WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #213: NEBULA AWARD STORIES, NUMBER TWO Edited by Brian W. Aldiss and Harry Harrison

Back in 1965, a new Science Fiction award, The Nebula, showed up to give the Hugo Award some competition. The stories that won the Nebula Award and some of the nominees were collected in an anthology each year. Nebula Award Stories Number Two (1967) includes an Introduction and Afterword that puts the year of publishing into perspective.

Back in the 1960s, there were NOT a dozen different categories for stories (and later media). Things were pretty simple. Nebulas for BEST NOVEL went to Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes and Babel-17 by Samuel R. Delany. Yes, it was a tie!

The Nebula for BEST NOVELLA went to Jack Vance’s classic “The Last Castle.” The Nebula for BEST NOVELETTE went to “Call Him Lord” by Gordon R. Dickson. The Nebula for BEST SHORT STORY went to Richard McKenna’s “The Secret Place.”

That’s it. Sweet and simple. Today the Award environment is messy and convoluted. And, I would argue, less effective at celebrating great SF stories. If you can find early Nebula Award anthologies, maybe the first dozen or so, they hold plenty of great stories for your enjoyment. GRADE: A

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14 thoughts on “WEDNESDAY’S SHORT STORIES #213: NEBULA AWARD STORIES, NUMBER TWO Edited by Brian W. Aldiss and Harry Harrison

  1. Cap'n Bob

    Sounds like a winner! I’ve always been intrigued by the Slow Glass idea! Flowers for Algernon is one of the few books I’ve read more than once! A true treasure!

    Reply
  2. Jerry+House

    This ne goes back to the days when I read everything science fiction I could get my hands on. Today, not so much.

    Hard to pick favorites here but Vance, Pohl, Dickson, and Dick stand out, and I always devoured any story by Lafferty. I loved Shaw’s “Slow Glass” concept but later stories in the series diminished its effect for me. McKenna was always good but not necessarily my cup of tea, I’m a great admirer of Aldiss’s writing but I can only take so much of him at one time.

    All in all, a darned good anthology. Harrison and Aldiss were great editors but always felt like outliers to me. (And, yes,) the early Nebula anthologies are all worthwhile.)

    Reply
    1. george Post author

      Jerry, the arc of the Nebula yearly anthologies was up, up, up. Then, down, down, down. NEBULA AWARD STORIES, NUMBER TWO distills a year of SF into one handy volume. Today’s BEST SF anthologies are too long and too diffuse. Less is More…

      Reply
      1. Fred Blosser

        I read “Call Him Lord” and “Who Needs Insurance” fresh off the rack in ANALOG. Was that 1966 AD or 1966 BC?

  3. Todd Mason

    Though even then, the arguable injustices kick in. Part of the reason McKenna beat Shaw for the best short story award was McKenna’s early death…

    I think part of the reason for bugcrushing in BOTY anthologies (aside from the established award-driven ones, but them as well) is the notion that you can’t entice a reader to pay today’s prices without guaranteeing a long ride…

    Reply

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