Year’s Best Annuals and the Consensus View of SF

During the coming nine months ten companies will publish no fewer than nineteen separate books collecting the best science fiction, fantasy, horror, paranormal romance, noir, long, Australian, Nebula nominated, Tiptree shortlisted, and even overlooked stories that were published during the 2005* calendar year.

Now, given that trade journal Locus reported that it saw a record 3,000 short stories in 2005, and noted that even that represented only a small sample of the number of stories actually published, nineteen books collecting maybe 300 stories may not necessarily seem like a lot, especially given that a number of those books will appeal to quite different readers. And, if industry insiders might expect some kind of reduction in those numbers over time, it doesn’t explain the value of the year’s best annual. What interests me the most, as an editor of three different year’s best anthologies myself, is the role that these books play in defining what science fiction (or fantasy) is for the modern reader.

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Dream job…

Back in the late ’70s Del Rey published a series of author “Best of” collections. There was The Best of Lester Del Rey, The Best of Leigh Brackett, The Best of L. Sprague de Camp, The Best of Fritz Leiber, The Best of Cordwainer Smith, and The Best of Jack Williamson. These books were about 350 pages long and came with an intelligent introduction written by someone close to the field, who was able to say something meaningful to put the writer in context. These were good books, single, concise arguments for why these writers were important.

I love these books, and this kind of book. If I could get a dream job, it would be to edit a series of similar books for the writers of the ’60s, ’70s. and even 80s.  I mean, we have a few awful collections for Larry Niven, but how about The Best of Larry Niven? Or The Best of Harlan Ellison, or The Best of Connie Willis or The Best of Stephen Baxter?  And there are others. The Best of Gene Wolfe! It would be very cool. Publish them as a set, matching design, numbered as a set – it’s definitely a dream job. sigh.

Conjure schedule

Well, Conjure is only two weeks away and I just got what I think is my full and final schedule.  Friday looks a little crazy, but it should be okay. If you’d like to see me, this is where I’ll be. Otherwise, come up and say hi. I bite, but probably not you…

Friday
2.00pm – For Your Review: The art of reviewing speculative fiction
3.00pm – Opening Ceremony
4.00pm – What’s hot in speculative fiction?
5.00pm – Troy Book Launch
7.00pm – Cocktail party

Saturday
3.00pm – The Essence of Editing
7.30pm – Ditmar Awards ceremony

Sunday
9.00am  – Crumbs From the Editing Table
11.00am – Small Press Forum – The Different Types of Small Press Publishing
12noon  – Kaffee Klatch

Monday
3.00pm – Closing ceremony

Conjure

Well, it’s March 30, which means I’ll be headed up to Brisbane in two weeks for Conjure. I’m hoping everyone who can is buying their tickets and memberships and finalising plans to be there. I think it should be a great weekend. The cool people at HarperCollins just sent me a copy of this ad, which mentions some of the VoyagerFolk who’ll be attending the event. You should be there too!

Click here to see an ad. for Voyager authors at Conjure.

Note: Post edited to move ad from page to pop-up.