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Editor | Gardner Dozois |
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Cover artist | Michael Carroll |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | The Year's Best Science Fiction |
Genre | Science fiction |
Publisher | St. Martin's Press |
Publication date | 2000 July (collecting stories published in 1999) |
Media type | Print and e-book |
Pages | 688 (617 of stories) |
ISBN | 9780312262754 (hardcover) ISBN 9780312264178 (trade paperback) ISBN 9780312271626 (e-book) |
OCLC | 44655078 |
Preceded by | The Year's Best Science Fiction: Sixteenth Annual Collection |
Followed by | The Year's Best Science Fiction: Eighteenth Annual Collection |
The Year's Best Science Fiction: Seventeenth Annual Collection is a science fiction anthology which was compiled by Gardner Dozois and published in 2000. It won the Locus Award for best anthology in 1991.[1]
Contents
Like most of the books in the Year's Best Science Fiction series, the book consists of a "summation" section listing and commenting on developments in and related to science fiction in the previous year (1999), a selection of stories published in that year (each with an introduction by the editor), and a referenced list of honorable mentions from the stories not selected. The stories included in the book are as follows.
- David Marusek: "The Wedding Album"
- James Patrick Kelly: "1016 to 1"
- Robert Reed: "Winemaster"
- Alastair Reynolds: "Galactic North"
- Eleanor Arnason: "Dapple: A Hwarhath Historical Romance"
- Stephen Baxter: "People Came from Earth"
- Richard Wadholm: "Green Tea"
- Karl Schroeder: "The Dragon of Pripyat"
- Chris Lawson: "Written in Blood"
- Frederik Pohl: "Hatching the Phoenix"
- M. John Harrison: "Suicide Coast"
- Sage Walker: "Hunting Mother"
- Ben Bova: "Mount Olympus"
- Greg Egan: "Border Guards"
- Michael Swanwick: "Scherzo with Tyrannosaur"
- Robert Silverberg: "A Hero of the Empire"
- Paul J. McAuley: "How We Lost the Moon, A True Story by Frank W. Allen"
- Charles Sheffield: "Phallicide"
- Walter Jon Williams: "Daddy's World"
- Kim Stanley Robinson: "A Martian Romance"
- Tanith Lee: "The Sky-Green Blues"
- Hal Clement: "Exchange Rate"
- Geoff Ryman: "Everywhere"
- Mike Resnick: "Hothouse Flowers"
- Sean Williams: "Evermore"
- Robert Grossbach: "Of Scorned Women and Causal Loops"
- Kage Baker: "Son Observe the Time"
References
- ↑ "The Locus Index to SF Awards: Locus Award Nominees List". Archived from the original on May 31, 2015. Retrieved July 9, 2011.
External links
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