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	<title>Rat's Reading &#187; kristine kathryn rusch</title>
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	<description>Books make me happy.</description>
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<creativeCommons:license>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/us/</creativeCommons:license>		<item>
		<title>Lightspeed Magazine December 2010</title>
		<link>http://reading.kingrat.biz/story-reviews/lightspeed-magazine-december-2010</link>
		<comments>http://reading.kingrat.biz/story-reviews/lightspeed-magazine-december-2010#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 26 Dec 2010 19:48:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>King Rat</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Short Fiction Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[john joseph adams]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kristine kathryn rusch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lightspeed magazine]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[magazines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[science fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[short stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ted kosmatka]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://reading.kingrat.biz/?p=1579</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Seemed to me like the stories were shorter in this issue of Lightspeed Magazine, but perhaps that&#8217;s because I got into the issue and read quickly. In-fall by Ted Kosmatka A space-ship is heading toward a black hole. On the ship are two people, one an interrogator the other a prisoner. See the prisoner thinks [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="coverstorebox"   style="float:right; margin:3pt; text-align:center; background-color: #EEEEEE;float:right; margin:3pt; text-align:center; background-color: #EEEEEE;">
<div class="coverbox"   style="padding:8pt;padding:8pt;"><a href="http://reading.kingrat.biz/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/Lightspeed-Magazine-December-2010-cover.jpg" ><img src="http://reading.kingrat.biz/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/Lightspeed-Magazine-December-2010-cover-91x128.jpg"  alt="Lightspeed Magazine December 2010 cover"  title="Lightspeed Magazine December 2010 cover"  width="91"  height="128"  class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-1580"   style="border:none;"/></a></div>
<div class="storebox"     style="padding:8pt;padding:8pt;padding:8pt;padding:8pt;border-top: medium groove;border-top: medium groove;"><a title="Buy this title at Amazon.com"  href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B004EBTH4Q?creativeASIN=B004EBTH4Q&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;tag=rats-reading-20&amp;link_code=as3&amp;camp=211189&amp;creative=373489" ><img class="alignnone"  title="Amazon Logo"  src="http://reading.kingrat.biz/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/Amazon_Logo.gif"  alt="Amazon Logo"  width="90"  height="28"   style="border:none;"/></a></div>
</div>

<p>Seemed to me like the stories were shorter in this issue of Lightspeed Magazine, but perhaps that&#8217;s because I got into the issue and read quickly.</p>

<dl>
<dt><a href="http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/in-fall/" ><q>In-fall</q></a> by <a href="http://www.tedkosmatka.com/" >Ted Kosmatka</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;"><p>A space-ship is heading toward a black hole.  On the ship are two people, one an interrogator the other a prisoner.  See the prisoner thinks he&#8217;s going to go to paradise for the cause if he dies a martyr.  The side running the ship have figured out that it will never actually cross the event horizon.  It will just asymptotically approach, meaning they will never die.  I actually had a hard time with the story because this seemed like a very ineffective and expensive way to question someone.  But then, so is Guantanamo Bay, so what do I know?</p></dd>

<dt><a href="http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/the-observer/" ><q>The Observer</q></a> by <a href="http://www.kristinekathrynrusch.com/" >Kristine Kathryn Rusch</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;"><p>Let&#8217;s turn women into super-warriors by enhancing the <q>protect your children</q> part of their psyche.  The effect of being turned into a soulless killing machine has been written about before, many times. But this is one of the more effective versions of that theme that I&#8217;ve read. Nasty, brutal, and short.  Excellent.</p></dd>

<dt><a href="http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/jennys-sick/" ><q>Jenny&#8217;s Sick</q></a> by <a href="http://davidtallerman.net/" >David Tallerman</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;"><p>Although the interview with Tallerman that accompanies the story compares Jenny to an addict, I think a better comparison is to bulimics or cutters.  The future brings cures for all diseases, so a new wave is drugs that make people sick.  One pill to make you sick, a second to make you better.  Jenny likes being sick, so she holds off on the second pill as long as she can.  And then there&#8217;s her friend and roommate who sorta wants to help, and sorta doesn&#8217;t.  The story is made by his complex character.  Jenny is almost a prop.</p></dd>

<dt><q>The Silence of the Asonu</q> by <a href="http://www.ursulakleguin.com/" >Ursula K. Le Guin</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;"><p>An alien world where the residents do not speak.  Like kittens, they chit-chat a lot as children, with somewhat older children teaching the younger ones the language.  But after a few years, they just stop speaking.  I love the people in the story who follow the aliens around recording the few short utterances they actually do make, then construct epistemologies based on the revealed nuggets of wisdom.  Because obviously, if someone doesn&#8217;t speak much, when they do it must be full of great import.</p></dd>

</dl>

<p class="catalog"   style="font-size: 85%; line-height: normal;font-size: 85%; line-height: normal;">
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Title:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style=""><a href="http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/" >Lightspeed Magazine</a></span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Issue:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style=""><a href="http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/issue/dec-2010-issue-7/" >December 2010 (#7)</a></span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Editors:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style=""><a href="http://www.johnjosephadams.com/" >John Joseph Adams</a> (fiction) / Andrea Kail (non-fiction)</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Cover:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style=""><a href="http://www.johnpicacio.com/" >John Picacio</a></span>
</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Asimov&#8217;s Science Fiction August 2009</title>
		<link>http://reading.kingrat.biz/story-reviews/asimovs-science-fiction-august-2009</link>
		<comments>http://reading.kingrat.biz/story-reviews/asimovs-science-fiction-august-2009#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 04 Aug 2010 01:13:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>King Rat</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Short Fiction Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[damien broderick]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[derek zumsteg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kristine kathryn rusch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[magazines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mary robinette kowal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[michael blumlein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[robert reed]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[science fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[short stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[steven popkes]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://reading.kingrat.biz/?p=1504</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Not normally someone who reads a lot of the Big 3 S.F. magazines, but the August issue last year had a story by Derek Zumsteg, a former co-worker at Expedia. I do tend to buy fiction written by people I know, so I got it in ebook format. However, it sat in my queue for [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="coverstorebox"   style="float:right; margin:3pt; text-align:center; background-color: #EEEEEE;float:right; margin:3pt; text-align:center; background-color: #EEEEEE;">
<div class="coverbox"   style="padding:8pt;padding:8pt;"><a href="http://reading.kingrat.biz/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/Asimovs-Science-Fiction-August-2009.jpg" ><img src="http://reading.kingrat.biz/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/Asimovs-Science-Fiction-August-2009-96x128.jpg"  alt="Cover of Asimov&#039;s Science Fiction August 2009 (by John Jude Palencar)"  title="Asimov&#039;s Science Fiction August 2009 (John Jude Palencar)"  width="96"  height="128"  class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-1505"   style="border:none;"/></a></div>
</div>

<p>Not normally someone who reads a lot of the Big 3 S.F. magazines, but the August issue last year had a story by Derek Zumsteg, a former co-worker at Expedia.  I do tend to buy fiction written by people I know, so I got it in ebook format.  However, it sat in my queue for a while.  Now that I have the Nook, it&#8217;s more convenient to read some of my backlog.</p>

<p>Here&#8217;s my thoughts on the stories in the issue.</p>

<dl>
<dt><q>The Qualia Engine</q> by <a href="http://www.panterraweb.com/" >Damien Broderick</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Really smart kids kept secret, except they don&#8217;t go to Professor Xavier&#8217;s school.  Broderick combines a pretty standard trope with a more philosophical rambling about what thoughts and consciousness are.  I don&#8217;t like this sort of thing when it&#8217;s a thought exercise rather than the basis for a plot.  And there&#8217;s not really a whole lot of plot here.</dd>

<dt><q>Creatures of Well-Defined Habits</q> by <a href="http://www.robertreedwriter.com/" >Robert Reed</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">An interesting story.  You read all the time about elderly folks who live simply but secretly have lots of money, and then they leave $1 million to a charity.  Hogan in this story is sorta like that. He&#8217;s 400+ years old, one of the older humans around after genetic engineering allows people to live long lives, among other things like incorporate the D.N.A. of other animals to get their characteristics.  Hogan secretly buys his local cafe so he has a place to retell his centuries worth of stories.  Then he dies and an android takes his place, paid for with his estate and having his memories.  The android exists  just so it can retell Hogan&#8217;s stories in the cafe.  Some people think it isn&#8217;t right, and do something about it.  Thought this was a pretty neat take, even though I was confused as to why hate on the android, though at the end I got it.</dd>

<dt><q>Blue</q> by <a href="http://www.zumsteg.net/" >Derek Zumsteg</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Two crew people stuck together on a spaceship expedition gone wrong.  Science fiction stuff pretty standard. Personality story was okay.</dd>

<dt><q>The Consciousness Problem</q> by <a href="http://www.maryrobinettekowal.com/" >Mary Robinette Kowal</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">The first human clone, or at least the first one that has the memories of the original.  In the tradition of scientists experimenting on themselves, the first clone is that of the scientist himself.  The clone is just as smart, but as an experiment, he has to stay in the lab.  Also, the scientist has issues with his wife, who&#8217;s recovering from a car accident and probably will be forever.  You can sorta see where this is going.  The clone doesn&#8217;t get to see the woman it loves.  But it&#8217;s a scientist, so it knows it&#8217;s a bad idea.  Really interesting story.  Kowal takes a standard trope and fills it with really good characters instead of cookie-cutter ones.  (Which is something like what she did in <q>First Flight</q> as well.)  Might have to pick up her short story collection now, though I probably won&#8217;t go near her Jane Austen inspired Regency fantasy novel that just came out.  Regency not my thing.</dd>

<dt><q>Two Boys</q> by <a href="http://www.stevenpopkes.com/" >Steven Popkes</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Neanderthals recreated from D.N.A.  Really pretty good if you look past one weirdness.  The neanderthals create for themselves a completely new culture.  That&#8217;s kind of cool.  But it doesn&#8217;t have a lot of reference to the existing <i>homo sapiens</i> culture.  For instance, they create a whole new marriage and child-raising tradition out of whole cloth, where parenting roles are really different and partially communal.  Particularly considering the first neanderthal in the story was raised as <i>homo sapiens</i> not knowing he was neanderthal for a while, it seems kind of odd that they&#8217;d successfully invent their culture that way.  Regular girl satisfies her curiosity about neanderthals by going looky-looing for the house of the rumored new kid in school, a neanderthal.</dd>

<dt><q>Turbulence</q> by <a href="http://www.kristinekathrynrusch.com/" >Kristine Kathryn Rusch</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Some people always get stuck next to the talkative person.  The protagonist gets stuck next to the talkative person who is nervous about the flight. And every time she gets nervous, something bad happens. Dude doesn&#8217;t believe her at first.  More a story about worrying than about precognition.</dd>


<dt><q>California Burning</q> by <a href="http://www.michaelblumlein.com/" >Michael Blumlein</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Larry&#8217;s father doesn&#8217;t want to be cremated.  Dad&#8217;s dead, and the crematorium returns the bones (and the fee) to Larry because they just won&#8217;t burn.  Then people show up asking Larry questions, wanting to see the remains.  They kind of remind me of some of the characters in Kraken.  They tell one version of who they are, then another. First the police, then the health department.  It becomes increasingly apparent that Larry&#8217;s dad is far more than he seemed.  I&#8217;m really not sure whether I like the story or not.  It hooked me though, but that might be because of the characterization for the Larry&#8217;s dad&#8217;s weird colleagues.</dd>

</dl>

<p>Solid stories mostly, but nothing I&#8217;d nominate for awards.  I think the fact that the cover image was originally intended for a Stephen King book cover and was repurposed for this issue speaks volumes about the contents.</p>

<p class="catalog"   style="font-size: 85%; line-height: normal;font-size: 85%; line-height: normal;">
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Title:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style=""><a href="http://www.asimovs.com/" >Asimov&#8217;s Science Fiction</a></a></span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Issue:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">August 2009 (#403)</a></span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Editor:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">Sheila Williams</a></span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Cover creator:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style=""><a href="http://www.johnjudepalencar.com/" >John Jude Palencar</a></a></span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Publication date:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">June 2009</a></span>
</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Year&#8217;s Best Science Fiction: Ninth Annual Collection / Gardner Dozois ed.</title>
		<link>http://reading.kingrat.biz/reviews/years-best-science-fiction-nine-gardner-dozois</link>
		<comments>http://reading.kingrat.biz/reviews/years-best-science-fiction-nine-gardner-dozois#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Mar 2009 10:34:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>King Rat</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Book Reviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[alexander jablokov]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[brian aldiss]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[chris beckett]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[connie willis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gardner dozois]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[geoffrey landis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[greg egan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[gregory benford]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ian macleod]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ian mcdonald]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[jack dann]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[james patrick kelly]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[karen joy fowler]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kathe koja]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kim newman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kim stanley robinson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kristine kathryn rusch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lois tilton]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mark van name]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mike resnick]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[multiple author collections]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nancy kress]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pat cadigan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pat murphy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[paul mcauley]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reprinted story collections]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rick shelley]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[william gibson]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://reading.kingrat.biz/?p=1135</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The middle of this anthology wasn&#8217;t particularly strong, but you can&#8217;t go wrong with something that includes Beggars in Spain. Gene Wars, Eyewall, and Desert Rain round out the top stories in the collection, at least according to me. As I&#8217;ve noted before, Dozois&#8217; seeming obsession with naming authors as Big Names and Ones to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="coverstorebox"   style="float:right; margin:3pt; text-align:center; background-color: #EEEEEE;float:right; margin:3pt; text-align:center; background-color: #EEEEEE;">
<div class="coverbox"   style="padding:8pt;padding:8pt;"><a href="http://reading.kingrat.biz/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/the-years-best-science-fiction-nine.jpg" ><img src="http://reading.kingrat.biz/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/the-years-best-science-fiction-nine-84x128.jpg"  alt="Cover of The Year&#039;s Best Science Fiction: Ninth Annual Collection (Bob Eggleton)"  title="Cover of The Year&#039;s Best Science Fiction: Ninth Annual Collection (Bob Eggleton)"  width="84"  height="128"  class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-1139"   style="border:none;"/></a></div>
<div class="storebox"     style="padding:8pt;padding:8pt;padding:8pt;padding:8pt;border-top: medium groove;border-top: medium groove;"><a title="Buy this book at Amazon.com"  href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0312078919?creativeASIN=0312078919&#038;ie=UTF8&#038;tag=rats-reading-20&#038;linkCode=as2&#038;camp=1789&#038;creative=9325" ><img class="alignnone"  title="Amazon Logo"  src="http://reading.kingrat.biz/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/Amazon_Logo.gif"  alt="Amazon Logo"  width="90"  height="28"   style="border:none;"/></a></div>
<div class="storebox"     style="padding:8pt;padding:8pt;padding:8pt;padding:8pt;border-top: medium groove;border-top: medium groove;"><a title="Buy this book at Powell's"  href="http://www.powells.com/partner/33154/biblio/0312078919" ><img class="alignnone"  title="Powells Logo"  src="http://reading.kingrat.biz/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/PowellsLogo.gif"  alt="Powells Logo"  width="90"  height="29"   style="border:none;"/></a></div>
</div>

<p>The middle of this anthology wasn&#8217;t particularly strong, but you can&#8217;t go wrong with something that includes <q>Beggars in Spain</q>.   <q>Gene Wars</q>, <q>Eyewall</q>, and <q>Desert Rain</q> round out the top stories in the collection, at least according to me.  As I&#8217;ve noted before, Dozois&#8217; seeming obsession with naming authors as Big Names and Ones to Watch irritates me.  While I think who writes a story is important, Dozois spends more ink in his intros on an author&#8217;s pedigree than on the story.</p>

<dl>
<dt><q>Beggars in Spain</q> by <a href="http://www.sff.net/people/nankress/" >Nancy Kress</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">I think this is the first time I&#8217;ve read a short story after reading the novel version.  Kress set the standard for the trope I call human evolution: what happens when the next version of humans come along.  The idea: genetic engineering allows us to create people who don&#8217;t need to sleep. The extra time and some beneficial side effects mean they are smarter and more balanced than normal humans.  Who promptly start treating them like crap.  Re-reading this is tough precisely because I&#8217;ve read so many stories that mimic Kress&#8217;.</dd>

<dt><q>Living Will</q> by <a href="http://www.ajablokov.com/" >Alexander Jablokov</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">You are going senile. You know it. You want to off yourself before you get too far gone to be a burden.  However, you don&#8217;t want to do it while you have some semblance of brain left.  The dilemma is that once that semblance has left you, you are no longer capable of making the decision.  Could you turn that decision over to someone else? Someone you trusted utterly?  Good story.</dd>

<dt><q>A Just and Lasting Peace</q> by Lois Tilton</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Alternate history in which Reconstruction goes on a lot longer, and southern resistance goes on a lot longer. Rather than the north winning and eventually losing, they never really win. Not bad, but it didn&#8217;t impress me either.</dd>

<dt><q>Skinner&#8217;s Room</q> by <a href="http://www.williamgibsonbooks.com/" >William Gibson</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">I don&#8217;t really understand why Dozois&#8217; introduction says this story is about housing the homeless.  In a future where cities are falling apart, the poor take over the Golden Gate bridge and build structures for themselves to live in. Nothing earth shattering.  Pretty good style though, which sets a mood really well.</dd>

<dt><q>Prayers on the Wind</q> by <a href="http://www.walterjonwilliams.net/" >Walter Jon Williams</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Sometimes it seems like people disaffected by monotheistic Christianity flock toward Eastern religions or philosophies.  Although I don&#8217;t share Christopher Hitchens vehement language toward those religions, I do tend to agree on principle. If you can&#8217;t find evidence for it, it&#8217;s not true.  Buddhism is one of those religions that falls into that category for me.  If you want to believe it on faith, be my guest, but I need evidence. Reincarnation? Asceticism? Bah! Intentionally or unintentionally, this story fits in very much with my view. A future Buddhist-themed galactic empire runs into conflict with an alien race. But right when things come to a head, the empire&#8217;s version of the Dalai Lama dies and the new incarnation of Buddha changes things up a bit.  To me, highlights how little sense soul reincarnation makes, as well as how despotic religion can be.</dd>

<dt><q>Blood Sisters</q> by <a href="http://www.gregegan.net/" >Greg Egan</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">When you do a double-blind test of a new drug, isn&#8217;t it kind of unfair (if the drug works) that the control group won&#8217;t be cured?</dd>

<dt><q>The Dark</q> by <a href="http://www.karenjoyfowler.com/" >Karen Joy Fowler</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">A dark fantasy/horror tale about a boy raised by wolves who ends up as a C.I.A. experiment. It didn&#8217;t do a whole lot for me.</dd>

<dt><q>Marnie</q> by <a href="http://www.ianrmacleod.com/" >Ian R. Macleod</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">If you could go back to high school/college and do it all over again, would you?  Here&#8217;s how that might happen.</dd>

<dt><q>A Tip on a Turtle</q> by <a href="http://www.majipoor.com/" >Robert Silverberg</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">What would it be like to actually have premonition? For the guy in this story who predicts who can win turtle races at a resort, it kinda sucks.  Well-written, but I&#8217;ve seen this done better elsewhere.</dd>

<dt><q>Übermensch!</q> by <a href="http://www.johnnyalucard.com/" >Kim Newman</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">A sorta alternative history story.  It&#8217;s not really alternate to real history. Alternate to the Superman history.  Instead of the spaceship from Krypton landing in a Kansas field, and Superman working to save the allies, he grows up in Germany and is a tool of the Nazis.  Despite not being particularly fond of alternative history, I did like the story. Maybe because superheros from this kind of perspective are done so rarely (that I run across at least).</dd>

<dt><q>Dispatches from the Revolution</q> by <a href="http://fastfwd.livejournal.com/" >Pat Cadigan</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Not fond of alternative history unless done really well.  This one, not so well. What if&#8230; the right wing ascended in 1968?! Yeah, it happened in Germany. Perhaps it could have here.  But it didn&#8217;t. And I&#8217;m not sure we really need another scare piece on what the right wing could do in America.  I&#8217;m pretty sure we don&#8217;t need one at all.</dd>

<dt><q>Pipes</q> by <a href="http://www.robertreedwriter.com/" >Robert Reed</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">An okay story about environmental restoration. Predicated on cheap food from offshore farms making midwest farming unnecessary.</dd>

<dt><q>Matter&#8217;s End</q> by <a href="http://www.gregorybenford.com/" >Gregory Benford</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">I did not like this story one little bit. A lot of melodrama about India hating scientists so much any scientist/Westerner will get beaten or killed. Westerner comes to secret Indian physics experiment that is measuring proton decay, which will determine the end of the universe.  And then things really go to hell.  Everything except the actual experiments felt false to me.</dd>

<dt><q>A History of the Twentieth Century, with Illustrations</q> by Kim Stanley Robinson</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">This seems more like a fictionalized travel essay than science fiction or fantasy. A lot more. Maybe I missed something. As travel writing, it seems pretty decent.  I want to travel to the <a href="http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&#038;source=s_q&#038;hl=en&#038;geocode=&#038;q=Orkney+Islands,+Orkney+Islands,+United+Kingdom&#038;sll=59.195626,-3.153076&#038;sspn=1.31934,4.943848&#038;g=Orkney+Islands,+Orkney+Islands,+United+Kingdom&#038;ie=UTF8&#038;ll=59.181557,-3.153076&#038;spn=1.319884,4.943848&#038;z=8" >Orkney Islands</a> now.  As speculative fiction, it seems lacking.</dd>

<dt><q>Gene Wars</q> by <a href="http://www.omegacom.demon.co.uk/" >Paul J. McAuley</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">I really liked this story about genetic engineering.  Not that it&#8217;s necessarily likely to happen.  The story follows more along the lines of <q>take something to it&#8217;s extreme</q> to good effect.</dd>

<dt><q>The Gallery of His Dreams</q> by <a href="http://kriswrites.com/" >Kristine Kathryn Rusch</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Interesting concept.  Interesting writing. Interesting point.  But for some reason I just didn&#8217;t get into the story.  Mathew Brady, a photographer who sought to chronicle the horrors of war during the U.S. Civil War, went penniless from his efforts.  The story has a time traveler whisking Brady to wars throughout time to use his skills and equipment to chronicle wars of all kinds.  In the end, people view his work as art, not history.  Good story, but perhaps I just wasn&#8217;t in the mood.</dd>

<dt><q>A Walk in the Sun</q> by <a href="http://www.geoffreylandis.com/" >Geoffrey A. Landis</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Good mundane-SF (at least by my estimation) story about rescuing a person from the surface of the moon.  The walk in the sun refers to the fact that the castaway&#8217;s life support in her space suit is solar powered.  She can&#8217;t let sundown catch up to her or her ability to breathe will shut off for 15 days (you try holding your breath that long!).  So she has to walk ahead fast enough to stay in the moon&#8217;s daylight for a month (at least) until a rescue rocket can reach her from earth.  Kind of like the premise of Stephen King&#8217;s <cite>The Long Walk</cite>; walk or die.</dd>

<dt><q>Fragments of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria</q> by <a href="http://ianmcdonald.livejournal.com/" >Ian McDonald</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">A Jew during and before World War II is visited by an angel?  I think.  I&#8217;m not really sure what her visions represent.  Another story that didn&#8217;t resonate with me, but again probably more me than the story.</dd>

<dt><q>Angels in Love</q> by <a href="http://www.kathekoja.com/" >Kathe Koja</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">A girl overhears her apartment neighbors having loud sex, and she wants some of it.  Enough that she starts spying on the woman hoping to get a glimpse of her boyfriend, to see if she can horn in on the action.  Nice to see a story about a hard-up undersexed loser being a woman instead of a pasty white geek boy for once.  Anyhow, she never sees the man enter or leave the place, despite increasingly stalkerish behavior.  What&#8217;s going on over there?</dd>

<dt><q>Eyewall</q> by Rick Shelley</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">I loved this story.  I have Shelley&#8217;s book <cite>Fires of Coventry</cite> which I really want to read now.  Not technically a mundane SF story, but all the key parts of the story are.  Basically, a category 5 hurricane leaves 20,000 dead in Florida and a million homeless. A hurricane study group must bow to political pressure.  Instead of pure science research, they are supposed to conduct experiments using explosives (including nuclear) to disrupt the eye of a hurricane to get it to dissipate.  They don&#8217;t like the applied research, and they don&#8217;t like using nuclear weapons, and they don&#8217;t like that their scientific existence depends on something they don&#8217;t like.  The non-mundane part is that the experiments occur on a water covered world that has lots of hurricanes and is mostly untouched by human hands.  The awesome part is the simmering conflict between the political guys and the original science people.  Awesome tension and buildup.</dd>

<dt><q>Pogrom</q> by <a href="http://www.jimkelly.net/" >James Patrick Kelly</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Another story I liked.  Near future story where the young are in conflict with a richer older generation.  What I loved is the hypocrisy of the main character, an older woman, commenting on how the younger generation blames the entire older generation for the sins of a few.</dd>

<dt><q>The Moat</q> by Greg Egan</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Interesting but not compelling (gah! I just used compelling in a review!) idea about people who create their own alternate D.N.A. and why they might want to do so.  Hint: it&#8217;s an us vs. them thing.</dd>

<dt><q>Voices</q> by <a href="http://www.jackdann.com/" >Jack Dann</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Boy talks to the dead. Friend doesn&#8217;t believe him. Not inspiring.</dd>

<dt><q>FOAM</q> by <a href="http://www.brianwaldiss.com/" >Brian W. Aldiss</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">FOAM stands for Free Of All Memory.  Unscrupulous people steal other people&#8217;s memories to sell, kind of like drugs. Eh.</dd>

<dt><q>Jack</q> by <a href="http://www.conniewillis.net/" >Connie Willis</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">I don&#8217;t usually like stories of this type.  A type I won&#8217;t reveal here so as not to spoil the story, but also partially because the relevant word is never actually used in the pages.  But I liked this one.  Thought it was a novel take on the idea, and some of the things left unsaid intrigued me.  For instance, how down and out would Jack have to be to resort to the kind of subterfuge he does?</dd>

<dt><q>La Macchina</q> by <a href="http://www.btinternet.com/~chris.bb/" >Chris Beckett</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Yet another version of <q>robots gain awareness</q>.  Nothing about this screams best of the year to me, though I wouldn&#8217;t call it bad either.</dd>

<dt><q>One Perfect Morning, with Jackals</q> by <a href="http://www.mikeresnick.com/" >Mike Resnick</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">I like this story because of what a bastard Koriba Kimante (the elder) is, so beholden to his convictions that he cannot be a father.</dd>

<dt><q>Desert Rain</q> by <a href="http://www.markvanname.com/" >Mark L. Van Name</a> and <a href="http://www.brazenhussies.net/murphy/" >Pat Murphy</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">The miracle of artificial intelligence illustrates this story about one woman&#8217;s one person bubblehead validation brigade.  A BVB is always a little more empty than you&#8217;ll think it will be.  I&#8217;m not sure if this is my favorite story in the book or not.  I guess it depends on how I think people relate to their BVBs.  Most days, I don&#8217;t think most people get that a BVB is skin-deep.  Those days I probably will like this story even more.</dd>

</dl>

<p>I kinda do want to know why this particular year is still in print.  I bought this new from Amazon.  New.  It was published over 15 years ago and every other edition of the series older than a year or two has to be purchased used.  So why this one?</p>

<p class="catalog"   style="font-size: 85%; line-height: normal;font-size: 85%; line-height: normal;">
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Title:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">The Year&#8217;s Best Science Fiction: Ninth Annual Collection</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Editor:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">Gardner Dozois</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Cover creator:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">Bob Eggleton (artist)</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Series:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">Year&#8217;s Best Science Fiction; 9</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Imprint / publisher:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">St. Martin&#8217;s Press</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Format:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">Paperback</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Length:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">575 p.</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Publication date:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">1992</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">ISBN-10:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">0-312-07891-9</span>
</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Year’s Best Science Fiction: Sixth Annual Collection / Gardner Dozois ed.</title>
		<link>http://reading.kingrat.biz/reviews/years-best-science-fiction-six-gardner-dozois</link>
		<comments>http://reading.kingrat.biz/reviews/years-best-science-fiction-six-gardner-dozois#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Oct 2007 18:58:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>King Rat</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Not much to say generally. Another pretty good collection of short fiction. Though I do wonder at the preponderance of fantasy stories, particularly given that St. Martin&#8217;s was in the 2nd year of their Year&#8217;s Best Fantasy and Horror series at the time this was published. They did have that niche covered. Surfacing, Walter Jon [...]]]></description>
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<p>Not much to say generally. Another pretty good collection of short fiction.  Though I do wonder at the preponderance of fantasy stories, particularly given that St. Martin&#8217;s was in the 2nd year of their Year&#8217;s Best Fantasy and Horror series at the time this was published.  They did have that niche covered.</p>

<dl>

<dt><q>Surfacing</q>, <a href="http://www.walterjonwilliams.net/" >Walter Jon Williams</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">This story takes two S.F. plots and mingles them, and I don&#8217;t really like the effect too well.  In the first plot, Anthony brings whales to another world because they can help him communicate with a species that lives underwater on that world.  Anthony was a scientist who helped decode whale speech.  After the discovery that a set of resonances underwater were actually an alien species, Anthony heads to that world to try to decode it, and to figure out what these unseen creatures are. Plot two revolves around a Kyklops, a multi-dimensional alien.  This alien has a contract with a woman that allows him to take over her body at will.  Anthony falls in love with her, and they plot to release her from the alien&#8217;s control.  I&#8217;ve found other <q>decoding alien languages</q> stories boring, but here I was very interested in it.  The damsel-in-distress story?  Not so much.  The mix?  Eh.</dd>

<dt><q>Home Front</q>, <a href="http://www.jimkelly.net/" >James Patrick Kelly</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Using an apparently unintentional prescient plot device, Kelly explores youth who are eligible to join the military and fight for America.  It kind of covers the same ground as Ender&#8217;s Game and Lord of the Flies, but in a shorter more digestible chunk.  The prescient part is an interchangeable position of Johnny America, the P.R. soldier of the military.  Unlike G.I. Joe, Johnny is more of a reality show construction.  Except there weren&#8217;t reality shows in the 80s when this was written.</dd>

<dt><q>The Man Who Loved The Vampire Lady</q>, Brian Stableford</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">A kind of S.F. take on a fantasy trope, vampires.  In this version, vampirism is a blood-born disease sometimes transmitted sexually that allows the vampire to live a long time.  Vampires have essentially become the ruling nobility in Europe.  Someone finally invents a microscope, and Lady Carmilla (a vampire) assigns her former lover Edmund (a human) to examine the device.  He&#8217;s a mechanician, which I assume means he&#8217;s a tinkerer.  He grasps the microscope, and understands the meaning of the little amoeba animals he sees, that they carry the vampirism trait.  He knows that the vampires won&#8217;t let him live long with the knowledge.  Fairly pedestrian idea, but decently well-written.</dd>

<dt><q>Peaches For Mad Molly</q>, <a href="http://www.digitalnoir.com/s/" >Stephen Gould</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Wow!  This was an awesome story.  Characterization not so involved.  It&#8217;s more a concept, and a pretty original one at that, wedded to a thriller mentality.  The concept is that when giant skyscrapers are built in the future, a culture of people will live on the outside of them.  Think rock climbers in the extreme.  The are poor and unable to afford to live inside, or they are malcontents who just don&#8217;t fit in there.  Our main character decides to go on a trading run down the side of his building, but he has to cross a 10 story area controlled by bandits.  He gets past them easily on the way down.  But climbing is slower and on the way back up they are ready and waiting for him.  Just an awesome story!</dd>

<dt><q>The Last Article</q>, <a href="http://www.sfsite.com/~silverag/turtledove.html" >Harry Turtledove</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Alternate history where the Third Reich wins World War II.  In India, the newly dominant Germans take over from the English and inherit their problems with the restless subcontinent.  A German officer who is the military governor takes on Mohandas Gandhi.  Turtledoves conclusion is that this time Gandhi does not win.  The analysis seems to be that nonviolence requires two things to work that would not be present: a very courageous population that would be willing to sacrifice their lives on a large scale, and an opponent that is squeamish about killing people.  If the authority has no problem with killing thousands of non-violent protesters, then they will emerge victorious if it scares people into compliance.  I think Tian An Men just might have proved Turtledove right.</dd>

<dt><q>Stable Strategies For Middle Management</q>, <a href="http://www.eileengunn.com/" >Eileen Gunn</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">A story about gene manipulation where people can get animal-like bodies. Then it gets surreal by being set in a middle management office and the workers use their changes for advancement.  It didn&#8217;t really click with me, though it was an interesting juxtaposition.</dd>

<dt><q>In Memoriam</q>, <a href="http://www.sff.net/people/nankress/" >Nancy Kress</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Would you give up your memory of who you are if that enabled you to live forever?</dd>

<dt><q>Kirinyaga</q>, <a href="http://www.mikeresnick.com/" >Mike Resnick</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">I&#8217;ve read this story before, but for some reason I always think of the plot of <cite>Ivory</cite> when I see the title <q>Kirinyaga</q>.  <cite>Ivory</cite> is not as good.  Koriba is the mundumugu of the Kikuyu tribe.  Originally located in Kenya, they now have their own planet maintained by Maintenance.  Kenya is essentially one big metropolis by this time in the future.  Maintenance is supposed to have a prime directive like instruction.  The Kikuyu get to run it how they want and Maintenance is not supposed to interfere.  Only one of the traditions of the Kikuyu is that babies born feet first are demons, and must be killed.  Which horrifies Maintenance, as the child of course had no choice in which tradition he would like.</dd>

<dt><q>The Girl Who Loved Animals</q>, <a href="http://www.mcallistercoaching.com/" >Bruce McAllister</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">In the future, many animals are extinct.  Some people want to bring them back, using methods like we have heard for dinosaurs.  D.N.A. for dinosaurs can be found embedded in amber on occasion.  Or mammoths in ice.  To my knowledge, we don&#8217;t have enough D.N.A. for these animals to clone them yet.  And we really don&#8217;t have a way to gestate them.  <q>Dolly</q> the cloned sheep was gestated by another sheep.  But, in the future, we will likely have genetic records for some of the animals that might become extinct.  We have live specimens.  We can take samples and record everything about their D.N.A.  And so if they become extinct, we could recreate them.  If we have a way to gestate them.  Without artificial uteruses, we&#8217;re kind of S.O.L.  But, there may be these groups of people trying to revive them.  They may have money.  And some women may need the money badly enough to take it for these purposes.</dd>

<dt><q>The Last Of The Winnebagoes</q> (Hugo award for best novella, Nebula award for best novella), Connie Willis</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">A nice novella about a future when environmentalism is standard.  States have outlawed gas hogs and water is a precious scarcity.  Many animals, particularly pets, have become extinct.  The protagonist is a photojournalist, one of a dying breed as automation pushes humans out of even that field.  On the way to his assignment, he sees a dead jackal in the road.  Jackals are rare, though not extinct.  But seeing it brings up memories of his dog, over which he obsesses.  Still, he dutifully shows up to take pictures of and talk to two older people who live in an R.V., traveling highways and making a living by charging people to see their Winnebago. Human interest story.  But he&#8217;s too distraught to continue on to his second assignment at the governor&#8217;s press conference.  Here&#8217;s the catch: that makes him look suspicious to the Humane Society which is investigating the death of the jackal.  I <em>loved</em> this story.</dd>

<dt><q><a href="http://www.lewisshiner.com/liberation/vain.html" >Love In Vain</a></q>, <a href="http://www.lewisshiner.com/" >Lewis Shiner</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">This story was included in <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/031203007X/rats-reading-20" ><cite>The Year&#8217;s Best Fantasy: Second Annual Collection</cite></a> which I <a href="http://reading.kingrat.biz/archives/263" >reviewed in July</a>.  It&#8217;s still a great story, but it doesn&#8217;t really seem like S.F. to me.  Love this story.  Go read it.</dd>

<dt><q>The Hob</q>, Judith Moffett</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Hobs are gnomelike creatures that live in Britain.  Creatures of legend.  They feel a need to serve masters, kind of like house-elves in Harry Potter.  But as modern life encroaches, the hobs retreat from interacting with humans and hide.  Except one of them, Elphi, gets careless and allows a backpacker, Jenny, to see him.  It&#8217;s a nice story, but it didn&#8217;t do a whole lot for me.  Very ho-hum.  Oh, and the S.F. hook is that hobs are really stranded aliens.  And that&#8217;s about the length of that hook too.</dd>

<dt><q>Our Neural Chernobyl</q>, Bruce Sterling</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">A really short story that describes a future evolutionary cataclysm from the perspective of an even further future.  The <q>neural Chernobyl</q> depicted is a genetically engineered virus that makes people smarter, though most can&#8217;t handle it and burn out crazy.  But it also jumps to a few animals as well.</dd>

<dt><q>House Of Bones</q>, <a href="http://www.majipoor.com/" >Robert Silverberg</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">A time-traveler is stranded in the past, among Cro-Magnons.  Pushes the idea that our assumptions that Cro-Magnon&#8217;s were primitive may not be quite correct.  The premise isn&#8217;t all that exciting, but it&#8217;s a pretty well-written story.  I enjoyed it.</dd>

<dt><q>Schrödinger’s Kitten</q>, George Alec Effinger</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Supposedly illustrating the <q>Schrödinger’s cat</q> phenomena, I just found this story confusing.</dd>

<dt><q>Do Ya, Do Ya, Wanna Dance?</q>, <a href="http://www.sff.net/people/Waldrop/" >Howard Waldrop</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Another story that I really wouldn&#8217;t classify as science fiction.  Maybe I&#8217;m just missing something.  Frank is still a local in the town where he went to high school.  It&#8217;s time for the 20 year reunion.  Frank becomes a <q>guide</q> to show all the returnees what&#8217;s happened to the various places the class used to haunt.  The highlight of the reunion is supposed to be a performance by the long since split up high school rock band that briefly achieved stardom right after high school.  Only something interesting happens when they play one of their songs.  Howard Waldrop stories always seem to have a bit of fun in them.  At least the three I&#8217;ve read previously.  Not deep, but decently good.</dd>

<dt><q>The Growth Of The House Of Usher</q>, Brian Stableford</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">A bit of a homage to Edgar Allen Poe, including the use of language and style of Poe&#8217;s period.  Here a scientist named Usher lives in a house of biomass in which genetically engineered creatures live.  They build the house.  They keep it running.  Usher wants to pass on his knowledge before he dies, and so invites a colleague to the house.</dd>

<dt><q>Glacier</q>, Kim Stanley Robinson</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">A new ice age has descended on North America.  A large glacier is just north of Boston, where the Canadian refugees at the center of the story live.  Dad is a professor.  Son heads out to the glacier to play by himself a lot.  Times are tough.  I&#8217;m not generally a Kim Stanley Robinson fan, but I liked this story.  It shows the effect of climate change on ordinary people.  No real explanation of the societal impact of this ice age.  You have to glean that from the conversations the kid has with his parents, and some of his interactions with others.  So it comes off as a very personal story rather than a birds-eye view.</dd>

<dt><q>Sanctuary</q>, James Lawson</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">This story reminds me a lot of <a href="http://www.amazon.com/o/ASIN/0345457692/rats-reading-20"  title="Buy this book at Amazon.com" ><cite>Altered Carbon</cite></a>, except this was written well before.  Basically, a computer software designer is found in his office with his mind wiped.  And another one working for another company is as well.  Cardenas is a cop.  His job is to figure out who killed these guys when there is no evidence except the bodies. I&#8217;m gonna do something here that I don&#8217;t normally do: issue a pretty blatant spoiler.  These guys kill themselves.  Here&#8217;s why I&#8217;m spoiling it.  They kill themselves because of <a href="http://www.amazon.com/o/ASIN/1582701709/rats-reading-20"  title="Buy this book at Amazon.com" ><cite>The Secret</cite></a>.  In other words, the law of attraction, which is the stupidest thing ever.  The version in this story is that if you repeat something often enough, you set up a harmonic resonance for that action that embeds itself in space-time.  Anyone else doing that action latches on to that resonance and can do the action just a bit better than would be expected.  So these guys get a super-computer to repeat some program that emulates their brains.  And it does it so often that they are literally whisked into the space-time continuum.  Urg.  Since when did the <q>law of attraction</q> get any traction in anything having to do with science?  I&#8217;ll buy faster than light travel before this crap.</dd>

<dt><q>The Dragon Line</q>, <a href="http://www.michaelswanwick.com/" >Michael Swanwick</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Mordred and Merlin in modern times.  I wasn&#8217;t so impressed with this.</dd>

<dt><q>Mrs. Shummel Exits A Winner</q>, <a href="http://www4.ncsu.edu/~tenshi/index2.html" >John Kessel</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Another story that isn&#8217;t really science fiction so much as fantasy.  Did Dozois do this in the other anthologies I&#8217;ve read and I just not notice?  Anyway, it&#8217;s not a bad story.  Mrs. Schummel is a sad old woman who plays bingo.  Lots of bingo.  One night at the bingo hall a boy sits next to her.  He doesn&#8217;t talk.  He wins on every bingo card, but never yells <q>bingo!</q> or even waves over the judges.  Mrs. Shummel is flabbergasted but doesn&#8217;t want him to win over her so she says nothing.  He offers her the card, for a price.  Will she take it?</dd>

<dt><q>Emissary</q>, Stephen Kraus</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">A researcher finds an alien artifact and turns it on.  There isn&#8217;t anything groundbreaking in this story, but I thought it was pretty snifty nonetheless.</dd>

<dt><q>It Was The Heat</q>, Pat Cadigan</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Not science fiction.  Not something I liked.  The second story in the volume to have appeared in <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/031203007X/rats-reading-20" ><cite>The Year&#8217;s Best Fantasy: Second Annual Collection</cite></a>.</dd>

<dt><q>Skin Deep</q>, <a href="http://www.kristinekathrynrusch.com/" >Kristine Kathryn Rusch</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">On an alien world a young woman is starting to have signs of a mysterious disease.  Decent story.</dd>

<dt><q><a href="http://www.infinityplus.co.uk/stories/dyinginhull.htm" >Dying In Hull</a></q>, <a href="http://www.davidalexandersmith.com/" >D. Alexander Smith</a> (David Alexander Smith)</dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Man, it must suck to have a common last name like Smith and on top of that use your middle name only to have some famous author come along, use your name, and hog all the top Google spots.  Anyway, this is a story of the sea rising and slowly inundating the town of Hull Massachusetts.  Like Washington State&#8217;s Harry Truman, who refused to leave the side of Mt. St. Helens knowing it would probably be his death, Ethel Cobb continues to live in Hull.  There she deals with marauding gangs and memories of people long gone.  I think this is the oldest story I&#8217;ve read that deals with global warming.  I recommend it.</dd>

<dt><q>Distances</q>, <a href="http://www.kathekoja.com/" >Kathe Koja</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Eh.  People are specially altered to received faster than light communications from robotic space ships on their way to Alpha Centauri.  This story had no oomph for me. Characters were stock.  The ideas were stock.</dd>

<dt><q>Famous Monsters</q>, <a href="http://www.johnnyalucard.com/" >Kim Newman</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">This was fun!  A Martian gets in the movies and after a long career mostly in B-movie roles writes this memoir-like retrospective.</dd>

<dt><q>The Scalehunter&#8217;s Beautiful Daughter</q>, <a href="http://www.lucius-shepard.com/" >Lucius Shepard</a></dt>
<dd  style="margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;margin-top: 3pt; margin-bottom: 3pt;">Wow!  Beautiful fantasy novella!  Original and powerful.  Of course, every Lucius Shepard story I&#8217;ve read has been unique.  Definitely a fitting end to this anthology.</dd>

</dl>

<p class="catalog"   style="font-size: 85%; line-height: normal;font-size: 85%; line-height: normal;">
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Title:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">The year&#8217;s best science fiction: sixth annual collection</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Editor:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">Gardner Dozois</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Cover artist:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style=""><a href="http://www.armandcabrera.com/" >Armand Cabrera</a></span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Series:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">year&#8217;s best science fiction ; 6</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Imprint / publisher:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">St. Martin&#8217;s Press</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Format:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">Paperback</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Length:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">xxiv, 596 p.</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">Publication date:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">1989</span><br/>
<span class="catname"   style="font-weight: bold;font-weight: bold;">ISBN-10:</span> <span class="catvalue"   style="">0-312-03009-6</span>
</p>]]></content:encoded>
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