- Joined
- Jul 22, 2020
Oh I love short fiction. Lemme pull up and just flat out recommend The Science Fiction Hall of Fame trio of books. They were a set of books that collected short fiction/novells the SFWA voted on. The catch is that these were all pre-Nebula wards so pre 1964. Mind you, this was back when the SFWA members had good writers. The first volume (1-A) is edited by Robert Silverberg and is 26 stories, all kino, that are top tier short stories. You got the usual suspects of major heavy hitting sci-fi (Asimov, Heinlein, Clarke, Bradbury), your historically important sci-fi writers that are just as fun (Weinbaum, Leinster, Moore & Kuttner, Brown, Campbell), and everyone else is a solid writer that got me interested in their other works (Blish, Boucher, Bester, Zelazny, etc.) Volumes 2-A and 2-B are edited by Ben Bova and collect the novellas that the SFWA voted as being the best. You have shit like The Machine Stops and Time Machine, which are evergreen and old classics. But the rest of them are varied and, of course, by an all-star selection of respected SF writers of that era.
Aside from this, I've also been enjoying Robert Sheckley's works. Watchbirds is a kino short story that's very proto-Robocop in theme. Seabury Quinn's Jest of Warberg Tantavul was a fun little grotesque tale.
Honestly just look for anthologies of old short fiction. There's shitloads of sci-fi ones. There's also a dozen or so anthologies centered on the Weird Tales Pulp magazine and related rivals/similar content. I also highly recommend these. Lovecraft, Clark Ashton Smith, Robert E. Howard, Frank Belknap Long, August Derleth, Seabury Quinn, and etc. are all splendidly fun writers.
You want fantasy? Fritz Leiber was an old writer, a latter member of the Lovecraft Circle, and a masterfully enjoyable storyteller that did sci-fi, fantasy, and horror all very well. While his horror and sci-fi are certainly well remembered, his sword and sorcery tales are probably his most famous and influential. Fafhrd & Grey Mouser were a pair of adventurers that bantered and ran around. They inspired a lot of what DnD would become. I'd also highly recommend C. L. Moore and Henry Kuttner's works. They were a husband and wife duo that worked a lot together. Moore is known for her sword and sorcery Jirel tales and well as her sorta planetary romance proto-Han Solo tales of Northwest of Earth. She also did some fantasy and horror and sci-fi. Kuttner's overall solid too and they often worked together. I'd also toss in L. Sprague de Camp and Fletcher Pratt's Enchanter books for fun short-ish fantasy.
I also highly recommend Chandler, Hammett, Macdonald (John AND Ross), and Spillane for crime/noir fiction. They had plenty of short stuff.
Aside from this, I've also been enjoying Robert Sheckley's works. Watchbirds is a kino short story that's very proto-Robocop in theme. Seabury Quinn's Jest of Warberg Tantavul was a fun little grotesque tale.
Honestly just look for anthologies of old short fiction. There's shitloads of sci-fi ones. There's also a dozen or so anthologies centered on the Weird Tales Pulp magazine and related rivals/similar content. I also highly recommend these. Lovecraft, Clark Ashton Smith, Robert E. Howard, Frank Belknap Long, August Derleth, Seabury Quinn, and etc. are all splendidly fun writers.
You want fantasy? Fritz Leiber was an old writer, a latter member of the Lovecraft Circle, and a masterfully enjoyable storyteller that did sci-fi, fantasy, and horror all very well. While his horror and sci-fi are certainly well remembered, his sword and sorcery tales are probably his most famous and influential. Fafhrd & Grey Mouser were a pair of adventurers that bantered and ran around. They inspired a lot of what DnD would become. I'd also highly recommend C. L. Moore and Henry Kuttner's works. They were a husband and wife duo that worked a lot together. Moore is known for her sword and sorcery Jirel tales and well as her sorta planetary romance proto-Han Solo tales of Northwest of Earth. She also did some fantasy and horror and sci-fi. Kuttner's overall solid too and they often worked together. I'd also toss in L. Sprague de Camp and Fletcher Pratt's Enchanter books for fun short-ish fantasy.
I also highly recommend Chandler, Hammett, Macdonald (John AND Ross), and Spillane for crime/noir fiction. They had plenty of short stuff.