Hyperpowers from Third Flatiron Anthologies, guest-edited by Bascomb James, takes on the challenge of telling short speculative fiction stories that explore space opera and military fiction themes. It contains 16 stories by an international group of contributors. And as usual, our "Grins and Gurgles" humor section allows a light-hearted take on the subject.
Juliana Rew was an NCAR science and technical writer in Boulder, Colorado, and is editor at Third Flatiron Publishing, publishing SF and fantasy anthologies.
There are 16 stories in the anthology, all of which detail some adventure that has to do with space, alien invasion, interstellar battles and so forth. There’s kind of low diversity in the authors on this one, as you might expect given the topic, but the stories make up for it with fairly diverse characters. Also, we get to see some exotic aliens. There were several of the stories that I liked a lot.
One of these is “Grid Drop� by William Huggins. Celeste is part of a team that enforces the anti-tech provisions of a Fallowing, where an overpopulated and over-polluted world is stripped of technology so it can recover. She and her team are on a mission. They take the shuttle down to the offending village to deal with the problem. Will there be resistance? Can they save anyone here?
Another story that really caught my attention was “The Mytilenian Delay� by Neil James Hudson. This one is brilliant, sharply plotted, and very edge-of-the-seat. The captain of a warship has been ordered by her command to destroy the world New Borodin. Thinking the order is questionable, the captain sends the order by slow radio, which means there is a Mytilenian delay, and the order can be rescinded within 30 hours by faster-than-light communication. She expects a mutiny, but her crew holds fast. She discusses the order with her command, and realizes the Empire is in disarray, so large now that communication has broken down. Lodging her complaints about the order, she waits for it to be rescinded. Will the order be changed? Will there be a decision in time to save New Borodin? Read the story to find out.
These stories are all generally entertaining, including plot twists and subtle humor.
REVIEWED: Hyperpowers anthology EDITED BY: Bascomb James PUBLISHED: May, 2016
Hyperpowers is the sixteenth anthology out from Third Flatiron Publishing, and the first guest-edited by someone other than its regular anthologist, Juliana Rew. Bascomb James, however, ensures the standard of quality continues in this latest, as has been established by Juliana. The theme of this volume is space opera and military science fiction, and it does not disappoint.
Included are 15 full-length stories, a piece of flash fiction, and opening Editor’s remarks. Each story is good in its own way, many are fun, some dark and tragic; it’s filled with unique ideas, action, diverse characters, and wonderful imaginary worlds, a quality I particularly enjoy reading in short form.