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[personal profile] chris_gerrib
One of my panels at Windycon is "Best Science Fiction of 2007." In that spirit, here are my completely subjective picks. The listings in each category are completely random, listed in the order I thought of them.

Novel-length fiction

* Tobias Buckell, Ragamuffin. This is his second novel, a loose sequel to 2006's Crystal Rain. My review is available here.

* John G. Hemry writing as Jack Campbell, The Lost Fleet: Fearless. Also book 2 of a series, this is one of the few SF "Fleet action" novels that considers relativistic effects. The series concept is based on the story of Xenophon's March. You can see my review here.

* Kristine Smith, Endgame. Kristine won the Campbell Award a few years back for Best New Writer, and this story, the final one in her Jani Kilian series, is a good example why. Click here to see my review.

Short fiction and anthologies

* The anthology Visual Journeys, edited by Eric T. Reynolds of Hadley Rille Books. This is a small-press release, so you'll have to order it. It features stories by Tobias Buckell, Richard Chwedyk, Ron Miller and Frank Wu. Click here to read my review.

* Jim Baen's Universe, an online magazine offering over 150,000 words of fiction every other month. This is not "all military SF, all the time" but a balanced mix of fantasy and SF. They've publishes stuff from Kristine Smith to Julie Czerneda.

* Shimmer Magazine. This is a semi-pro magazine with strong editing and layout, and represents the future of SF.

My novel The Mars Run came out in 2006, so even if I thought it was the best SF novel around (it's good, but not the best) it's not eligible.

Date: 2007-11-08 11:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pyropyga.livejournal.com
I am also fond of the Lost Fleet books. My comments on them are at Dauntless (http://www.chicago-sf.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=726), Fearless (http://kargadan.chicago-sf.org/?p=26)

Date: 2007-11-09 02:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chris-gerrib.livejournal.com
Glad to see we have some tastes in common. I should have figured from our Battlestar Galactica interests.

I only made it 4 books through the Honor Harrington whatever-verse. Weber's a good writer, but he spent 4 books to build to the payoff of somebody signing their name "Robspierre." If I want to read Horatio Hornblower, I'll read it. Otherwise, I'll skip the imitations.

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