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The Best of Strange Horizons: Year One: September 2000-August 2001 (The Best of Strange Horizons, 1)

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Title: The Best of Strange Horizons: Year One: September 2000-August 2001 (The Best of Strange Horizons, 1)
by Mary Anne Mohanraj
ISBN: 1-59021-036-0
Publisher: Lethe Press
Pub. Date: December, 2003
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $15.00
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Average Customer Rating: 4.38 (8 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5
Summary: List of Authors with Titles
Comment: Since Amazon doesn't have this information, I thought it might be interesting and helpful to show the list of the 46 articles, interviews, fiction, poetry, and reviews in this anthology:

- Strange New Horizons, by Mary Anne Mohanraj
- A Winter's Tale, by Nora M. Mulligan
- Last Call in Temperance, by Alan DeNiro
- Ghost Lakes, by David C. Kopaska-Merkel
- Grief, by Wendy Rathbone
- Explosions, by Michael J. Jasper
- Medusa at Morning, by Beth Bernobich
- A Gardener Betrayed by Roses, by Benjamin Rosenbaum
- The Medieval Agricultural Year, by Rachel Hartman
- Discovering the Earth in Earthsea: Ursula K. Le Guin's Tales from Earthsea, by Christopher Cobb
- Sittin' a Spell at Miz Love's, by Nancy Proctor
- Words of Love, Soft and Tender, by Mark Rudolph
- The Heat of the Moon, by Gary Lehmann
- Exogenous Origins of Life, by Dr. Max Bernstein
- Frank Herbert's Dune: It can be filmed!, by Fred Bush
- Icarus, by Wendy A. Shaffer
- In a Mirror, by Kim Fryer
- One-Eyed Jack, by Connie Wilkins
- Surreal Domestic, by Bruce Boston
- Sophisticated Renaissance Fantasy: The Astrology, Necromancy, and Phytomancy of Melissa Scott's & Lisa Barnett's Point of Dreams, by Rob Gates
- Major-League Entertainment: Moore & O'Neill's The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, by Bryan A. Hollerbach
- A Private Unbinding of Time, by James Allison
- The Palm Tree Bandit, by Nnedi Okorafor
- The God of the Crossroads, by Tim Pratt
- The Bridge Between Truth/Death and Power/Knowledge: Ted Chiang's "72 Letters", by Greg Beatty Passing Through, by Kurt Newton
- The Fen-Queen's Bride, by P. K. Graves
- Something on the Bed, by D. K. Latta
- accidental series, by Charles Coleman Finlay
- Harrowing Urban Fantasy: Robert Charles Wilson's The Perseids and Other Stories, by John Aegard
- Can a TV Tie-In Novel Achieve Excellence? Jeanne Cavelos's The Passing of the Techno-Mages, by R Michael Harman
- Eliyahu ha-Navi, by Max Sparber
- The Green Corn Dance, by Emily Gaskin
- In the Shade of the Tree of Knowledge, by Michael Chant
- Love Versus Corruption in a Psychological Space Opera: C.J. Merle's Of Honor and Treason, by Christopher Cobb
- If the Dead Must Speak, by Ward Kelley
- I Know Why Sales Clerks Fall From the Sky, by Mark Heath
- Little Brother (TM), by Bruce Holland Rogers
- Voodoo Corner Bus Stop, by Nancy Ellis Taylor
- Alien or Human? Humanity's Orphan Children in Scott Mackay's The Meek, by Greg Beatty
- Kubrick's A.I. and Square's Final Fantasy: Plastics for the People, by Danyel Fisher & R Michael Harman
- A Tale of Collaboration, by Marge Simon & Bruce Boston
- With Open Eyes, by Cecilia Tan
- Interview: Pamela Dean, by Mary Anne Mohanraj
- Interview: Gary A. Braunbeck, by Lucy A. Snyder
- Late for Dinner, by Ursula Pflug
- Toaster of the Gods, by Randall Coots

Rating: 5
Summary: A collection from an acclaimed magazine
Comment: There is nothing dull or amatuerish about Strange Horizons, the website or this anthology. Visit the site and you'll see they only publish professional work (and are recognized by SFWA as a professional-level magazine) and many of the stories have been nominated for the Nebula or included in various Year's Best titles.

The book holds a rich mix of prose and poem, of fantasy and science-fiction, of whimsy and seriousness. I can tell who are the up-and-coming authors by looking at the Table of Contents. I look forward to reading more 'annuals' from the magazine. There is something, no more like many things, about the book that will appeal to a wide variety of readers.

Rating: 1
Summary: rather dull
Comment: This seems to be a zine read mainly by its writers, which explains the odd feel of congratulatory nothingness all around it, strongly echoed in this book.

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