What anthologies of sci-fi short stories would you recommend? I used to have several about 30 years ago but I lost them in a horrible blimp accident. The horrible blimp threw them out when we where divorced.
I want to find some of these old anthologies of short stories again.
I have most Bradbury, I have most Heinlein, so I don’t need those. Asimov was a good editor of some of these collections, but I don’t dig him as a writer.
I have 50 Short Science Fiction Tales by Asimov & Conklin. I have Richard Matheson’s I am legend. That is about it on the shelf now.
No novels, collections of short stories. Recommendations please.
The “Nebula Awards” series, most especially Nebula Awards Number Two (wonderful collection!)
Lesser known, but quite good, are the “Stellar” series, Stellar 1, 2, 3, and 4, edited by Judy-Lynn Del Rey.
Of the old Groff Conklin anthologies, I highly recommend “Science Fiction Terror Tales.” Yow! You will lose sleep! Recommended for horror/terror fans ONLY!
How are you on “New Age” weird stuff? Michael Moorcock’s “Best From New Worlds 4” is one of my faves, but, fair warning, the stuff is not classical science fiction. It’s screwy, experimental, quirky, and different. But if that’s yer cuppa, it doesn’t get better than this.
Just checked, and all of these are available on Amazon, and not too expensive. Many are priced at “$0.01” plus shipping.
Healy and McComas “Adventures in Time and Space” is the classic anthology of Golden Age stories - though pretty old now, anyone who reads sf should have read all these.
There are a number of Hugo Award anthologies which are also great.
There are Nebula Award anthologies also, but the first Hugo ones have more stuff collected in one place.
There are many best of the year anthologies also. I’ve fallen behind on them, so I don’t know which of the current ones are best.
There are tons of collections of stories by single authors - there are collected works of Clarke, Asimov and Heinlein. I suspect used book stores with good sf collections are a good source - I’ve got hundreds of collections and anthologies from the '50s to the '70s which I concentrate on.
Ellison’s Dangerous Visions
Terry Carr’s Best Science Fiction of the Year Series
Gardner Dozois’s Year’s Best SF
Judith Merrill’s Year Best Science Fiction The Other Side of the Clock by Philip Van Doren Stern, a great collection of time travel/alternate world anthologies, including Stern’s short story “The Greatest Gift,” which few here have read, but everyone know about (it was made into an extremely popular movie). Great Science Fiction Stories by Cordelia Titcomb Smith. I assume Smith was a pseudonym, this is probably the best short collection of Golden Age Science Fiction (other than the Hall of Fame books), which came later and had some of the same stories.
Single author anthologies: San Diego Lightfoot Sue by Tom Reamy The Persistence of Vision by John Varley The Island of Doctor Death and Other Stories and Other Stories by Gene Wolfe.
Del Rey published a great series of The Best Of anthologies in the early 70s. Authors included Cordwainer Smith, Frederick Brown, Henry Kuttner, and Cyril Kornbluth.
Pocket Books did a similar series. Their series included Poul Anderson, Harry Harrison, Damon Knight, Keith Laumer, Barry N. Malzburg, Mack Reynolds, and Robert Silverberg.
Ditto on this, and there was an even better follow-up Again Dangerous Visions, that was 2 volumes in paperback.
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Carcinoma Angels*. Now there’s a story.
Roddy
I’ll second the Gardner Dozois best of anthologies, which are done every year.
Stephen R Donaldson collected 27 short stories in Strange Dreams. Many of these are fantasy rather than science fiction, but there are many brilliant stories in there.
I asked a question about the Orbit anthologies, and I’ve really enjoyed tracking them down in used bookstores. 75% great, 20 percent good, with a few stinkers thrown in. I’ve picked up library volumes for $1.00 or less.
If you’re including shared worlds anthologies, I’d say the Wild Cards novels are worth looking into.
If we’re allowed to include collections of short stories by a single author, then Spider Robinson’s Callahan collections are worth a read. Unless you hate Spider Robinson, in which case, not so much.
Major Ingredients: The Selected Stories of Eric Frank Russell, edited by Rick Katze. Russell is absolutely wonderful. His Men, Martians and Machines is a collection of four novellas set on board a ship with a mixed human and Martian crew. (The Martians are chess-crazed octopoids, and are one of my favourite alien races.)
Isaac Asimov Presents The Great SF Stories 1 (1939) through Isaac Asimov Presents The Great SF Stories 25 (1963) are good collections edited by Asimov and Greenberg.