CONTENTS
Introduction:
Novelette, Over Easy -- Keith R.A. DeCandido
Next Year in Jerusalem -- Harry Turtledove
Amends -- H. Courreges LeBlanc
Totem -- Janet Berliner
The Thalatta Thesis -- Charles L. Harness
A Planet Called Elvis -- Craig Shaw Gardner
Great White Hope -- Daniel Pearlman
Insider -- Sarah Zettel
Inescapable Justice -- Aaron Rosenberg
Walking Contradiction -- Nancy Jane Moore
Of a Sweet Slow Dance in the Wake of Temporary Dogs -- Adam-Troy Castro
Biographies
The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
Keith R.A. DeCandido
Noveletteis a really silly word.
Ask the average person on the street what a novelette is, and they're most likely to say that it's a kind of egg dish -- or they'll think it's a malapropism fornovelty. Most people are familiar with the termsnovelandshort story, but once you get into the more esoteric subcategories likenovellaandnovelette, you are met with looks of abject confusion.
However, a novelette is the ideal length for a speculative-fiction story.
My personal definition of SF -- which, for the purposes of this discussion, applies to fantasy, science fiction, and certain types of horror -- is that it's the world we live in with at least one major change. Sometimes that change is as simple as moving forward or backward in time. Sometimes it's that vampires exist. Sometimes it's that someone from our world falls down a rabbit hole or goes into a wardrobe or travels through a wormhole. Sometimes it's that the Axis won World War II. Sometimes it's that the sun is eaten by a giant space goat. Often, it's more complex, of course, but what's important is that the author has to create a new world -- sometimes several -- or, at least, a new way of looking at this world. To do that, and to also weave a tale, sometimes requires a certain amount of storytelling space not provided by the short-story format. After all, SF is the only genre in which the setting isn't (necessarily) real.
SF is also one of the few genres that still has a thriving short-fiction market. It's possible to have a writing career in SF that focuses primarily on less-than-novel-length works (indeed, some of the authors in this volume have such careers). Unfortunately, most short-fiction markets, limited as they are by space, the rising costs of paper, and the desire to include as much as possible, prefer the traditional short story (which usually averages 3000- 8000 words) to those silly-sounding novelettes, which are about 8000-15,000 words, or to 15,000-40,000-word novellas. Such longer works still do get published, of course, but in much smaller numbers.
A pity, that, as some of the most influential and important stories in the field are novelette length: "The Bicentennial Man" by Isaac Asimov, "Blood Music" by Greg Bear, "Tower of Babylon" by Ted Chiang, "Buffalo Gals, Won't You Come Out Tonight"
by Ursula K. Le Guin, "Sandkings" by George R.R. Martin, "The Screwfly Solution" by Raccoona Sheldon (better known under her other pseudonym, James Tiptree, Jr.), "Slow Sculpture" by Theodore Sturgeon, and so many more.
The book you hold in your hands is an attempt to provide a new source for these novelettes.
It all started in Framingham, Massachusetts.
It was Boskone, 1999. Boskone is a science-fiction convention that has been held in or near Boston for over four decades now. I was there, doing a panel on anthologies. Also present -- either on the panel or in the audience -- were Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Kathryn Cramer, Esther M. Freisner, and David G. Hartwell, all experienced anthologists. We got to discussing Patrick'sStarlightseries of original anthologies, and how it was a return to the old-fashioned anthology, à la Terry Carr'sUniverseseries, where the only requisite was that a story be a good example of the genre, as opposed to the "theme" anthologies that proliferate these days (hell, I've edited a whole bunch of them).
Kathryn made a comment that there needed to be more books like that. And I said to myself, "Self," I said, "you should do that."
The catch was trying to make mine unique, and it didn't take long to hit on how to do that: length. I would do an anthology that would be home to the best new novelettes (silly word notwithstanding) in the genre. As a result, the two requirements for consideration inImaginings-- which was a totally open call, with no preselected stories or guaranteed spots -- were that the story be in the science-fiction or fantasy genre (or horror, but only if the story contained SF elements), and that it be between 8000 and 15,000 words in length.
I received approximately 450 submissions over nine and a half months, and somehow managed to whittle it down to the ten in this volume. It wasn't easy -- I could have filled two more volumes with excellent stories that I ultimately passed on. But in the end, I think we have the cream of the crop. The quality of the submissions certainly, to my mind, proved the ideal-length thesis to be corrrect.
What's more, we have variety. Within these pages are hard-science stories, fantasies, horror stories, superhero stories, funny stories, speculative stories, stories that couldn't have been written before the turn of the twenty-first century, stories that could just as easily have been written in the mid-twentieth, stories from acknowledged masters of the field, stories from relative unknowns.
They have only this in common: they show us the world we know, but with at least one important thing changed, and they are quality tales.
Well, at leastIthink so. I hope you feel likewise. If you do -- or if you don't -- please drop us an e-mail at imaginings@albeshiloh.com or send us a letter:Imaginings, PO Box 4976, New York, NY 10185-4976. I want to hear your thoughts, positive and negative. As of this writing, I have no idea if there will be anImaginings 2, but if there is, I want to go in prepared....
So enjoy your journey through ten authors' wildest Imaginings.
-- Keith R.A. DeCandido
somewhere in
New York City
Copyright © 2003 by Albé-Shiloh, Inc.
Excerpted from Imaginings: An Anthology of Long Short Fiction by Keith R. A. DeCandido
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.