The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Ninth Annual Collection

Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling

Book 9 of The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror

Language: English

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Publisher: St. Martin's Press

Published: Jul 2, 1994

Description:

Justly lauded for its diversity and its exellent taste, "The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror" continues this award-winning tradition with another sterling collection of fantastic short fiction, including stories by Terry Bisson, Fred Chappel, Charles de Lint, Terry Downling, Neil Gaiman, Lisa Goldstein, Elizabeth Hand, Nancy Kress, Ian McDonald, Sara Paretsky, Wil Shetterly, Robert Westall, Jane Yolen, and more than forty other distinguished contributors. Rounded out by the editors' insightful and wide-ranging overviews of fantasy and horror literature, film and graphic novels, this volume offers the most comprehensive and entertaining collection of fabulous fiction available anywhere.

Amazon.com Review

This superb anthology is as valuable for its detailed summations of horror and fantasy in 1995 (in literature and in comics, television, movies, etc.), as for the 35 stories and 9 poems. Also useful for its exploration of the crossover genre known as "dark fantasy." Noteworthy authors include Peter S. Beagle, Ursula Le Guin, Stephen King, Lucy Taylor, Steve Rasnic Tem, Tanith Lee, A. S. Byatt, David J. Schow, and Joyce Carol Oates.

From Publishers Weekly

The delicious promise of the first piece, "Home for Christmas," a lyrical tale of modern-day magic by Nina Kiriki Hoffman, is fully realized in this year's offering of the best fantasy and horror by today's finest writers, including Terry Bisson, Joyce Carol Oates, A.S. Byatt, David Schow, Amy Tan and Jane Yolen. Editors Datlow and Windling should be congratulated for selecting a delightful blend that shows the variety of work created in both genres without compromising quality. The 46 short stories and poems range from the folkloric, such as "King of Crows" by Midori Snyder, which weaves the sorrowful tale of a musician who falls in love with a crow, to the truly terrifying as demonstrated in Stephen King's "Lunch at the Gotham Cafe," in which a crazed maitre d' turns what is already a tense situation into a bloodbath. Delia Sherman offers a brilliant 17th-century pastiche about a printer's apprentice created by an alchemist from a pile of papers and ultimately returned to that form. From ghosts to unicorns, from dragons to murder on the Internet, there are stories to enthrall and entertain any reader with a love of the bizarre, the mysterious, the frightening.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.