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The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror #9

The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Ninth Annual Collection

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This renowned series, recipient of three World Fantasy Awards, continues to captivate and fascinate readers. Stories by such notables as: Scott Bradfield, A.S. Byatt, Pat Cadigan, Peter Crowther, Charles De Lint, Ellen Kushner, Tanith Lee, Ursula K. Le Guin, Patricia A. McKillip, Nina Kiriki Hoffman, Douglas E. Winter, and thirty-three other acclaimed writers show off the very best of contemporary fantasy and horror, while comprehensive and exhaustive summations add critical depth to this unique anthology. This book is essential for all fans of the weird and wonderful.

624 pages, Paperback

First published June 1, 1996

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About the author

Ellen Datlow

276 books1,875 followers
Ellen Datlow has been editing science fiction, fantasy, and horror short fiction for forty years as fiction editor of OMNI Magazine and editor of Event Horizon and SCIFICTION. She currently acquires short stories and novellas for Tor.com. In addition, she has edited about one hundred science fiction, fantasy, and horror anthologies, including the annual The Best Horror of the Year series, The Doll Collection, Mad Hatters and March Hares, The Devil and the Deep: Horror Stories of the Sea, Echoes: The Saga Anthology of Ghost Stories, Edited By, and Final Cuts: New Tales of Hollywood Horror and Other Spectacles.
She's won multiple World Fantasy Awards, Locus Awards, Hugo Awards, Bram Stoker Awards, International Horror Guild Awards, Shirley Jackson Awards, and the 2012 Il Posto Nero Black Spot Award for Excellence as Best Foreign Editor. Datlow was named recipient of the 2007 Karl Edward Wagner Award, given at the British Fantasy Convention for "outstanding contribution to the genre," was honored with the Life Achievement Award by the Horror Writers Association, in acknowledgment of superior achievement over an entire career, and honored with the World Fantasy Life Achievement Award at the 2014 World Fantasy Convention.

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Redsteve.
1,371 reviews21 followers
December 21, 2020
On thing that I like about this series is that each collection give you a snapshot of fantasy and horror fiction from the year (in this case, 1995) - both from just reading the short stories and also from the sections at the beginning of the book that provide summations of fantasy and horror from the year. For me, the treatment of computers and urban fantasy in the stories definitely marks this as mid-90s. As with many short story collections, this book contains a range of fiction (and, in this case, poetry), some good, some not so good.
Profile Image for Jo.
607 reviews14 followers
February 5, 2022
Faves:

Home for Christmas, Nina Kiriki Hoffman
Screens, Terry Lamsley
Professor Gottesman and the Indian Rhinocerous, Peter S. Beagle
Lunch at the Gotham Cafe, Stephen King
Queen of Knives, Neil Gaiman
Too Short a Death, Peter Crowther
Switch, Lucy Taylor
The Granddaughter, Vivian Vande Velde
After the Elephant Ballet, Gary A. Braunbeck
The Printer's Daughter, Delia Sherman
Profile Image for Chere.
164 reviews5 followers
February 8, 2012
This is the second YBFH collection I've read and it was as wonderful for me as the first. Datlow and Windling pick indeed the best selections, with all sorts of fantasy and different kinds of horror. There were several poignant pieces like Home For Christmas by Nina Kiriki Hoffman, Paper Lantern by Stuart Drybek, and She's Not There by Pat Cardigan. Some of the horror I found quite frightening (Screens by Terry Lamsley, Lunch at Gotham Cafe by Stephen King, and Scaring the Train by Terry Dowling), while others were very, very disturbing (More Tomorrow by Michael Marshall Smith, Loop by Douglas E. Winter, Refrigerator Heaven by David J. Schow, and [Black Rectangle] by Joyce Carol Oates). I was very much entertained by the comic Henry V, Part 2 by Marcia Guthridge, the enchanting The Printer's Daughter by Delia Sherman and the contemporary Dragon's Fin Soup by S. P. Somtow, and I fell in love with the beautiful language of La Loma, La Luna by Sue Kepros Hartman. Of course among my favorites are the poems by my favorite Neil Gaiman (Queen of Knives and The White Road), who tells the tales very effectively. Overall, the collection totally satisfied.
Profile Image for Kirsten.
2,137 reviews115 followers
March 15, 2008
I love these collections. I don't read much short fiction, generally -- I used to subscribe to some of the genre fiction magazines, like "Asimov's" and "Realms of Fantasy," but they had a tendency to sit there and not get read. So I like these collections because I can catch up on some of what I've missed. Plus Windling and Datlow don't just get stories from the usual genre sources, there's stuff from "The New Yorker" and literary magazines as well. Anyway, this collection, from 1996 (collection stuff from 1995) doesn't disappoint at all. Some of my favorites were the most off-beat stories: "Professor Gottesman and the Indian Rhinoceros" by Peter S. Beagle, in which a gentleman befriends a talking rhino who insists he is not a rhino at all, but a unicorn; "The James Dean Garage Band" by Rick Moody, in which James Dean is alive and well and starting a musical revolution; and "The Printer's Daughter" by Delia Sherman, which is a more classic fantasy tale but weird and wonderful nonetheless. Good stuff.
240 reviews3 followers
January 21, 2012
Out of this collection, I enjoyed the most out of:

* Home for Christmas by Nina Kiriki Hoffman
* Heartfires by Charles deLint
* King of Crows by Midori Snyder
* Professor Gottesman and the Indian Rhinoceros by Peter S. Beagle
* More Tomorrow by Michael Marshall Smith
* Lunch at the Gotham Café by Stephen King
* Dragon-Rain by Eileen Kernaghan
* La Loma, La Luna by Sue Kepros Hartman
* Switch by Lucy Taylor
* Scaring the Train by Terry Dowling
* Resolve and Resistance by S.N. Dyer
* La Dame by Tanith Lee
* Dragon's Fin Soup by S.P. Somtow
* A Lamia in the Cevennes by A.S. Byatt
* Henry V, Part 2 by Marcia Guthridge
* Mrs. Greasy by Robert Reed
* The Printer's Daughter by Delia Sherman
* The Lion and the Lark by Patricia A. McKillip

The best stories out of all these would be the Hoffman, King's story, Dragon's Fin Soup, Henry V Part 2, Mrs. Greasy, and Printer's Daughter.
Profile Image for Erica Tuggle.
Author 9 books8 followers
December 11, 2014
Solid collection, especially love The Lark and the Lion and Lunch at Gothem Cafe
1,670 reviews12 followers
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August 22, 2008
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Ninth Annual Collection (Year's Best Fantasy and Horror) (1996)
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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