
Tony Den on Bob’s Books – Shelfie #6: (Cook, LeGuin, Gygax, Hardy, Hendee, Flint, Smith, McKillip).Dave Hook on Beauty and Nightmares on Aliens Worlds: Interviewing C.
SELindberg on Beauty and Nightmares on Aliens Worlds: Interviewing C. HOME Search Search for: Search Mad Shadows Darker than Weird Hither Came Conan Get Back Issues of Black Gate Recent Comments See all our coverage of the best new fantasy and science fiction here. It is 400 pages, priced at $11.99 in trade paperback and $6.99 in digital formats. Made To Order: Robots and Revolution was published by Solaris Books on March 17, 2020. How Science Fiction Was Saved by Solaris and Jonathan Strahan by Todd McAulty (2018)ĭistinctive Visions of Earth After Climate Change: Drowned Worlds (2016) The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year, Volume Thirteen (2019) Our previous coverage of Jonathan’s anthologies include: “A Glossary of Radicalization” by Brooke Bolander “Fairy Tales for Robots” by Sofia Samatar “An Elephant Never Forgets” by Rich Larson “Polished Performance” by Alastair Reynolds “A Guide for Working Breeds” by Vina Jie-Min Prasad Making the Other We Need by Jonathan Strahan It’s a hilarious tale of two robot pals who couldn’t be more different, and it’s well worth your time.) (To get a sense of the spirit of this anthology, read the first story “A Guide for Working Breeds” by Vina Jie-Min Prasad, complete and completely free, at Tor.com. Hamilton, Annalee Newitz, Suzanne Palmer, Ian R. Published on the 100th anniversary of the word “Robot” entering our modern lexicon, Made To Order contains brand new stories by Sofia Samatar, Peter Watts, Ken Liu, Sarah Pinsker, Alastair Reynolds, Peter F. His latest is Made To Order: Robots and Revolution, released yesterday by Solaris.
He also edited the groundbreaking Infinity series for Solaris, seven volumes starting with Engineering Infinity (2010) and ending with Infinity’s End (2018), perhaps the most acclaimed original anthology series of the last decade. He’s been editing Year’s Best volumes since 2003, for ibooks, the Science Fiction Book Club, Night Shade, and Solaris, and just announced the contents of the first volume of The Year’s Best Science Fiction from Saga Press (if that Facebook link doesn’t work for you, don’t worry about it I’ll cover it in an upcoming Future Treasures post). A new anthology by Jonathan Strahan is always an event.