lsparrow's review against another edition

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3.0

I enjoyed this collection.

hedgehogbookreviews's review against another edition

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2.0

Honestly, there were only 3 stories that I really enjoyed. Maybe my hopes were set too high for this one. I'm sad I didn't like it very much.

claire_loves_books's review against another edition

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2.0

I really tried but I just had to give up at page 163 (I kept starting a story, not really enjoying it then skim-reading/skipping to the end of that one), I just was't enjoying the stories, they were all to experimental for me and felt more driven by the writing style and concept than by plot or characters. Some of them were interesting but I didn't actually enjoy any of the 11 stories I tried. Clearly who ever collated this just has a completely different reading taste to me.

sumayyah_t's review against another edition

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3.0

A motley collection of stories, some that have appeared in othe rplaces. I found myself skimming the stories, and only reading the ones by authors I've read before and liked.

serenedancer's review against another edition

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5.0

Greatly enjoyed reading the different stories. It also gave me a great overview of SF female writers who do not usually get as much exposure and I definitely found some I will check out again. Definitely check out this book for a good overview. Also something that I very much liked was that there were many LGBT characters and plotlines which are not as prevalent in SF as they could/should be. That was very enjoyable.

nwhyte's review against another edition

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4.0

https://nwhyte.livejournal.com/3715215.html

This one contains 33 excellent stories by women writers, a couple of which I already knew, some of which were new to me, all reprints and almost all good. A casual reference to a distant relative of mine in Karen Joy Fowler's "The Science of Herself" prompted me to do some family research; I particularly liked Ekaterina Sedia's "A Short Encyclopedia of Lunar Seas"; but basically I was kicking myself for having acquired this way back in 2014 and not yet read it.

c_bulin's review against another edition

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3.0

This was an interesting collection of stories. Some were not to my taste, but I really enjoyed the ones by Lucy Sussex, Alice Sola Kim, Nardi Okorafor, Elizabeth Bear and Sarah Monette, Zen Cho, Carrie Vaughn, Hao Jingfang, Shira Linkin, Kameron Hurley, Aliette deBodard, and Cat Valente.

michaeldrakich's review against another edition

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1.0

Where to begin? Because there is so little of it, I will start with what praise I can give before the criticism. Encapsulated within this collection are a few very good stories that deserve recognition.

My favorites, in order, are;
IMMERSION by Aliette De Bodard.
SPIDER THE ARTIST by Nnedi Okorafor.
DANCING IN THE SHADOW OF THE ONCE by Rochita Loenen-Ruiz.
These three were the only ones I was willing to rate as 5 stars. There are a few 4 star selections.
THE RADIANT CAR THY SPARROWS DREW by Catherynne M. Valente.
THE ELEVEN HOLY NUMBERS OF THE MECHANICAL SOUL by Natalia Theodoridou.
BOOJUM by Elizabeth Bear & Sarah Monette.
VALENTINES by Shira Lipkin.
EJ-ES by Nancy Kress.

So ends the good news.

Adding these five 4 star stories to the three 5 star stories only gives you a list of eight out of the thirty-three that fill this collection. That leaves you with twenty-five with a 3 star or lower rating, and far too many of those with only a 1 star rating. Using an average 2.57 I could rate this collection as high as 3 stars by rounding up, or play it safe by rating it 2 stars, but the fact there were so many disappointments a reader would have to suffer through to get to the gems forced my hand to give the disappointing rating of 1 star.

A number of issues upset me to the point of almost antagonizing me. There were way too many stories which should never have even been considered science fiction. They simply weren't. There were many where the only trace of science fiction dealt with unique (and often outrageous) matrimonial situations. In hindsight, I cannot understand how the editor, Alex Dally MacFarlane, came to the decision to include such irregulars in a volume dedicated to science fiction stories by women.

For an individual review and rating of each story in the order as they appear in the novel, here is the complete list.

GIRL HOURS by Sofia Samatar. One would think you would want to start a compilation with something good, not the mindless doodling of this first story. 1 star
EXCERPT FROM A LETTER BY A SOCIALIST-REALIST ASWANG by Kristin Mandigma. Oh my gosh, the second story is nothing more than a rant. 1 star
SOMADEVA: A SKY RIVER SUTRA by Vandana Singh. Alien looks for the meaning of life through the tales of other species. Someone should have told her the answer is 42. 2 stars
THE QUEEN OF EREWHON by Lucy Sussex. A tale of an illegal lesbian affair in a land ruled under a unique society based loosely on the structure in a bee hive. Too convoluted for easy reading. 3 stars
TOMORROW IS ST. VALENTINE'S DAY by Tori Truslow. A tale of mermaids told in a collection of scientific notes, memoirs, poems and references. The use of footnotes made reading this fluently impossible. 1 star
SPIDER THE ARTIST by Nnedi Okorafor. Finally! A story I enjoyed. Giant robotic AI spiders guard an oil pipeline in Africa. One falls in love with music and befriends the musician. 5 stars
THE SCIENCE OF HERSELF by Karen Joy Fowler. This is nothing more than an essay about Mary Anning, a noted paleontologist . How this classifies as science fiction is beyond me. 1 star
THE OTHER GRACES by Alice Sola Kim. A young Korean woman in America has a Gateway opened in her mind to others who are guiding her to success. Lacking details. 3 stars
BOOJUM by Elizabeth Bear & Sarah Monette. Living monstrous beings called Boojums are also spaceships people live in - a concept done before, but still rare enough to enjoy. Black Alice works in engineering on a Boojum pirate ship. The ship and her become friends. 4 stars
THE ELEVEN HOLY NUMBERS OF THE MECHANICAL SOUL by Natalia Theodoridou. Stuck on a dying alien world with only mechanical beasts for company, the sole survivor struggles to survive and whether to struggle on. 4 stars
MOUNTAIN WAYS by Ursula L LeGuin. Another boring foray into a unique marriage system requiring two men and two women when some want the system cheated. Outside of the weird marriage, where's the scifi? 1 star
TAN-TAN AND DRY BONE by Nalo Hopkinson. Written in some kind of African English the story is about a woman who is encumbered by a man who holds dark sway over her. Respectable, but is truly an occult story, not science fiction in any manner. It should never have been in this collection. 2 stars
THE FOUR GENERATIONS OF CHANG E by Zen Cho. A girl goes through numerous physical and mental changes to become a moon person. 2 stars
STAY THE FLIGHT by Elisabeth Vonarburg. An interesting premise of living statues, but the staccato style of the writing made reading somewhat difficult. 3 stars
ASTROPHILIA by Carrie Vaughn. A simplistic post-apocalyptic world returned to simple life where people weave wool by hand. One girl has an old telescope. Some same sex love. I've noticed a trend in this book where sexual relationships are outside the norm. Not much of a story. 3 stars
INVISIBLE PLANETS by Hao Jingfang. A collection of flash fiction bios of silly planets with even sillier people loosely tied together by an elder relating them to a child. 2 stars
ON THE LEITMOTIF OF THE TRICKSTER CONSTELLATION IN NORTHERN HEMISPHERE STAR CHARTS, POST-APOCALYPSE by Nicole Kronher-Stace. A story of an historian gathering details from ghosts loosely tied to the naming and history of constellations. 3 stars
VALENTINES by Shira Lipkin. A woman takes copious notes about everything and tracks her relationship with three different waiters named Valentine, Val and V. Is she crossing between worlds in the mutli-verse? 4 stars
DANCING IN THE SHADOW OF THE ONCE by Rochita Loenen-Ruiz. A woman from a conquered people has implants that allow her to be the Artifact of her people through live presentations. Showcase around the galaxy, she is a living history exposed to other races with misgivings. 5 stars
EJ-ES by Nancy Kress. Almost all people die in a distant colony on a far off planet from a special virus. Survivors suffer from dillusions. One woman sets out to fix things. Some good medical jargon in here. 4 stars
THE CARTOGRAPHER WASPS AND THE ANARCHIST BEES by E. Lily Yu. Literally, this is about a hive of wasps and a hive of bees living in a difficult arrangement side by side. 2 stars
THE DEATH OF SUGAR DADDY by Toyla Kristen Finley. I found the writing style, some type of inner city poor, interesting, but a story about inner city youths looking for a man known as Sugar Daddy while some people are suffering a weird rash is not science fiction, it is supernatural. 2 stars
ENYO-ENYO by Kameron Hurley. This mish-mash of a dark future for humanity is too convoluted to provide a credible story that can be followed by the average reader, By the end, I never really grasped what was being said. 2 stars
SEMIRAMIS by Genevieve Valentine. A post apocalyptic world being flooded by rising seas and a woman in charge of a seed collection and the illicit trade of seeds. 3 stars
IMMERSION by Aliette De Bodard. A superb story of people wearing a device called an immerser that changes your image and your way of thinking to emulate people known as Galactics. 5 stars
DOWN THE WALL by Greer Gilman. A montage of incomprehensible statements creating neither a story or message. 1 star
SING by Karin Tidbeck. The base concept on which the story was written, a planet where all life involves parasitism, is interesting, but the actual story left something missing. 3 stars
GOOD BOY by Nisi Shawl. On a distant planetary colony an unknown sickness is spreading and one citizen resorts to being possessed by spirits to address the problem. Not including the setting, not sure whether this is science fiction or supernatural. 2 stars
THE SECOND CARD OF THE MAJOR ARCANA by Thoraiya Dyer. A supernatural ancient deity returns to life and kills people who fail to answer her questions until she comes face to face with a computer that does. 3 stars
A SHORT ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LUNAR SEAS by Ekaterina Sedia. The title says it all. A list of lunar seas with silly descriptions. 1 star
VECTOR by Benjanun Sriduangkaew. This is a guess, but I think this is a homage to the movie THE MATRIX. The character is in the matrix and fights the system. Only a guess because it is not clear enough. 2 stars
CONCERNING THE UNCHECKED GROWTH OF CITIES by Angelica Gorodischer. First off, this is not science fiction, it is 100% high fantasy. The story reads like a 20 page marathon monologue summation of a 1000 page book. 1 star
THE RADIANT CAR THY SPARROWS DREW by Catherynne M. Valente. Alien super-whales on Venus and the mystery around them as seen by a female reporter. A slow start, but ends with a flair. A reasonable finish to the collection. 4 stars

dr_matthew_lloyd's review against another edition

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3.0

Ah, time to review this collection of short stories that I read over a period of two years. Let's see what I can remember.

Fortunately, I posted updates about most of the stories almost immediately after reading them, which helps. Looking back at the earlier stories, I remember "The Other Graces" by Alice Sola Kim most distinctly as a fascinating story that I would like to revisit; I enjoyed "Spider the Artist" by Nnedi Okorafor and "The Science of Herself" by Karen Joy Fowler, although I was already familiar with both of those authors. These were all very different stories across the science fiction genre, but all were interesting in different ways. For a volume such as this one, "interesting in different ways" must be the aim. I can't imagine it's possible to collect 33 stories by very different writers in very different styles and have many readers love all of them; there are certainly those that I would have left out (but which, I'm sure, are other people's favourites). Furthermore, as Alex Dalley MacFarlane writes in the introduction, this volume is intended as a challenge to the exclusion of women from the history of science fiction (although it focuses largely on the contemporary). I mention this, largely, as a warning that some bad reviews of this volume will be reflecting the fact that this volume is meant to be a challenge. Personally, my responses to these stories were wildly variable.

My average rating for the stories in this book is 3.30 recurring, so 3 seems about fair. However, looking back I notice that my tendency to give certain stories 3.5 ratings to indicate that they were better than fine but not great also seems to have affected stories that were excellent and probably deserved 5* (Zen Cho's "Three Generations of Chang-E", Hao Jingfang's "Invisible Planets", and Aliette de Bodard's "Immersion"). Essentially, there are stories in this volume that I would absolutely recommend, and some that I didn't enjoy, but you might. It might be worth you taking a look.

arachne_reads's review against another edition

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5.0

This collection is solid, a well-chosen list of some of the best SF I've set my eyeballs on. I think it was a bold move to lead the collection with verse (Girl Hours), but it set the tone for some strange and delicious pieces.

One of the bigger threads throughout many of the selected stories is the question of what happens to one's society and the culturally constructed self in the face of the colonial entity, the power which strips bare and forces new norms. The answers vary, each holding up a new facet when that thread reappears. And not all the works explore those waters. I think as a reader, this is what my antennae are extended to listen for, and so when I find such a rich array of them, that is where I am.

I have come away with some new favorite authors, and I must go inhale all the work in translation that I can find of Hao Jingfang, I have to roll around in Nnedi Okorafor (how, how have I not approached her work before? It was everywhere around me, and yet other things have just always risen to the top of my reading list), and devour all the fiction of E. Lily Yu.