Even BASS, as much as I love it, can't rehabilitate 2016, but Junot Díaz succeeds in giving us a much-needed bright spot. This marks my tenth year of buying Best American Short Stories (yes, if you do the math on that, you can figure out what compelled geeky college-me to pick it up that first year), so I was feeling appropriately sentimental, but I can say with confidence that this would be a great place to pick the series up for the first time. Díaz provides a volume with a great global sensibility, a sharp attention to the faults and foibles of interpersonal relationships, and an openness to genre. Nearly every story here was a winner for me.
Some of my favorites include:
"Apollo," by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, about desire, jealousy, and pink-eye in middle-class Nigeria, with a masterful and appropriately melancholy retrospective look at childhood. The intensity of the narrator's emotion here is clear--the speed with which his emotions crystallize, the significance he lends to small but fraught moments--and the tragedy comes out of that. Children make their emotions into the whole world, and that's a dangerous thing, especially when they've been raised to expect servants to be there purely to serve. There are larger political points here about the way people in positions of relative power and safety act out their hurt feelings with grave consequences, but Adichie touches on that only lightly, and the story works all the better for it.
"Wonders of the Shore," by Andrea Barrett, where two naturalists at the turn of the century (one the darling of that sliver of the scientific community, at least in the days when it still welcomed and championed women, the other her more ordinary but dogged and passionate friend) end up in a slightly tangled social context while staying out at the shore. Like "Apollo," there's a lot here about desire, jealousy, and social position, and like Adichie, Barrett navigates it expertly. But the thrust here is somewhat more optimistic--this isn't the small turning point of a tragedy but rather a glimpse into a small pocket of time in a long life.
"The Great Silence," by Ted Chiang. Chiang is one of my favorite science fiction writers, and this short take on the passing of parrots--an "alien" species that can communicate with us, and that here proves wistful about how we look out to the stars and listen while ignoring things closer to home--is beautifully-written and moving. The last line is a genuine tearjerker.
"Cold Little Bird," by Ben Marcus. This was probably my favorite of the year--a chilling, quasi-horror story that's all the creepier for being told strictly as realism, with no solution or even resolution offered by the end. It's about parents who one day, very abruptly, have their formerly-affectionate ten-year-old son turn to them and say that he doesn't love them anymore, and, past that, it's about what happens when he sticks rigorously to that position. He stops tolerating their touch, he barely acknowledges their questions, he's polite but never warm, and his interests begin to veer towards the disturbing (especially for his father). Loved it.
"The Politics of the Quotidian," by Caille Millner. Some of the best literary takes on academe I've seen in the last few years have been about people who feel drawn towards the field but nonetheless systematically excluded from it, and Millner takes that topic on gracefully and achingly, and almost with the same contained sense of horror of "Cold Little Bird." It's about navigating a hostile world--and waking up into one, almost, as the protagonist first faces down an openly rude and disrespectful student and, in seeking consolation after that, keeps running into more and more evidence of what's been there all along. (There's another light genre touch here with the way the rude student has or hasn't dropped her class, and it adds to the slight surrealism and the destabilization.)
The best praise I can think of for the whole collection is that looking at the table of contents again to pull the titles of my favorites made me smile. There are plenty of authors here who are new to me whose work I'll now be actively seeking out.
Onward to The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2016.