Tag: Favorites
2009: The Year in Short Stories
by Aidan on Jan.14, 2010, under Reading, Thoughts
Most of the published short stories (as opposed to drafts of friends’ stories) I read in 2009 were from online magazines.
I read them on my computer or downloaded them to my Palm Pilot and read (or listened to) them while I was commuting. I noticed that I’ve got less patience with stories I read in electronic format. If I’m sitting down with a book, I’ll generally give a story more of a chance. But with stories in electronic format, if they haven’t grabbed me by the first paragraph, I’m likely to discard them and move on to the next one.
I didn’t read any original anthologies last year. I just got my hands on Eclipse 3, The New Space Opera 2 and The Apex Book of World SF and am looking forward to reading them this year.
Here are my ten favorite short stories I read in 2009 (several of them were published a few years ago).
Death and Suffrage
Dale Bailey
The dead have risen and are voting democrat. Funny and moving.
Shoggoths in Bloom
Elizabeth Bear
Winner of the 2009 Hugo for best novelette. An interesting and thoughtful blend of Cthulhu mythos and race relations.
The Tale of Junko and Sayuri
Peter S. Beagle
A slow-paced, but carefully drawn tale of mythical creatures in ancient Japan.
Exhalation
Ted Chiang
Along with Greg Egan, Ted Chiang is my favorite short story writer. I don’t think there is anyone else that compares with the sheer granduer of Egan’s and Chiang’s ideas. Exhalation won the 2009 Hugo for best short story. It’s a bit drier and slower than some of Chiang’s other stories, but still contains some remarkable ideas.
Sinner, Baker, Fabulist, Priest; Red Mask, Black Mask, Gentleman, Beast
Eugie Foster
Manages to successfully pack a whole range of interesting world-building ideas into a short story.
A Study in Emerald
Neil Gaiman
Sherlock Holmes versus Cthulhu. What’s not to love?
Orange
Neil Gaiman
A quirky, fun story in an unusual format.
Article of Faith
Mike Resnick
A robot wants to know why he is excluded from the church’s congregation.
The Death of Che Guevara
Lewis Shiner
A thoughtful alternate world history story speculating on what might have happened if Che didn’t die in Bolivia. I loved it, but I suspect that if you’re not familiar with Che’s history, a lot of the story might be lost on you.
From Babel’s Fallen Glory We Fled
Michael Swanwick
A well-crafted story with interesting aliens and technology.
2009: The Year in Books: Part 2 – Non-Fiction
by Aidan on Jan.13, 2010, under Reading, Thoughts
I read Freakonomics early in the year (it was published a few years ago) and loved it. Full of fascinating details about human behaviour. The book sold a lot of copies and many similar books followed on its heels. Levitt’s and Dubner’s follow-up book, Superfreakonomics came out this year and caused a bit of controversary due to a lot of accusations that their research on climate change wasn’t the most accurate. Superfreakonomics wasn’t as good as Freakonomics, but the first two-thirds of the book still has a lot of fun details.
My favorite non-fiction books of 2009:
Tokyo Vice: An American Reporter on the Police Beat in Japan
Jake Adelstein
Not the best written book ever, but the subject material is fascinating. An American reporter got a job as a crime reporter in Japan and ended up breaking a story about the yakuza paying for liver transplants in the US.
Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions
Dan Ariely
One of the books that followed in the wake of the success of Freakonomics. Fascinating stuff.
Outliers: The Story of Success
Malcolm Gladwell
Why some people succeed and others don’t. Lots of interesting stuff in here.
The Logic of Life: The Rational Economics of an Irrational World
Tim Harford
Another freaky behavioural book.
Stuff White People Like: A Definitive Guide to the Unique Taste of Millions
Christian Lander
The funniest book I read this year. Lots of telling observations in here.
Freakonomics : A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything
Steven D. Levitt & Stephen J. Dubner
The book that opened up a new publishing niche. Examines why do people do what they do.
The Last Lecture
Randy Pausch & Jeffrey Zaslow
Randy Pausch shot to fame when he gave a lecture about how to live a good life. He was a professor of computer science and had been diagnosed with terminal cancer. He died last year
Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded
John Scalzi
The collected amusing and insightful blog rantings of science fiction writer John Scalzi.
Born on a Blue Day
Daniel Tammet
Tammet is an autistic savant who experiences numbers in a different way from most people. Details some of his accomplishments such as reciting pi to more than 22,000 decimal places and learning to speak Icelandic in less than a week.
Booklife
Jeff VanderMeer
I’ve read lots of books on writing and this is one of the best. There are plenty of writing books that give advice about how to write, but this book focuses on how to be a writer.
I also enjoyed Alex Kerr’s Lost Japan, where he talks about some of Japan’s disappearing traditions and Paul Theroux’s Riding the Iron Rooster, his travel book about riding the trains in China.


