Commentary: “Best of” and “Book of” books

SFFaudio Commentary

SFSignal.com recently asked me to participate in another of their “Mind Melds.” The topic:

Q: What are the “Forgotten Books” of science fiction/fantasy/horror?

Here was my answer:

Best Of/Book Of/Many Worlds Of books (spines)

I spend most of my time worrying about which lost gems deserve audiobook editions. But, there are quite a paperbooks I’d like to be able to lay my grubby mitts on too. Just lately I’d been thinking about the “Best Of AUTHOR NAME” and “Book of AUTHOR NAME” books that I’ve collected and cherished over the last twenty years or so. There was a big wave of them in the 1970s but most have been out of print forever. These are seriously in need of reprints. I’m a sucker for a carefully edited short story and novella collections with introduction by another SF author (and often an afterward by the author himself). Maybe it is a conservative streak in me. I don’t love these books because they’re old, though that doesn’t hurt. I love them because they’ve collected stories by authors who’ve had a chance to stand the test of time. It’s hard to judge the recent crop of SF authors and say exactly who’ll be the next grandmaster of SF, a grand old man of the genre – someone worth reading a “best of” collection without even having read a page of their work before. Innovation, style, a few solid hits is great, but to stand the burning acid of just a few years of history is by far a greater test. A good new book only wins you a second chance with me but a “best of” or “book of” book is the proof that you’ve stuck around long enough that you’ve been shown to be the genuine article – an author whose work is to be remembered.

If some publisher does pick up the idea of printing “best of/book of” collections again they can always throw in a “Best of Charlie Stross” and a “Book of Ted Chiang” into the mix too. In fact I’d love to read The Book Of Ted Chiang with an introduction by Charlie Stross and a Best Of Charlie Stross with an introduction by Ted Chiang.

To read everyone else’s check out the ORIGINAL POST.

And here are more images of these notable paperbooks:

The Best Of C.L. MooreThe Best Of C.M. KornbluthThe Best Of Edmond HamiltonThe Best Of Eric Frank RussellThe Best Of Frederik PohlThe Best Of Fritz LeiberThe Best Of Hal ClementThe Best Of Henry KuttnerThe Best Of John W. CampbellThe Best Of Leigh BrackettThe Best Of Lester Del ReyThe Best Of L. Sprague De CampThe Best Of Murray LeinsterThe Best Of Cordwainer SmithThe Best Of Raymond Z. Gallun






















Posted by Jesse Willis

SFFaudio is looking for contributors

SFFaudio News

SFFaudio MetaBLOGGERS NEEDED! SFFaudio.com is looking for a few good bloggers.

With more than 300,000 unique visitors in 2008, 1,000 downloads per show on our podcast, having been BoingBoinged, written up in Asimov’s magazine and having had one of our contributors been named a John W. Campbell Award winner we think we’re doing pretty awesome. But, we think we can do more and be awesomer. FREE audiobooks and audio dramas are just the beginning, all positions at SFFaudio come with fancy job titles and as much street-cred as the SFFaudio name will get you (I’ve been told it may garner you as much as a fresh ginger snap and a cup of tea in some places).

We are looking for:

1. At least one voracious reviewer for Paranormal Romance audiobooks (we get tons of these).

2. A podcast producer for our show (can you host, record, edit and run our podcast?).

3. At least one podiobook/podcast novel reviewer (there are so many great free podcast novels coming out we want to cover more of them).

4. Cool hunters (do you have psycho-crazy-web-searching-spider skills? Can you find the coolest audio out there? If so we want you).

5. Other positions (if you have some other skill or interest you’d like to bring to the SFFaudio table, let us know, we’ll have a serious look at it).

Bloggers Needed

Posted by Jesse Willis

LibriVox: The Lost Continent by Edgar Rice Burroughs

SFFaudio Online Audio

LibriVoxHere’s another Edgar Rice Burroughs novel that I hadn’t heard of prior to its release on LibriVox. For fans like me who are daunted by the prospect of trundling through one of the many series books by Burroughs this is a good place to start as this is a standalone novel. First published in the February 1916 issue of “All Around Magazine.”


LibriVox Science Fiction - The Lost Continent by Edgar Rice BurroughsThe Lost Continent
By Edgar Rice Burroughs; Read by Lucy Lo Faro
9 Zipped MP3 Files or Podcast – Approx. 4.5 Hours [UNABRIDGED]
Publisher: LibriVox.org
Published: April 2009
Originally published under the title Beyond Thirty. The novel, set in the year 2137, was heavily influenced by the events of World War I. In the future world depicted in the novel, Europe has descended into barbarism while an isolationist Western Hemisphere remains sheltered from the destruction. The title Beyond Thirty refers to the degree of longitude that inhabitants of the Western Hemisphere are forbidden to pass.

Podcast feed:

http://librivox.org/bookfeeds/the-lost-continent-by-edgar-rice-burroughs.xml

iTunes 1-Click |SUBSCRIBE|

Posted by Jesse Willis

LibriVox: Deathworld by Harry Harrison

SFFaudio Online Audio

LibriVoxGregg Margarite is an up and coming narrator over on LibriVox.org. He recorded stories for five of the LibriVox “Short Science Fiction” collections as well as soloing on the Collected Public Domain Works Of Stanley G. Weinbaum! But it is his latest project that I suspect will be his most popular narration. Here’s how he describes it:

Deathworld is the first in a series of novels begun in 1960 and originally serialized in Astounding Science Fiction Magazine. It’s the story of Jason dinAlt a professional gambler with psionic skills who finds himself on Pyrrus the deadliest planet to be colonized by humanity. Violent weather, active tectonics, heavy gravity, abundant predators, and a hostile splinter group of colonists is only the beginning of Jason’s quest to learn the truth about Pyrrus.”

LibriVox Science Fiction - Deathworld by Harry HarrisonDeathworld
By Harry Harrison; Read by Gregg Margarite
28 Zipped MP3 Files or Podcast – Approx. 5 Hours 23 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]
Publisher: LibriVox.org
Published: April 2009
Some planet in the galaxy must—by definition—be the toughest, meanest, nastiest of all. If Pyrrus wasn’t it … it was an awfully good approximation! First published in Astounding Science Fiction magazine’s January, February and March 1960 issues.

Podcast feed:

http://librivox.org/bookfeeds/deathworld-by-harry-harrison.xml

iTunes 1-click |SUBSCRIBE|

Posted by Jesse Willis

Podcast feeds for our AUTHOR PAGES

SFFaudio Online Audio

metaSFFaudioSFFaudio now has two more podcasts (!) – sort of anyway. First up is the new Ted Chiang podcast feed, which we previewed late last month (there’s new content in it). There’s also a new Poul Anderson podcast, which includes all the MP3 files from our Anderson AUTHOR PAGES.

Ted Chiang podcast feed:

http://huffduffer.com/jessewillis/tags/ted_chiang/rss

Poul Anderson podcast feed:

http://huffduffer.com/jessewillis/tags/poul_anderson/rss

We’ll also be adding more feeds over the coming months.

Posted by Jesse Willis

BBC7: Understand by Ted Chiang

SFFaudio Online Audio

BBC Radio 7 - BBC7Tuesday will see another broadcast of Understand by Ted Chiang. If you haven’t heard it before, don’t miss it! Understand was originally published in “Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine” in 1991. This outstanding novelette is one of the very best stories I’ve ever heard on radio. It was produced by Gemma Jenkins for the BBC and first broadcast in 2004 on BBC 7. Re-broadcasts of this popular tale have been heard in 2006 and 2007.

BBC Radio 7 - Understand by Ted ChiangUnderstand
By Ted Chiang; Read by Rashan Stone
4 half-hour segments – Approx. 2 Hours [UNABRIDGED]
Broadcaster: BBC Radio 7
Broadcast: Tuesday April 7th to Friday April 10th 2009 (6.30pm and 12.30am)
Leon is a former coma victim, who has gone experimental medical treatment to repair the massive trauma his brain received after he was trapped under ice for more than an hour. He’s regained consciousness, found he has all of his faculties back and a whole lot more. In the tradition of Daniel Keyes’ Flowers For Algernon.

If you don’t live in the U.K., or even if you do, I highly recommend you try out Radio Downloader, it takes the streamed broadcasts and converts them to MP3s with nary a trouble once its set up.

Posted by Jesse Willis