Read The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Seventeenth Annual Collection (Year's Best Fantasy & Horror) by Ellen Datlow, Kelly Link , Gavin Grant Online
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Title | : | The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Seventeenth Annual Collection (Year's Best Fantasy & Horror) |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.34 (750 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0312329288 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 672 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2015-03-25 |
Language | : | English |
All rights reserved. Lucius Shepard conjures ghosts from the ruins of the World Trade Center for a consoling tale of redemption in "Only Partly Here," while Brian Hodge evokes an all-consuming evil in the battlefields of Afghanistan in "With Acknowledgments to Sun Tzu." Wartime paranoia is implicit in two subtly crafted fables, M. Stephen King is represented by "Harvey's Dream," an eerie tale of a precognitive dream's disruption of an ordinary suburban household. Karen Joy Fowler, in "King Rat," and Ursula K. Rickert's "Bread and Bombs" and George Saunders's "The Red Bow." Like the other selections, these stories are proof that the best fantastic fiction is modern mythmaking at its finest. From Publishers Weekly The proliferation of specialty fantasy publications with short runs and low profiles, combined with the growing pervasiveness of fantasy and horror
The fiction and poetry here is culled from an exhaustive survey of the field-- nearly four dozen stories, ranging from fairy tales to gothic horror, from magical realism to dark tales in the Grand Guignol-style. Rounding out the volume are the editors' invaluable overviews of the year in fantasy and horror and Year's Best sections--on comics, by Charles Vess, and on anime and manga, by Joan D. McHugh *Steve Rasnic Tem *Benjamin Rosenbaum *Michael Marshall Smith *Michael Swanwick *Karen Traviss *Megan Whalen Turner. For more than a decade, readers have turned to The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror to find the most rewarding fantastic short stories. This is an indispensable reference as well as the best reading available in fantasy and horror.*Terry Bisson *Kevin Brockmeier *Dan Chaon *Peter Crowther *Theodora Goss *Daphne Gottlieb *Glen Hirshberg *Brian Hodge *Nina Kiriki Hoffman *Kij Johnson *Paul LaFarge *Thomas Ligotti *Sara Maitland *Maureen F. Ellen Datlow, Kelly Link an
Grant worked in bookshops in Los Angeles and Boston and BookSense a website for independent bookshops. She is the editor of the anthology Trampoline and is currently working on more short stories.Originally from Scotland, Gavin J. She has won and been nominated for the Stolker Award. She lives in New York City and currently
Paul M. Allen said A Must-Have for fantasy fans!. The bulk of this great book (500+ pages) reprints about A Must-Have for fantasy fans! Paul M. Allen The bulk of this great book (500+ pages) reprints about 40 fantasy and horror stories culled from both niche and mainstream literary magazines (the Stephen King story included in the book was originally published in The New Yorker).With the thousands of fantasy books being published every year (more than ever, probably due to the mainstream success of Mr. Potter), you really need a guidebook to find your way through the maze. And the comprehensive 150 page section at the beginning of the book will show you the way.There are "Summary 2003" sections for the best . 0 fantasy and horror stories culled from both niche and mainstream literary magazines (the Stephen King story included in the book was originally published in The New Yorker).With the thousands of fantasy books being published every year (more than ever, probably due to the mainstream success of Mr. Potter), you really need a guidebook to find your way through the maze. And the comprehensive 150 page section at the beginning of the book will show you the way.There are "Summary "A Must-Have for fantasy fans!" according to Paul M. Allen. The bulk of this great book (500+ pages) reprints about A Must-Have for fantasy fans! Paul M. Allen The bulk of this great book (500+ pages) reprints about 40 fantasy and horror stories culled from both niche and mainstream literary magazines (the Stephen King story included in the book was originally published in The New Yorker).With the thousands of fantasy books being published every year (more than ever, probably due to the mainstream success of Mr. Potter), you really need a guidebook to find your way through the maze. And the comprehensive 150 page section at the beginning of the book will show you the way.There are "Summary 2003" sections for the best . 0 fantasy and horror stories culled from both niche and mainstream literary magazines (the Stephen King story included in the book was originally published in The New Yorker).With the thousands of fantasy books being published every year (more than ever, probably due to the mainstream success of Mr. Potter), you really need a guidebook to find your way through the maze. And the comprehensive 150 page section at the beginning of the book will show you the way.There are "Summary 200A Must-Have for fantasy fans! The bulk of this great book (500+ pages) reprints about A Must-Have for fantasy fans! Paul M. Allen The bulk of this great book (500+ pages) reprints about 40 fantasy and horror stories culled from both niche and mainstream literary magazines (the Stephen King story included in the book was originally published in The New Yorker).With the thousands of fantasy books being published every year (more than ever, probably due to the mainstream success of Mr. Potter), you really need a guidebook to find your way through the maze. And the comprehensive 150 page section at the beginning of the book will show you the way.There are "Summary 2003" sections for the best . 0 fantasy and horror stories culled from both niche and mainstream literary magazines (the Stephen King story included in the book was originally published in The New Yorker).With the thousands of fantasy books being published every year (more than ever, probably due to the mainstream success of Mr. Potter), you really need a guidebook to find your way through the maze. And the comprehensive 150 page section at the beginning of the book will show you the way.There are "Summary 2003" sections for the best . " sections for the best . 00A Must-Have for fantasy fans! The bulk of this great book (500+ pages) reprints about A Must-Have for fantasy fans! Paul M. Allen The bulk of this great book (500+ pages) reprints about 40 fantasy and horror stories culled from both niche and mainstream literary magazines (the Stephen King story included in the book was originally published in The New Yorker).With the thousands of fantasy books being published every year (more than ever, probably due to the mainstream success of Mr. Potter), you really need a guidebook to find your way through the maze. And the comprehensive 150 page section at the beginning of the book will show you the way.There are "Summary 2003" sections for the best . 0 fantasy and horror stories culled from both niche and mainstream literary magazines (the Stephen King story included in the book was originally published in The New Yorker).With the thousands of fantasy books being published every year (more than ever, probably due to the mainstream success of Mr. Potter), you really need a guidebook to find your way through the maze. And the comprehensive 150 page section at the beginning of the book will show you the way.There are "Summary 2003" sections for the best . " sections for the best . "Still the place to discover the best writers and stories" according to David J. Schwartz. The strength of the Datlow/Windling collections was always--aside from the editors' shrewd instincts--the wide net they cast over the field. Grant and Link help continue that tradition, and this edition includes stories from Esquire, The New Yorker, and the Paris Review as well as the breadth of genre magazines and anthologies. The big names are here (King, LeGuin, Gaiman) as well as folks you may not have heard of. There are too many standout stories to mention, but the most exciting thing about the Year's Best for me has always been the discoveries, so I'll l. As compelling as ever Ribreader I am a long-time reader of this anthology, and #17 marks a fascinating shift in the fantasy selections. Link & Grant have tastes quite distinct from Windling's, though I can also see some overlap. But the works they've chosen are no less well-written and wonderful. Datlow's horror selections are as strong as always, so there's an interesting new balance in the two genres here. It's a smart and interesting new spin on this always notable series.
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