WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #105: THE FUTURE IS FEMALE! MORE CLASSIC SCIENCE FICTION STORIES BY WOMEN Edited by Lisa Yaszek

The Library of America, obvious pleased by the positive reviews and sales of 2018’s first volume of The Future Is Female (you can read my review here), has issued this new volume of SF stories by women from 1971 to 1979.

I had read many of these stories when they were first published. Far and away “The Screwfly Solution” by “Raccoona Sheldon” (aka, Alice Sheldon, and “James Tiptree, Jr.”) is the most powerful and memorable story in this book. Even today, when I reread it, the story made me shiver!

Alice Sheldon is also featured under her “James Tiptree, Jr.” pseudonym with “The Girl Who Was Plugged In,” another story that will stay with you for a long time.

Women were making an impact of Science Fiction in the 1970s. Authors like Kate Wilhelm, Joanna Russ, Pamela Sargent, Ursula K. Le Guin, Marta Randall, Joan D. Vinge, Cynthia Felice, C. J. Cherryh, Lisa Tuttle, and Connie Willis would go on to write SF novels and win awards.

If you enjoyed the first volume of The Future Is Female! you’ll enjoy this second volume even more. And, if you haven’t checked out these two excellent volumes, what are you waiting for? GRADE: A

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Introduction by LISA YASZEK — xi

SONYA DORMAN HESS
     Bitching It (1971) — 3
CHELSEA QUINN YARBRO
     Frog Pond (1971) — 11
KATE WILHELM
     The Funeral (1972) — 23
JOANNA RUSS
     When It Changed (1972) — 59
KATHLEEN SKY
     Lament of the Keeku Bird (1973) — 70
MIRIAM ALLEN DEFORD
     A Way Out (1973) — 92
VONDA N. McINTYRE
     Of Mist, and Grass, and Sand (1973) — 107
JAMES TIPTREE, JR.
     The Girl Who Was Plugged In (1973) — 135
PAMELA SARGENT
     If Ever I Should Leave You (1974/77) — 185
DORIS PISERCHIA
     Pale Hands (1974) — 202
URSULA K. LE GUIN
     The Day Before the Revolution (1974) — 218
ELEANOR ARNASON
     The Warlord of Saturn’s Moons (1974) — 238
MARTA RANDALL
     A Scarab in the City of Time (1975) — 251
KATHLEEN M. SIDNEY
     The Anthropologist (1975) — 263
GAYLE N. NETZER
     Hey, Lilith! (1976) — 287
RACCOONA SHELDON
     The Screwfly Solution (1977) — 291
ELINOR BUSBY
     Time to Kill (1977) — 321
M. LUCIE CHIN
     The Best Is Yet to Be (1978) — 326
JOAN D. VINGE
     View from a Height (1978) — 360
CYNTHIA FELICE
     No One Said Forever (1978) — 380
C. J. CHERRYH
     Cassandra (1978) — 395
LISA TUTTLE
     Wives (1979) — 406
CONNIE WILLIS   

 Daisy, in the Sun (1979) — 419

Biographical Notes — 445

Notes — 489

Sources & Acknowledgments — 488

20 thoughts on “WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #105: THE FUTURE IS FEMALE! MORE CLASSIC SCIENCE FICTION STORIES BY WOMEN Edited by Lisa Yaszek

  1. Todd Mason

    For me, among the stories I remember, Kate Wilhelm’s “The Funeral” was the most powerful (and the Russ, also from AGAIN, DANGEROUS VISIONS, is close)…and she was already writing and publishing novels in the ’60s, in sf her first was a collaboration with Ted Thomas, expanding and improving his shorter work, THE CLONE (1965), the best Blob story I recall…and a Nebula shortlister. She won her first Nebula in ’68 (though not for a novel till she also picked up a Hugo for WHERE LATE THE SWEET BIRDS SANG in ’77) . But it’s a fine anthology, and I look forward to reading that Sonya Dorman story, among some of the others, for the first time.

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Todd, Kate Wilhelm was a rising star in the SF world…and then she switched to writing very good mystery novels! Sonya Dorman is a underrated writer!

      Reply
      1. Todd Mason

        Well, George, Wilhelm’s first novel was crime fiction: MORE BITTER THAN DEATH (1963). By the time she began writing crime fiction novels primarily, never exclusively, she had more than made her bones in fantasy and sf…past mistress vs. rising star…Dorman was best known as a poet for most of her life, but she did brilliant work in prose, as well…

      2. george Post author

        Todd, thanks for that clarification on Wilhelm’s writing career. I have about a dozen of her mysteries sitting on my shelf waiting to be read. Hopefully, I can read a few in 2023.

  2. Steve A Oerkfitz

    I have read both the Tiptree stories, the Joanna Russ, Lisa Tuttle, McIntyre and the Kate Wilhelm. A couple authors I have never heard of-Netzer, Sidney, Chin and Busby. The only author I have never cared for is C. J. Cherryh.

    Reply
    1. Todd Mason

      FWIW, I’ve yet to read Netzer, as well (the included work is her only citation in ISFDB). The others are not too obscure, though Busby was a Big Name Fan before she began writing for the pro markets, similarly her late husband, F. M. Busby. They shared a Hugo, hers the first awarded to a woman, for their fanzine CRY/CRY OF THE NAMELESS.

      Reply
  3. Jeff Meyerson

    As mentioned when you reviewed the first book in 2018mm we saw an off-Broadway adaptation of Tiptree’s “The Girl Who Was Plugged In” with Jeff & Ann Smith. I will have to read this collection too.

    Reply
      1. Todd Mason

        Spell-“correction” Got you again, George…a Tiptree through the tulips for Jeff Smith, clearly (only appropriate for an heir to a Cordwainer, I’d say…as a sprat, I wondered if a cordwainer and a linebarger might be comparable persons, before learning that a cordwainer was a shoemaker…which pairs, so to write, well with smithery).

      2. Todd Mason

        I believe it was Harlan Ellison, about the same time, who suggested that Ursula K. Le Guin was the best woman SF writer at that point, Tiptree the best man…

      3. george Post author

        Todd, you’re right! Harlan also bought into the Tiptree is a guy movement. That’s why when the identity of Tiptree was revealed…it shocked a lot of people!

  4. tracybham

    This sounds like a terrific book and would be a real eye opener for me. Many of these authors I either have not heard or have not read anything by. I have read a bit by le Guin, but no short stories. I have read several of Willis’s novels and short stories.

    Reply
  5. Carl V. Anderson

    I saw this one at a bookstore the other day and made a mental note that it is one I might want to pick up. Mary bought me the first one a few years ago and I read some of the stories but have yet to finish it. Around the same time I read a great collection called Women of Futures Past, which I really enjoyed.

    I love the covers on both this and the first volume.

    Reply
  6. wolfi7777

    Fond memories!
    As soon as I had an IT job in 1970 I started to go to London three times a year for SF shopping and I was surprised how many women were named as authors!
    I’ve probably read most of the stories, especially if they appeared in one of the magazines. But my memory is no longer that good …
    When I went on business trips and stayed in a hotel I would usually take out my package of magazines – German tv was so boring that I preferred some stories (ok, first I had a beer or two with my colleagues – but not too many!

    Reply

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