After last month the line-up for the fifth edition of Paula Guran’s “The Year’s Best Dark Fantasy & Horror” was announced it is now the time for Ellen Datlow to reveal the
table of contents for the 6th volume of her excellent “The Best Horror of the Year”. This
year’s edition will be released on 3rd June by Night Shade Books.
This
statement was true when H. P. Lovecraft first wrote it at the beginning of the
twentieth century, and it remains true at the beginning of the twenty-first
century. The only thing that has changed is what is unknown.
With
each passing year, science, technology, and the march of time shine light into
the craggy corners of the universe, making the fears of an earlier generation
seem quaint. But this “light” creates its own shadows. The Best Horror of the Year,
edited by Ellen Datlow, chronicles these shifting shadows. It is a catalog of
terror, fear, and unpleasantness, as articulated by today’s most challenging
and exciting writers.
The
best horror writers of today do the same thing that horror writers of a hundred
years ago did. They tell good stories—stories that scare us. And when these
writers tell really good stories that really scare us, Ellen Datlow notices. She’s been noticing
for more than a quarter century. For twenty-one years, she coedited The Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror,
and for the last six years, she’s edited this series. In addition to this
monumental cataloging of the best, she has edited hundreds of other horror
anthologies and won numerous awards, including the Hugo, Bram Stoker, and World
Fantasy awards.More than any other editor or critic, Ellen Datlow has charted the shadowy abyss of horror fiction. Join her on this journey into the dark parts of the human heart . . . either for the first time . . . or once again.
“Apports” by Stephen Bacon (Black Static, #36)
“Mr. Splitfoot” by Dale Bailey (Queen
Victoria’s Book of Spells, eds. Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling,
Tor Books)
“The Good Husband” by Nathan Ballingrud (North
American Lake Monsters, Small Beer Press)
“The Tiger” by Nina Allan (Terror Tales of London,
ed. Paul Finch, Gray Friar Press)
“The House on Cobb Street” by Lynda E. Rucker (Nightmare, June 2013)
“The Soul in the Bell Jar” by K.J. Kabza (The
Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, November/December 2013)
“Call Out” by Stephen Toase (Innsmouth Magazine, #12)
“That Tiny Flutter of the Heart I Used to Call
Love” by Robert Shearman (Psycho-Mania!, ed. Stephen Jones,
Constable & Robinson)
“Bones of Crow” by Ray Cluley (Black Static, #37)
“Introduction to the Body in Fairy Tales” by
Jeannine Hall Gailey (Phantom Drift, #3)
“The Fox” by Conrad Williams (This is Horror chapbook)
“The Tin House” by Simon Clark (Shadow
Masters, ed. Jeani Rector, Imajin Books)
“Stemming the Tide” by Simon Strantzas (Dead
North, ed. Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Exile Editions)
“The Anatomist’s Mnemonic” by Priya Sharma (Black
Static, #32)
“The Monster Makers” by Steve Rasnic Tem (Black
Static, #35)
“The Only Ending We Have” by Kim Newman (Psycho-Mania!,
ed. Stephen Jones, Constable & Robinson)
“The Dog’s Paw” by Derek Künsken (Chilling
Tales: In Words, Alas, Drown I, ed. Michael Kelly, EDGE Science
Fiction and Fantasy Publishing)
“Fine in the Fire” by Lee Thomas (Like
Light For Flies, Lethe Press)
“Majorlena” by Jane Jakeman (Supernatural Tales, #24)
“The Withering” by Tim Casson (Black Static, #32)
“Down to a Sunless Sea” by Neil Gaiman (The Guardian.com)
“Jaws of Saturn” by Laird Barron (The Beautiful
Thing That Awaits Us All, Night Shade Books)
“Halfway Home” by Linda Nagata (Nightmare, September 2013)
“The Same Deep Waters as You” by Brian Hodge (Weirder Shadows Over Innsmouth,
ed. Stephen Jones, Fedogan & Bremer)
2 comments:
Sadness. No Reggie Oliver stories?
Unfortunately not. :)
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