mental world of science and unbreakable concentration. Gregory captures the strength and potential inside what many others would consider to be a horrible disease in desperate need of a cure. He also shows the effects it can have on even the most loyal of caretakers, the years slowly wearing them down. It’s very exciting to see a well written, thoughtful tale dealing with a neural-atypical mind, another facet of our current world that could easily lend itself to speculative futures.

“The Dreaming Wind” by Jeffrey Ford takes readers into a fairy tale, from its image invoking opening to an end that answers none of the questions. “The Dreaming Wind” is beautiful tale of the intimidating, raw power of creativity that’s likely to spark a few strikes of inspiration of its own.

Continuing the streak of fantasy is “The Coat of Stars” by Holly Black. It’s yet another beautiful story, a modern fairy tale of a gay man who learns his childhood love was stolen by fairies. In trying to win his love back he must also come to terms with himself and his family. Not moralistic, but the kind of story one can picture being told along side Grimm’s most popular, it’s stories like these that will become the classic short stories of our generation’s portion of the fantasy genre.

“The Prophet of Flores” by Ted Kosmatka takes on evolution, creating a world where it’s been debunked and religion rules science. This isn’t a horror tale however, but a scientific one, not just about the evolution of life, but about the evolution of religion as well.

Alex Irvine’s “Wizard’s Six” is a delightfully classic fantasy tale, the kind you forget how much you enjoy after reading more in vogue subgenres like science fantasy and urban fantasy. Paulus, at the behest of a wizard, is traveling across the land to stop an apprentice’s quest to collect “his six”, six people with magical potential that the apprentice needs to become a full wizard. But this apprentice is dangerous and has been denied by the guild, which would put his six in great danger should he succeed in collecting them, and make the apprentice himself much harder to control once he gained his full power. A true example of the best of fantasy, this is the kind of story that leaves the characters and reader changed.

“The Cambist and Lord Iron: A Fairy Tale of Economics” by Daniel Abraham is a tale for the puzzle lovers. When bored nobleman Lord Iron approaches cambist (money exchanger) Olaf he admits that he’s just bored, and that Olaf is simply in the wrong place at the right time. Destroying the cambist will provide a momentary distraction. Until Olaf manages to exchange the exotic bills from a tiny, distant, nearly unknown foreign land, stunning and impressing Lord Iron. Of course Olaf’s feat of intelligence just ends up getting him pulled into greater challenges, with higher stakes. The last challenge of all lays a human soul bare with enough honesty and need to make readers shiver with its strength. Every bit as human and soul-filled as the first story, Ted Chiang’s “The Merchant and the Alchemist’s Gate”, this tale is an excellent example of the best of fantasy.

“By Fools Like Me” by Nancy Kress is a tale writers and passionate readers can get behind. A Post-Apocalypse fantasy tale it centers on a young girl’s discovery of old fashioned print books (the kind trees were sacrificed for), and the books’ power many, many years later, to still entrap the mind. In a world where see-o-two clouds and destructive ash are among the worst hazards, not immediately destroying the books is a moral sin. But the true story in this tale is how the human spirit can corrupt all things, and even rules meant to guarantee survival in a harsh world, can go too far.

Bruce Sterling’s “Kiosk” is the first miss so far. This futuristic tale strongly focuses on the socio-political-economic truths of society rather than invoking the universal human feel of the other stories. A midstream switch from telling the story from a close third view of a kiosk owner and savvy businessman to a wide, fast forward, history book feeling approach killed my interest. The story failed to regain it when it focused on the lead character again for an attempt at a tight end. Surrounded with the present day politically poisoned media this tale just didn’t offer me the escape I found in other tales.

August 26

Wanderlust by Ann Aguirre

Wanderlust by Ann Aguirre

Sirantha Jax is about to learn that breaking the Corp’s hold on the world was just the beginning of her troubles. Sure she’s gotten justice for the death of her lover and crew, and exposed the crash that the Corp arranged and tried to pin on her to the Conglomerate. But now a powerful piece of the world government system is missing and visionaries and bullies from all over are trying to take up the slack.

So when the Conglomerate offers to make her an ambassador, Jax finds herself not only in need of the job, but also in a unique position to be one of the first Conglomerate citizens to make it to the home world of a notorious race of insect-like beings. If only she can get past the space pirates, civil wars, the Syndicate and her own mother first.

Like Grimspace before it, Wanderlust is more than just a story about a girl who navigates space ships through the unfathomable depths of grimspace (something akin to wormholes and subspace pathways combined). This story is about Jax, shattered spirit and failing body, in the middle of a complete life upheaval trying to figure out which pieces fit, which don’t and what to do with her new sense of responsibility and loyalty. It’s hard not to be paranoid and hopeless when everyone seems to either want to kill you or kill for you, when even your body is betraying you and life seems unwilling to give you the time to heal. Aguirre takes readers there, to a flashy science fiction world with a dark side where even the planetary civil wars, human-eating aliens and missions to save the world fade under the compelling clutches of the small band of characters that have come together under enormous pressure and against monstrous odds just to do what they think is right.

Wanderlust is an exciting new tale in the science fiction genre which captures the humanity in even the most odd of aliens and takes the reader for a nonstop action ride that’s hard to put down.

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August 9

Deep Inside by Polly Frost

Deep Inside by Polly Frost

Just in case a blurb at the front of the book from Ron Jeremy saying “If I directed some of these fantasies, I’d either be the world’s greatest adult-film director… or I’d be in jail.” isn’t enough to get you to check out this book of ten supernatural erotica stories let’s move on to a proper review.

It’s amusing that Frost starts this collection out with a virgin sacrifice/Catholic school girl combo, “The Threshold”. Frost doesn’t just pop main character Cameron’s cherry, she takes the reader out of their normal world and over her own threshold into another world. In this tale Cammie must chose between the weird, magical promises of a girl who might just want to do her harm and promises of a special, extraordinary life over the fate of becoming just as ordinary as her mother. Best of all is the unanswered question Frost leaves behind, making the reader wonder whether the real story was a girl’s voyage into womanhood or whether a greater story was lost to teenage passion.

“The Orifice” is a wild, startlingly sexy tale of fetishes. It’s more than that, because the characters are more than just their piercing/pain fetishes. Frost manages to take something considered “weird” and “freaky” and not just explain it to readers but to make it sound incredibly appealing, amplified by creating a world where the wildest sex dreams can come true.

“The Dominatrix Has a Career Crisis” is about a horribly self absorbed woman who suddenly learns that coasting by on artificially inflated self esteem and glorying at other peoples’ misfortunes will only take her so far. The transition from the previous story, an incredible erotic piece, to this one is a bit jarring. This is almost a social science fiction piece in the speculative commentary vein of Jennifer Pelland and Paolo Bacigulpa. Despite it’s obnoxious main character it’s amusing, and a complex tale with an erotic BDSM flavor.

Addressing sex addiction to the point of making it a squiggly, wet, separate creature “The Pleasure Invaders” follows a desperate cop, addicted to the erotic touch of seemingly unintelligent aliens and yet charged with stopping the important of this contraband. Frost nails the addict mentality, threading even the non-sexual parts with a heightened sense of eroticism that puts the readers directly into a mind obsessed.

With “Viagra Babies” Frost keeps to the science fiction flavor and continues from sex addict to what happens to those naturally resulting from sex addiction. After a pandemic of Viagra street use humanity gave birth to urban legend quality monsters. Children born from the hypersex unions are medicated and isolated lest their supernatural sexual powers drive the Normals mad. Viagra Babies also die shortly after turning eighteen, a hallmark that both the main characters are quickly approaching. A dark science fiction spin that pits sexual heroes against a twisted evil, it’s also the only story with a male main character.

From there Frost delves into the speculative realm of horror with “Imagine It” a disturbing, dark tale amplified by its fierce eroticism. Here Frost journeys into a mental mystery, the female rape fantasy. Traveling on a dagger’s edge between the powerlessness of the act itself and the perception that all the power is with the female if she or her gender can make a male so out of control that he seeks to take it back, Becca, a best selling sex writer, has been objectified by her readers, herself and even her therapist. She finds confronting and conquering her feeling most liberating, in terribly unsettling ways.

Following it up with a softer take on horror is “Playing Karen Devere”, a tale of a Hollywood lesbian couple who play more than screen parts after they have several close encounters (in the name of research) with a sexy, empowered female serial killer on death row.

“Test Drive” thrusts us back into the future, where the trend of the porn industry pushing technology to new heights (like it did with VHS and camcorders) continues. By this point humanity has completely lost its gender identity in its seeking of pleasure and perfection. Blake is a sex toy maker looking for something new and different in a very satisfied world. Her business partner’s latest sex video unleashes a monster that’s been long forgotten–The Male Libido. This tale is touched with humor and an amusing dose of irony.

“Visions of Ecstasy” takes us back to horror with a paranormal tale of a psychic who tries to save a woman destined to die in her search of a sexual thrill. But neither the man she thinks is a killer, nor the woman she thinks is the victim are quite what they seem. This another hot little fetish tale that’s perfect for the asphyxiation crowd.

Finally is “Deep Inside” a legend-inspired tale of a “voodoo penis” and the drive of males and females to find the perfect substitute for each other. This one is a more ordinary tale, the characters and history glanced upon in favor of a plot with a dark end.

These tales are surprisingly good, but more than that, they’re humorous and insightful as well, not just about what people do, but exploring through sex why they do it. Titillating and erotic, sure, but Frost also makes sex one more aspect of the human mind, not merely about the body and instincts.