Stories worth reading

Story of the week: "Calved" by Sam J. Miller

I used to review short stories. Critiqued a ton of them on the sadly defunct The Fix, back when Eugie Foster edited that wonderful website of short story reviews. Also reviewed them on this site, where I tried to bring attention to great stories by recommending short stories worth reading each week.

Then I slacked off. Which is shame on me, because I still read so many short stories. But instead of sharing them I stayed silent.

No longer. Inspired by the superb work K. Tempest Bradford is doing at io9 to highlight genre short fiction I'm again picking stories of the week. And my first is "Calved" by Sam. J. Miller in the September 2015 issue of Asimov's Science Fiction.

Sam J. Miller is a new author whose stories have been published in Lightspeed, Strange Horizons, Shimmer and many other places. He's also been nominated for a Nebula Award, won a Shirley Jackson Award, and has a novel coming out next year.

His first story for Asimov's is a near-future tale set on Earth after a global environmental disaster. The narrator, Dom, is an ice-grunt, a poor immigrant cutting ice from glaciers for use as drinking water around the world. When he's not working under horrific conditions on an illegal ice boat he lives on the floating Swedish city of Qaanaaq, where he battles those who hate him because he is poor and doesn't speak the city's main language.

If this sounds like a familiar tale of an immigrant being exploited and discriminated against, that's because it is. But Miller inverts the trope by having Dom be an immigrant from New York City, who fled the USA right before the environment there went to hell and back.

If the plot I've described was all there was to "Calved," then what we'd have would be the set-up for a decent science fiction story, a tale which offers nothing more than a cautionary warning to readers against becoming too comfortable with the benefits they've been blessed with by both history and power. But the heart of Miller's story doesn't come from the backstory described above. Instead, the story derives its true power, as do all great stories, from the relationships between the characters.

You see, Dom is trying and failing to maintain a relationship with his son. Because he must spend so much time at sea harvesting ice, his son has grown up without him. Now a teenager, his son is beginning to see Dom as the rest of the citizens of Qaanaaq see him — a poor piece of trash not worth saving or helping.

Dom is desperate to change his son's opinion. And to accomplish this he ... does something which will haunt me for years to come.

When I finished this story I wanted to scream. I wanted to punish Miller for writing something which so gut my emotions. I wanted to hug him for creating a story so beautifully captivating and so perfectly devastating to read.

"Calved" by Sam. J. Miller is one of the year's best stories and will likely be on my Hugo and Nebula Award short list. Seek this story out and read it.

Remembering Eugie Foster and her stories

The Nebula Award finalists were announced the other day and, to my excitement, one of the stories on the ballot is Eugie Foster's "When it Ends, He Catches Her."  I love this story, which is both touching and disturbing and a beautiful elegy on life and death.

I wish everyone would read the story. I wish everyone would consider it for the Hugo and Nebula Awards (the story was on my nominating list for both awards).

Unfortunately, I wasn't able to tell Eugie how much I loved this story because she passed away the day after it was published. But as with all authors, a part of her lives on through her stories.

The November 2014 issue of Locus Magazine published my short remembrance of Eugie. Here's the essay in case you missed it.

Remembering Eugie Foster

There's never enough time. There are never enough words. The day before Eugie Foster died, Daily Science Fiction published her amazing new short story "When It Ends, He Catches Her." The story — a lyrical tale about the dance of life and death and loss — touched me like few others have in recent years. I wanted so badly to tell Eugie how much I loved the story. But there's never enough time and, when Eugie passed the next day, there were no more words to share.

But words are still why I loved Eugie's writings so much. She was a friend, yes, but also one of my favorite authors. Her stories ranged from fairy tales to science fiction to horror, from stories which could puzzle even cynical and jaded adults to tales which couldn't help but delight eternally eager children. Eugie embraced the entire range of possibilities contained in the short story form, with her Nebula Award winning novelette "Sinner, Baker, Fabulist, Priest; Red Mask, Black Mask, Gentleman, Beast" ranking as a classic which people will read and wonder about for years to come.

Eugie was a powerful voice for short stories in a time and a culture where short stories are nearly a forgotten genre. As editor of The Fix short fiction review, she highlighted stories which otherwise would have been overlooked by readers. Through her friendships with fellow short story writers she encouraged so many authors to greater heights. I know I personally wouldn't be where I am today as a writer without her kind words and support.

Eugie's husband Matthew asked that instead of sending flowers, people remember her by reading her stories. That is a beautiful request and one which fits so well with Eugie's life and writings. Remember her life. Read her stories. Share her stories with others.

Goodbye, Eugie. You were a wonderful person and author. While it's never easy to say goodbye, I know I will continue to reread your stories — and urge others to read them — for as long as I live.

My 2015 Hugo and Nebula Award nominations

Update: See my related post on why you shouldn't straw man these nominations, or vote for these stories because I like them.

Below are the novels and stories I'll be nominating for this year's Hugo and Nebula Awards. Now, I'm well aware that many people don't like these award-promotion lists. In fact, last year someone went full rocket to the moon on me after I encouraged people to consider certain works for the Hugos.

If you feel like that, don't check out the novels and stories below. But if you are interested in the stories and authors I'm hoping will hit the awards this year, and the stories and authors who are influencing our genre right now, read on.

Best Novels

  • The Mirror Empire: Worldbreaker Saga 1 by Kameron Hurley. See my original review of the novel.
     
  • The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu, translated by Ken Liu. This is why we need translated fiction! This novel, which spans recent Chinese history as it revolves around a strange case of alien contact is one of the best hard science fiction novels I've read in years. Can't wait to read the next book in the trilogy.
     
  • Defenders by Will McIntosh. Just when I thought I'd read every type of alien invasion and military SF story out there, along comes Will McIntosh with something new.
     
  • Lagoon by Nnedi Okorafor. Wow. That's all I could say after reading this novel, which explores what happens when first contact happens in Lagos, Nigeria. I've always loved Nnedi Okorafor's amazing ability to create true-life characters which both resonate with readers and stories and twist you into new directions and Lagoon does this and far more in superb ways. Unfortunately, the novel is hard to find in the USA (I had to order a copy from the UK). The USA release is slated for later this year.
     
  • Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer. If I could, I'd nominate the entire Southern Reach series as one complete work. See my original review of the series.

Best Novellas

  • "We Are All Completely Fine" by Daryl Gregory. It's surprising more fictional genre characters don't enter therapy, what with all the supernatural horrors they continually experience. Daryl Gregory explores this topic in a unique and interesting manner.
     
  • "Where the Trains Turn" by Pasi Ilmari Jääskeläinen, Tor.com. Another great example of why we need more translated fiction. I'd never even heard of Finnish author Pasi Ilmari Jääskeläinen until I read this novella. Now I want to read more of his fiction. Warning: This novella will forever change how you view trains.
     
  • "The Regular" by Ken Liu, from the anthology Upgraded. Only Ken Liu could compel me to read a futuristic tech-based version of detective noir. Only Ken Liu could pull off such an amazing story.
     
  • "The Mothers of Voorhisville" by Mary Rickert, Tor.com. Motherhood will never be the same after this story by award-winning author Mary Rickert.
     
  • "Entanglement" by Vandana Singh, from the anthology Hieroglyph: Stories and Visions for a Better Future. It's rare to read an optimistic hard science fiction story about climate change, but Vandana Singh creates one by showing how ordinary people fight to save their world. An all-too-rare fictional look at how humans work together in the face of disaster.

Best Novelettes

  • "Marielena" by Nina Allan, Interzone 254
    I've long been a fan of Nina Allan's beautiful stories, and "Marielena" must surely rank among her best. The story is the tale of a refugee in near-future Britain who is both haunted by a literally demon from his past who lives alongside the demons of the present and future.
     
  • "Sleep Walking Now and Then" by Richard Bowes, Tor.com. One of the tragedies of the SF/F genre is that so few people read Richard Bowes' touchingly disturbing stories. Well, now's your chance to change this damned trend with this lovely near-future theater story.
  • "Steppin' Razor" by Maurice Broaddus from Asimov's Science Fiction, Feb. 2014.
    This impressive steampunk novelette is a great introduction to Maurice's fiction. The story is set in an alternate-history Jamaica, where competing factions and beliefs compete for dominance and power.
     
  • "A Guide to the Fruits of Hawai'i" by Alaya Dawn Johnson, F&SF July.Aug 2014. One of my frustrations with F&SF in recent years is that many of the stories seem to blur together in my reading mind. Not this strong story by Johnson in the issue guest edited by C.C. Finlay. This is also the only vampire story I've read in the last decade which I'm recommending to people. Warning: Don't read before you visit a certain tropical island.
     
  • "Wine" by Yoon Ha Lee, Clarkesworld. I'm always hesitant to say too much about one of Yoon Ha Lee's stories because part of the joy of reading them is in approaching them with fresh eyes. This "space opera but not a space opera" story is no exception. And if you haven't read her short story collection Conservation of Shadows, track it down today.

Best Short Stories

  • "The Breath of War" by Aliette de Bodard, Beneath Ceaseless Skies. Another story which is pointing toward a revitalization of military SF, or perhaps more accurately an expanding of possibilities for a subgenre which until recently limited itself in unacceptable ways.
     
  • "When it Ends, He Catches Her" by Eugie Foster, Daily Science Fiction. This story is both touching and disturbing, and an beautiful elegy on life and death. I was blown away by this story when I read it and immediately knew it'd be on my year's best list, with this story ranking in my mind with Eugie's Nebula Award winning "Sinner, Baker, Fabulist, Priest; Red Mask, Black Mask, Gentleman, Beast." I only wish I'd been able to tell Eugie how much I loved this story before she passed away.
     
  • "Patterns of a Murmuration, in Billions of Data Points" by JY Yang. This is why we read science fiction and fantasy — to discover an exciting new story by a new author who opens our eyes to new realms of possibility and imagination.
     
  • "Five Stages of Grief After the Alien Invasion" by Caroline M. Yoachim. Another great story by one of my favorite short story writers. The title is both self-explanatory and totally unable to capture the depth of this story.
     
  • "Santos de Sampaguitas" by Alyssa Wong, Strange Horizons. Alyssa Wong had an amazing year as a short story writer. Her horror story "Scarecrow" (originally published in Black Static 42, reprinted in Tor.com) was on my award shortlist, as was "The Fisher Queen" from F&SF. But in the end this disturbing tale from Strange Horizons is what refused to leave me in peace. My prediction: Alyssa Wong is beginning an amazing journey as an author and everyone will be reading many more great stories from her in the years to come.

Southern Reach by Jeff VanderMeer is as damn close to perfect as a trilogy can get

The beautiful omnibus edition of Area X: The Southern Reach Trilogy.

The beautiful omnibus edition of Area X: The Southern Reach Trilogy.

In my continuing roundup of the year's best stories and novels, it's time to mention the mysterious region dominating this year's fiction: Area X.

This region/wilderness/ecology/creature/entity is the star of Jeff VanderMeer's amazing Southern Reach Trilogy. If that description seems a little vague, I'm both trying to avoid spoilers and also dealing with a creation which is by design ambiguous. The trilogy lives and breathes within the opaque reaches of life, and it's this strange and unknown nature which both gives the story it's power and ensures the reader is both unsettled and fascinating by the world VanderMeer has created.

The trilogy's novels — Annihilation, Authority, & Acceptance — follow a fascinating arc. In the first book, we follow the newest expedition as they explore Area X, which appeared on the Florida panhandle decades before and ever since has devoured most people who enter its boundaries. In the second book, we witness the government's feeble attempts to contain Area X and the struggle of one man to understand what Area X might be. In the final book, the past and present-day worlds of Area X, along with the lives of those who have experienced Area X, implode into a surreal understanding of what the region/wilderness/ecology/creature/entity might actually be.

If you're not familiar with VanderMeer's writing, he's a master of description, psychological depth, and insightful, literary explorations. He's also very comfortable writing within the unknown realms of fiction, where unseen monsters bring a far deeper level of unsettling fear than anything we might truly see. When done correctly, as VanderMeer does, this level of ambiguity allows the reader to more deeply experience the truths of fiction than can be found in the concrete, black and white stories most authors create. 

The Southern Reach trilogy isn't merely one of the best stories of the year — it's one of the best of the last decade.

I'd love for the entire trilogy to be named to all the award shortlists, but that's probably expecting too much. So I will be naming Annihilation to my final ballots for the Hugo, Nebula, and World Fantasy Awards and I urge others to do the same.

And if you haven't already read the trilogy, it's not too late. FSG Originals has just released the trilogy as a hardcover omnibus edition. This edition is beautifully designed and crafted, and is a great way to dive into the truths of Area X.

"Sublimation Angels" now available in Polish

The Oct. 2014 issue of Nowa Fantastyka, containing the translation of my novella "Sublimation Angels."

The Oct. 2014 issue of Nowa Fantastyka, containing the translation of my novella "Sublimation Angels."

The October 2014 issue of the Polish SF magazine Nowa Fantastyka is now available and includes a translation of my novella "Sublimation Angels," which was a Nebula Award finalist a few years ago. 

Nowa Fantastyka is a beautiful 8.5 x 11 inch magazine containing 80 pages, with half its content printed on full-color glossy stock and the rest on black and white newsprint. For a glimpse of the magazine check out this PDF download, which includes the first page of my translated novella.

"Sublimation Angels" was originally published in the British magazine Interzone.

This is the third of my stories to be translated and published by Nowa Fantastyka. The other two are "Heaven's Touch" and "Monday's Monk," both originally published in Asimov's and named to the annual Locus Recommended Reading List.