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160+ Works 478 Members 11 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Photo by Lars-Olov Strandberg, 30th World Science Fiction Convention, Los Angeles, Calif., 1972. Copyright © Lars-Olov Strandberg

Series

Works by Charles N. Brown

Far Travellers (1976) 11 copies
Locus (issue 536) (2005) 1 copy
Locus (issue 537) (2005) 1 copy
Locus (issue 538) (2005) 1 copy
Locus (issue 539) (2005) 1 copy
Locus (issue 540) (2006) 1 copy
Locus (issue 541) (2006) 1 copy
Locus Nr.492 2002.01 — Editor — 1 copy
Locus, Issue 329 (1988) — Editor — 1 copy

Associated Works

The Best Science Fiction of the Year #8 (1979) — Contributor — 217 copies, 3 reviews
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #6 (1977) — Contributor — 150 copies, 3 reviews
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #4 (1975) — Contributor — 135 copies, 4 reviews
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #7 (1978) — Contributor — 125 copies, 4 reviews
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #10 (1981) — Contributor — 122 copies
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #5 (1976) — Contributor — 122 copies, 1 review
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #9 (1980) — Contributor — 117 copies, 4 reviews
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #11 (1982) — Contributor — 103 copies, 1 review
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #12 (1983) — Contributor — 95 copies, 1 review
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #15 (1986) — Contributor, some editions — 81 copies
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #14 (1985) — Contributor, some editions — 76 copies, 3 reviews
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #13 (1984) — Contributor — 70 copies, 2 reviews
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #16 (1987) — Contributor — 51 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1937-06-24
Date of death
2009-07-12
Gender
male
Occupations
editor
publisher
Organizations
United States Navy
Locus
Asimov's Science Fiction
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Associated Place (for map)
New York, USA

Members

Reviews

12 reviews
Since 1968, Locus has been the trade magazine of SFF publishing. It's the place to go for news of publishing deals, reviews of new fiction, and comprehensive lists of what's been published each month. In 1971, they began the Locus Awards, honoring the best fiction of each year. This anthology was published in 2004, and includes selected winners from the first 30 (ish) years of the award.

With so vague a theme, this collection does feel a little shapeless. There's no unifying authorial voice, show more no thematic similarities, not even a "here's what the genre looks like at this specific moment" snapshot. The only thing these stories share is excellence, and on that level, Brown and Strahan have assembled a terrific collection.

There are four stories here good enough to make my personal list of all-time classics: Harlan Ellison's "Jeffty Is Five," which starts as Bradbury-esqe nostalgia, then rips your heart out in the final paragrahps; John Varley's "The Persistence of Vision," about a man who stumbles into happiness at an unusual desert commune; Octavia E. Butler's "Bloodchild," about an alien race who establish a violently symbiotic relationship with humanity; and Ted Chiang's "Hell Is the Absence of God," in which despite angelic visitations and other visible signs of God's existence, one man simply cannot bring himself to accept or love God.

Chiang's is the best of the three stories on religious themes, but the others are also quite good. In "The Way of Cross and Dragon," George R. R. Martin sends a cleric, representing a future Inquisition, to a distant planet to wipe out a dangerous new heresy; Joanna Russ's "Souls" gives us a medieval abbey run by an extraordinary abbess.

And the rest of the authors here are like an all-star team of these three decades: Ursula K. Le Guin, Connie Willis, John Varley, James Tiptree Jr., Bruce Sterling, Greg Egan. There are a couple of stories that didn't do much for me, but both are by authers to whom I've never quite connected; Gene Wolfe and Lucius Shepard both write prose that's too ornate for my taste, though I certainly understand why so many do like them.

A strong, solid collection of late-20th century SF. If you enjoy the genre at all, there will be something here, and probably several somethings, that will delight you.
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I found this book in a Little Free Library in the summer of 2020. It has sat at the side of my bed since then and every once in a while when I had finished one book and wasn't quite ready to start another I would read a story from it. As the subtitle says the stories span thirty years from the 1970s to the 2000s. Many of the authors are well-known: Octavia Butler, Harlan Ellison, Neil Gaiman, Ursula K. Le Guin, George R. R. Martin, Connie Willis. I enjoyed all the stories but some stood out show more for me. Ursula Le Guin's short story called "The Day Before the Revolution" evoked her fabulous book The Dispossessed as it is the final thoughts of the founder of the society explored in that book. Connie Willis is represented by the short story "Even the Queen" which postulates a society in which women control their reproductive cycles and don't even have menstrual periods unless they wish to conceive. The story "Rachel in Love" is by Pat Murphy, a writer I haven't encountered previously. The Rachel in the title is a primate who has been reared by Dr. Aaron Jacobs. Rachel thinks of Aaron as her father and so, when he dies of a heart attack, she is bereft. What follows is even worse for her.

At the back of the book is a list of all the works that have won Locus Awards up until 2003. Locus Awards are voted on by readers of the magazine so they represent what works have appealed to people the most in that year. Looking at the list for best science fiction novel I can see that I have read about half of them and they were all very good. So I'm going to see if I can get my hands on some of the rest.
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Listen to this list of authors: Harlan Ellison, Ted Chiang, Ursula K. LeGuinn, Connie Willis, James Tiptree Jr.. Listen to this list of stories: “ The Death of Doctor Island”, “The Day Before the Revolution”, “Jeffty is Five”, “The Persistance of Vision”. (And those are literally the first four stories – it goes on from there.)

This book is a collection of Locus Award winners, but that also means it is a collection of some of the best Hugo and Nebula Award winners. In other show more words, it represents some of the best writing in science fiction from 1970 to 2000. And what that means is that it is a fantastic collection.

This is the book you give someone when they want to know what you see in that “sci-fi stuff”, this is the book you give to fellow fans to share why you all got into science fiction in the first place, this is the book you buy yourself if you need an introduction to the genre, and this is the book you buy for your collection so you can relive the best the genre has to offer.
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A very strong anthology of high quality work. Unlike many anthologies there is little if any "filler" to be found here. Worth owning for the Ellison, Varley, Gaiman and Bisson stories. Gaiman's OCTOBER IN THE CHAIR is a loving homage to Bradbury that should not be missed. And for the record this got remaindered quickly and may currently be had for pennies on Amazon.

Awards

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Associated Authors

Jonathan Strahan Editor, Contributor
Terry Carr Contributor
Neil Gaiman Contributor
John Crowley Contributor
James Jr. Tiptree Contributor
John Kessel Contributor
Ted Chiang Contributor
Terry Bisson Contributor
Pat Murphy Contributor
Lucius Shepard Contributor
Greg Egan Contributor
Joanna Russ Contributor
Ursula K. Le Guin Contributor
Bruce Sterling Contributor
Gene Wolfe Contributor
Harlan Ellison Contributor
John Varley Contributor
Octavia E. Butler Contributor
Connie Willis Contributor
Fritz Leiber Contributor
Gregory Benford Contributor
Jerry Kaufman Contributor
Arthur D. Hlavaty Contributor
Ian Covell Contributor
Colin Smythe Contributor
Nick Gevers Contributor
Fred W. Clarke Contributor
Jennifer A. Hall Contributor
Mark R. Kelly Contributor
Russell Letson Contributor
Faren Miller Contributor
Lisa Lees Contributor
Eli Eshed Contributor
Alyx Dellamonica Contributor
Tim Pratt Contributor
Andy Duncan Contributor
Karen Haber Contributor
Michael Moorcock Contributor
Karen Joy Fowler Contributor
Sean McMullen Contributor
Kinuko Craft Cover artist
Jackie Rigden Contributor
David Johnson Contributor
Forrest J Ackerman Contributor
Carolyn Cushman Contributor
Arnie Fenner Cover designer
Gary K. Wolfe Contributor
Jonathan Cowie Contributor
Walter Brumm Translator
Edda Petri Translator

Statistics

Works
160
Also by
14
Members
478
Popularity
#51,586
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
11
ISBNs
15
Languages
1
Favorited
1

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