To
continue yesterday’s theme about next week’s UK National Short Story Week, I
thought I’d scan my book shelves for the collections by sci-fi and horror
authors (a separate set of shelves).
Here
I find Brian Aldiss, J.G. Ballard, Anthony Boucher, Ray Bradbury, John W. Campbell,
Angela Carter, Harlan Ellison, Jack Finney, Richard Matheson, Cordwainer Smith, Philip K.
Dick, Christopher Priest, Clifford Simak, Theodore Sturgeon, James Tiptree Jr (Alice B. Sheldon), Gene Wolfe, Connie Willis and
H.G. Wells.
Jack Finney’s classic novel
Invasion of the Body Snatchers has
been filmed more than once; yet it’s his beautiful short story ‘I love
Galesburg in the Springtime’ that lingers in my memory.
Some
readers are quite insular in their taste, and eschew certain genre writing,
which is a pity, because there is a richness of prose and idea within all
genres; a good story, about people and emotion can be found in all genre
writing; a good story is a good story.
‘I
don’t read sci-fi’ is perhaps as common a statement as ‘I don’t read westerns’
or ‘I don’t read horror’. Perhaps these opinions stem from a bad experience
with a poor writer within a particular genre. Yet you won’t hear anyone say ‘I
don’t read novels’ (well, apart from those who prefer non-fiction!) because
this statement is too broad. And that’s the point. Within any genre, there’s a
very broad range of style, quality and imagination. Short story collections by
an author can introduce you to his or her style, and I believe that any of the
above mentioned authors have something like ‘precious metal’ to offer readers who are bold enough to mine these treasures.
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