The Year's Top Ten Tales of Science Fiction 9 Audiobook By Nina Allan, Karl Bunker, Carolyn Ives Gilman, Paul McAuley, Cat Rambo, Robert Reed, Lavie Tidhar cover art

The Year's Top Ten Tales of Science Fiction 9

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The Year's Top Ten Tales of Science Fiction 9

By: Nina Allan, Karl Bunker, Carolyn Ives Gilman, Paul McAuley, Cat Rambo, Robert Reed, Lavie Tidhar
Narrated by: Tom Dheere, Nancy Linari, Henrietta Meire
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About this listen

An unabridged audio collection spotlighting the best of the best science fiction stories published in 2016 by current and emerging masters of the genre, edited by Allan Kaster, as narrated by top voice talents.

In "The Art of Space Travel", by Nina Allan, the staff of a hotel prepares for the crew of a one-way mission to Mars on the heels of earlier disasters. An artist and his wife search for fulfillment in a utopian world created by AIs in "They Have All One Breath" by Karl Bunker. In "Patience Lake" by Matthew Claxton, an injured military cyborg helps defend a farm family that has helped him.

In a top-secret job, an all-too-conscious bus driver takes a non-cognizant alien and his human translator on a tour of the United States, in "Touring with the Alien" by Carolyn Ives Gilman. In "My Generations Shall Praise" by Samantha Henderson, a woman on death row is persuaded to have her mind overwritten so that a wealthy relative can use her as a host body. People adapting to a melted Antarctica evolve new folklore, superstitions, and myths in "Elves of Antarctica" by Paul McAuley.

In "Red in Tooth and Cog" by Cat Rambo, a woman acquires a keen interest in the small domestic appliance AI ecosystem that evolves in a park after her phone is stolen. An ancient robot tells a human how it helped build the Great Ship, a planet-sized starship, from hyperfiber in "Parables of Infinity" by Robert Reed.

In "Prodigal" by Gord Sellar, an uplifted family dog questions the relationship between dogs and humans and then takes action. And finally, in a Bradburyesque tale, people go to Mars via cheap, one-person, one-way spacecrafts called jalopies in "Terminal" by Lavie Tidhar.

©2016 Nina Allan, Karl Bunker, Matthew Claxton, Carolyn Ives Gilman, Samantha Henderson, Paul McAuley, Cat Rambo, Robert Reed, Gord Sellar, Lavie Tidhar (P)2017 AudioText
Anthologies & Short Stories Fantasy Fiction Science Fiction Interstellar Solar System Military
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Some Good in This

Enjoyed a few of the stories in this group. Narrators did exceptional job. A good review of the year's stories.

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Good selection of stories, variable voice talent.

The story mix on this edition in the series is above average, with excellent stories from McAuley, Reed, Cat Rambo and Gord Selllar. The narrators are generally good - I'm a fan of Nancy Linari's weirdly precise reading style, and Tom Dheere's nicely laid back approach. But as I have suggested on other reviews for this series, somebody please tell Tom Dheere to drop the accents. For one thing, they're pretty terrible, and for another completely incorrect in his rendition of accents in McAuley's 'Elves of Antarctica': two characters are from the Pacific, one from Tahiti, the other from The Marshall Islands, via Auckland New Zealand. Dude, people from the Pacific don't have Cockney accents!

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