Cover of first edition
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| Author | edited by Julie E. Czerneda |
|---|---|
| Cover artist | Maurizio Manzieri |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Series | Nebula Awards Showcase |
| Genre | Science fiction and fantasy |
| Publisher | Pyr |
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Publication date
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2017 |
| Media type | Print (paperback) |
| Pages | 335 pp. |
| ISBN | |
| OCLC | 957503760 |
| Preceded by | Nebula Awards Showcase 2016 |
| Followed by | Nebula Awards Showcase 2018 |
Nebula Awards Showcase 2017 is an anthology of award winning science fiction and fantasy short works edited by Julie E. Czerneda. It was first published in trade paperback and ebook by Pyr in May 2017.
The book collects pieces that won or were nominated for the Nebula Awards for best novel, novella, novelette and short story for the year 2016, as well as the novel that won the Andre Norton Award for that year, a tribute to 2016 grand master winner C. J. Cherryh and excerpts from representative early novels by her, nonfiction pieces related to the awards, and the three Rhysling Award and Dwarf Stars Award-winning poems for 2015, together with an introduction by the editor. The novels are represented by excerpts; the non-winning pieces nominated for the Andre Norton Award, Best Novella and for Best Novella are omitted.
Publishers Weekly states that "Czerneda has curated a sterling collection of outstanding work" and called the anthology "indispensable reading for anyone interested in fantastic fiction," with "[t]he three short-fiction winners show[ing] the breadth of themes and ideas and the sheer creativity of the genre’s leading writers."
Samantha Holloway in the New York Journal of Books calls "this year's collection ... a very good example of the breadth and depth of current scifi and fantasy. As it should be, being the best of the best nominated for the awards." She discusses most of the pieces favorably, summing up with "[t]he characters and cultures depicted are also wonderfully diverse, and that's still a new enough thing to see that it's exciting and fresh." Noting that "[m]ost of this collection comes from women," she take the fact as a signal "that the boy's club idea of scifi and fantasy may finally have cracked." She concludes "[i]f this book doesn't make a reader want to go find the full novels and collections these stories and excerpts come from, maybe speculative fiction isn't for them, because this year's collection is top notch and compulsively readable."