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MacFarlane, Alex Dally (ed.) - The Mammoth Book of SF Stories by Women / МакФарлейн, Алекс Дэлли (ред.) - Большая книга НФ, написанной женщинами [2014, EPUB, ENG]

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Alex Dally MacFarlane (ed.) - The Mammoth Book of SF Stories by Women

Название: The Mammoth Book of SF Stories by Women / Большая книга НФ, написанной женщинами
Год выпуска: 2014
Под редакцией: MacFarlane, Alex Dally / МакФарлейн, Алекс Дэлли
Издательство: Robinson
eISBN: 978-1-47211-171-5
Формат: EPUB
Качество: eBook
Язык: английский

Описание:
В полном соответствии с названием, у всех произведений авторы - женщины. Надо отметить, что в последние времена весьма значительная часть хорошей фантастики написано именно женщинами ...
Introduction by Alex Dally MacFarlane
Girl Hours by Sofia Samatar
Excerpt from a Letter by a Social-Realist Aswang by Kristin Mandigma
Somadeva: A Sky River Sutra / Сутра млечного пути by Vandana Singh
The Queen of Erewhon by Lucy Sussex
Tomorrow Is Saint Valentine's Day by Tori Truslow
Spider the Artist by Nnedi Okorafor
The Science of Herself by Karen Joy Fowler
The Other Graces by Alice Sola Kim
Boojum / Буджум by Elizabeth Bear and Sarah Monette
The Eleven Holy Numbers of the Mechanical Soul by Natalia Theodoridou
Mountain Ways / Законы гор by Ursula K. Le Guin
Tan-Tan and Dry Bone by Nalo Hopkinson
The Four Generations of Chang E by Zen Cho
Stay Thy Flight by Élisabeth Vonarburg
Astrophilia by Carrie Vaughn
Invisible Planets by Hao Jingfang
On the Leitmotif of the Trickster Constellation in Northern Hemispheric Star Charts, Post-Apocalypse by Nicole Kornher-Stace
Valentines by Shira Lipkin
Dancing in the Shadow of the Once by Rochita Loenen-Ruiz
Ej-Es / ЭЙ-ЭС by Nancy Kress
The Cartographer Wasps and the Anarchist Bees / Осы-картографы и пчёлы-анархисты by E. Lily Yu
The Death of Sugar Daddy by Toiya Kristen Finley
Enyo-Enyo by Kameron Hurley
Semiramis by Genevieve Valentine
Immersion / Погружение by Aliette de Bodard
Down the Wall by Greer Gilman
Sing by Karin Tidbeck
Good Boy by Nisi Shawl
The Second Card of the Major Arcana by Thoraiya Dyer
A Short Encyclopedia of Lunar Seas by Ekaterina Sedia
Vector by Benjanun Sriduangkaew
Concerning the Unchecked Growth of Cities by Angélica Gorodischer
The Radiant Car Thy Sparrows Drew by Catherynne M. Valente
EJ-ES


Nancy Kress


Jesse, come home
There’s a hole in the bed
where we slept
Now it’s growing cold
Hey Jesse, your face
in the place where we lay
by the hearth, all apart
it hangs on my heart …
Jesse, I’m lonely
Come home.

—“Jesse,” Janis Ian, 1972

“Why did you first enter the Corps?” Lolimel asked her as they sat at the back of the shuttle, just before landing. Mia looked at the young man helplessly, because how could you answer a question like that? Especially when it was asked by the idealistic and worshipful new recruits, too ignorant to know what a waste of time worship was, let alone simplistic questions.
“Many reasons,” Mia said gravely, vaguely. He looked like so many medicians she had worked with, for so many decades on so many planets … intense, thick-haired, genemod beautiful, a little insane. You had to be a little insane to leave Earth for the Corps, knowing that when (if) you ever returned, all you had known would have been dust for centuries.
He was more persistent than most. “What reasons?”
“The same as yours, Lolimel,” she said, trying to keep her voice gentle. “Now be quiet, please, we’re entering the atmosphere.”
“Yes, but—”
“Be quiet.” Entry was so much easier on him than on her; he had not got bones weakened from decades in space. They did weaken, no matter what exercise one took or what supplements or what gene therapy. Mia leaned back in her shuttle chair and closed her eyes. Ten minutes, maybe, of aerobraking and descent; surely she could stand ten minutes. Or not.
The heaviness began, abruptly increased. Worse on her eyeballs, as always; she didn’t have good eye-socket muscles, had never had them. Such an odd weakness. Well, not for long; this was her last flight. At the next station, she’d retire. She was already well over age, and her body felt it. Only her body? No, her mind, too. At the moment, for instance, she couldn’t remember the name of the planet they were hurtling toward. She recalled its catalogue number, but not whatever its colonists, who were not answering hails from ship, had called it.
“Why did you join the Corps?”
“Many reasons.”
And so few of them fulfilled. But that was not a thing you told the young.
...
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