Nebula Awards Showcase 2007


Nebula Awards Showcase 2007 is an anthology of award winning science fiction short works edited by Mike Resnick. It was first published in trade paperback by Roc/New American Library in March 2007.

Summary

The book collects pieces that won or were nominated for the Nebula Awards for best novel, novella, novelette and short story for the year 2006, a profile of 2006 Damon Knight Memorial [Grand Master Award|Grand Master winner] Harlan Ellison and a representative early story by him, various other nonfiction pieces and bibliographical material related to the awards, and the two Rhysling Award-winning poems for 2005, together with an introduction by the editor. Not all nominees for the various awards are included, and the best novel is represented by an excerpt.

Contents

  • "Introduction"
  • "About the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America"
  • "The 2006 Nebula Awards Final Ballot"
  • "Honoring Andre: The Andre Norton Award"
  • "Magic for Beginners"
  • "Short Fiction Round Table"
  • "I Live with You"
  • "Why Nebulas Matter"
  • "The End of the World as We Know It"
  • "Daring the Boundaries"
  • "Still Life with Boobs"
  • "Whither Canadian SF & F?"
  • "Identity Theft"
  • "My Mother, Dancing"
  • "To Boldly Go: A Strange, Beautiful Future for Genre Cover Art"
  • "The Mice that Roared"
  • Camouflage
  • "Soul Searching"
  • "No Ruined Lunar City"
  • "Think Outside the Page"
  • "The Faery Handbag"
  • "Men Are Trouble"
  • "Harlan Ellison: The Man in E Minor"
  • "The Resurgence of Miss Ankle-Strap Wedgie"
  • "About the Nebula Awards"
  • "Past Nebula Award Winners"
  • "Grand Master Award Winners"
  • "The Authors Emeriti"

    Reception

Kristin Gray, writing in The Davis Enterprise, calls the anthology "a reminder that short fiction still thrives" and "a book to revisit time and again." Observing that it "contains both fiction and the best of the year's nonfiction articles about the genre," she highlights Picacio's survey of science-fiction art, an "aspect of the genre isn't often considered," and Anderson's "timely" essay on "the changing face of science fiction." She notes, however, that the book's "real draw is its fiction, and the contents are admirable. Every story here is outstanding." Her favorites are the pieces by Link, "the sort of story that, for just a moment, makes us believe in magic again," Sawyer, "thought-provoking and a fast-paced adventure," and "for sheer laughs," Harris.
The anthology was also reviewed by Dorman T. Shindler in Subterranean Online, Spring 2007.