Although I am well-aware that fiction anthologies of all stripes are rarely discussed here, I thought perhaps it'd be interesting to hear opinions about what constitutes a good fiction anthology. As my sig line states, I've agreed to work with the Best American Fantasy anthology series (starting with vol. 4, tentative date being mid-2011, with more information forthcoming). Needless to say, how to structure an anthology (in this particular case, a reprint anthology) and make it appealing to a large group of readers has been on my mind recently.
So, for those of you who have read an anthology or who might if persuaded, what do you look for in an anthology (interconnecting stories, particular types of stories told, lots of commentaries by the editor(s), as little commentary from editor(s) and authors as possible, themes, etc.)?
So, for those of you who have read an anthology or who might if persuaded, what do you look for in an anthology (interconnecting stories, particular types of stories told, lots of commentaries by the editor(s), as little commentary from editor(s) and authors as possible, themes, etc.)?
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie
Je suis méchant.
Je suis méchant.
Anthologies
22/12/2009 11:12:37 PM
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Hey Lars...
22/12/2009 11:27:06 PM
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Thanks for the thoughts, Cat Boy
23/12/2009 12:54:48 AM
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Anthologies are like mix CDs. I don't really like them.
23/12/2009 03:39:12 AM
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I'm curious - do you read many short stories these days?
23/12/2009 08:32:14 AM
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Honestly, not many. But when I do, I prefer for them to be in a single-author collection.
23/12/2009 11:36:02 PM
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But some authors write such widely-ranging narratives that some anthologies are more unified
24/12/2009 02:17:58 AM
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Not to sound shallow, but honestly, I look for a known name ot two.
23/12/2009 04:15:45 AM
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