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Chronoscopy

Chronoscopy

Welcome to the journey through the history of the future! We're reading and discussing "The Big Book of Science Fiction", an anthology of the greatest short stories in the genre. The stories are in chronological order, so we're stepping through a century's worth of developments in a genre that trades on fresh ideas! We'll discuss them in tri-weekly sessions and you're invited to add your voice. Ready to jack in, young deckrunner?

Format

  1. We're reading and discussing short stories from "The Big Book of Science Fiction"
  2. "The Big Book" is an anthology spanning 100 years and features 104 short stories.
  3. Sessions are held every three weeks and cover 8 of those stories.
  4. Stories are 10 pages on average, that's 80 pages over 3 weeks, or less than 4 pages a day - you can do it! You also don't have to read everything, or come every time.
  5. The format of the sessions is decided by the session's moderator.

Session Format

  1. Anyone can host and organise a session.
  2. If you want to host a session, just post it here and roughly follow the reading schedule.
  3. Each session has a moderator who organises the event and decides its format. For example, to understand the context in which stories were written, I'd ask participants to read up on and share the background to their favourite story. I'd give every story a chance to be discussed, so would moderate accordingly. etc, etc.

How to get the book

The book is available from Amazon in paperback (US$14.88) and kindle formats (US$12.99). Highly recommend the kindle version as the paperback will snap your wrist.

It's called Chronoscopy, after the device which helps you look into other times and eras.

Provisional Meetup Schedule

Schedule

Meetups are always on a friday, and are typically three weeks apart. For the reading list see #stories

Meetup Number - Date - Publication Years Covered

  • CS/01 - 2017-02-24 - (1897-1920)
  • CS/02 - 2017-03-17 - (1927-1944)
  • CS/03 - 2017-04-07 - (1949-1954)
  • CS/04 - 2017-04-28 - (1955-1958)
  • CS/05 - 2017-05-19 - (1958-1962)
  • CS/06 - 2017-06-23 - (1965-1966)
  • CS/07 - 2017-07-14 - (1967-1972)
  • CS/08 - 2017-08-04 - (1972-1979)
  • CS/09 - 2017-08-25 - (1981-1984)
  • CS/10 - 2017-09-22 - (1984-1987)
  • CS/11 - 2017-10-13 - (1987-1988)
  • CS/12 - 2017-11-03 - (1988-1993)
  • CS/13 - 2017-11-24 - (1994-2002)

Alternative Dates

If you want to host and organise a session, please consider hosting them between these dates so it's easy for people to keep up with their reading.

Meetup Number : After Date - Before Date

  • CS/01 : 2017-02-17 - 2017-03-03
  • CS/02 : 2017-03-10 - 2017-03-24
  • CS/03 : 2017-03-31 - 2017-04-14
  • CS/04 : 2017-04-21 - 2017-05-05
  • CS/05 : 2017-05-12 - 2017-05-26
  • CS/06 : 2017-06-16 - 2017-06-30
  • CS/07 : 2017-07-07 - 2017-07-21
  • CS/08 : 2017-07-28 - 2017-08-11
  • CS/09 : 2017-08-18 - 2017-09-01
  • CS/10 : 2017-09-15 - 2017-09-29
  • CS/11 : 2017-10-06 - 2017-10-20
  • CS/12 : 2017-10-27 - 2017-11-10
  • CS/13 : 2017-11-17 - 2017-12-01

Location

T.B.D. - depends on the number of people joining.

Included Stories

CS/01 - (1897-1920)

  • The StarH. G. Wells
  • Sultana’s DreamRokheya Shekhawat Hossein
  • The New OverworldPaul Scheerbart
  • The Triumph of MechanicsKarl Hans Strobl
  • Elements of PataphysicsAlfred Jarry
  • MechanopolisMiguel de Unamuno
  • The Doom of Principal CityYefim Zozulya
  • The CometW. E. B. Du Bois

CS/02 - (1927-1944)

  • The Fate of the PoseidoniaClare Winger Harris
  • The Star StealersEdmond Hamilton
  • The Conquest of GolaLeslie F. Stone
  • A Martian OdysseyStanley G. Weinbaum
  • The Last Poet and the RobotsA. Merritt
  • The Microscopic GiantsPaul Ernst
  • Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis TertiusJorge Luis Borges
  • DesertionClifford D. Simak

CS/03 - (1949-1954)

  • September 2005: The MartianRay Bradbury
  • Baby HPJuan José Arreola
  • Surface TensionJames Blish
  • Beyond Lies the WubPhilip K. Dick
  • The Snowball EffectKatherine MacLean
  • ProttMargaret St. Clair
  • The Liberation of EarthWilliam Tenn
  • Let Me Live in a HouseChad Oliver

CS/04 - (1955-1958)

  • The StarArthur C. Clarke
  • GrandpaJames H. Schmitz
  • The Game of Rat and Dragon – _Cordwainer Smith _
  • The Last QuestionIsaac Asimov
  • Stranger StationDamon Knight
  • Sector GeneralJames White
  • The VisitorsArkady and Boris Strugatsky
  • PeltCarol Emshwiller

CS/05 - (1958-1962)

  • The MonsterGérard Klein
  • The Man Who Lost the SeaTheodore Sturgeon
  • The WavesSilvina Ocampo
  • PlenitudeWill Worthington
  • The Voices of TimeJ. G. Ballard
  • The AstronautValentina Zhuravlyova
  • The Squid Chooses Its Own InkAdolfo Bioy Casares
  • 2 B R 0 2 BKurt Vonnegut Jr.

CS/06 - (1965-1966)

  • A Modest GeniusVadim Shefner
  • Day of WrathSever Gansovsky
  • The HandsJohn Baxter
  • DarknessAndré Carneiro
  • “Repent, Harlequin!” Said the TicktockmanHarlan Ellison
  • Nine Hundred GrandmothersR. A. Lafferty
  • Day MillionFrederik Pohl
  • Student BodyF. L. Wallace

CS/07 - (1967-1972)

  • Aye, and GomorrahSamuel R. Delany
  • The Hall of MachinesLangdon Jones
  • Soft ClocksYoshio Aramaki
  • Three from ModeranDavid R. Bunch
  • Let Us Save the UniverseStanisław Lem
  • Vaster Than Empires and More SlowUrsula K. Le Guin
  • Good News from the VaticanRobert Silverberg
  • When It ChangedJoanna Russ

CS/08 - (1972-1979)

  • And I Awoke and Found Me Here on the Cold Hill’s Side – _James Tiptree Jr. _
  • Where Two Paths CrossDmitri Bilenkin
  • Standing WomanYasutaka Tsutsui
  • The IWM 1000Alicia Yánez Cossío
  • The House of Compassionate SharersMichael Bishop
  • Sporting with the ChidBarrington J. Bayley
  • SandkingsGeorge R. R. Martin
  • WivesLisa Tuttle

CS/09 - (1981-1984)

  • The Snake That Read ChomskyJosephine Saxton
  • Reiko’s Universe BoxKajio Shinji
  • SwarmBruce Sterling
  • MondocaneJacques Barbéri
  • Blood MusicGreg Bear
  • BloodchildOctavia E. Butler
  • Variation on a ManPat Cadigan
  • Passing as a Flower in the City of the DeadS. N. Dyer

CS/10 - (1984-1987)

  • New Rose HotelWilliam Gibson
  • PotsC. J. Cherryh
  • SnowJohn Crowley
  • The Lake Was Full of Artificial ThingsKaren Joy Fowler
  • The Unmistakable Smell of Wood VioletsAngélica Gorodischer
  • The Owl of Bear IslandJon Bing
  • Readers of the Lost ArtÉlisabeth Vonarburg
  • A Gift from the CultureIain M. Banks

CS/11 - (1987-1988)

  • ParanamancoJean-Claude Dunyach
  • Crying in the RainTanith Lee
  • The Frozen CardinalMichael Moorcock
  • Rachel in LovePat Murphy
  • Sharing AirManjula Padmanabhan
  • Schwarzschild RadiusConnie Willis
  • All the Hues of Hell – _Gene Wolfe _
  • Vacuum StatesGeoffrey A. Landis

CS/12 - (1988-1993)

  • Two Small BirdsHan Song
  • Burning SkyRachel Pollack
  • Before I WakeKim Stanley Robinson
  • Death Is Static Death Is MovementMisha Nogha
  • The Brains of RatsMichael Blumlein
  • GorgonoidsLeena Krohn
  • Vacancy for the Post of Jesus ChristKojo Laing
  • The Universe of ThingsGwyneth Jones

CS/13 - (1994-2002)

  • The RemorasRobert Reed
  • The Ghost StandardWilliam Tenn
  • Remnants of the Virago Crypto-SystemGeoffrey Maloney
  • How Alex Became a MachineStepan Chapman
  • The Poetry CloudCixin Liu
  • Story of Your LifeTed Chiang
  • CraphoundCory Doctorow
  • The SlynxTatyana Tolstaya
  • Baby DollJohanna Sinisalo

Praise

“A stunning and satisfying retrospective. . . . This is a complex and fantastic project. . . . It’s handsome, huge, and amazingly well-curated; our editors, here, have done a fabulous job. . . . I couldn’t ask for more, truly. It’s diverse, wide-ranging, engaging, and fun; the stories are introduced well, juxtaposed better, and the overall effect is one of dizzying complexity and depth.” —Tor.com

“A definitive volume of the genre. . . . This is a big book, and it’s an essential tome for readers who are dedicated SF fans or casual newcomers alike. Do they manage to redefine science fiction? I think so.” —The Verge

“The Big Book of Science Fiction is exactly what it says it is, nearly 1,200 pages of stories by the genre’s luminaries, like H. G. Wells, Arthur C. Clarke and Ursula K. Le Guin, as well as lesser-known authors. . . . [it] prizes diversity of all kinds, and translates work by several writers into English—some for the first time.” —The New York Times Book Review

“How big is big? In this case, we’re talking nearly 1,200 double-columned pages, dozens of representative short classics of science fiction, and newly translated work from around the world. There are surprises, too: Did you know that W.E.B. Du Bois wrote sf? That’s just one indication that the VanderMeers hope to establish a more culturally diverse science fiction canon.” —The Washington Post (10 Hidden Gems)

“An enormous anthology of science fiction put together by two of our sharpest purveyors of the genre. . . . This volume is a perfect mix of the classic and the unexpected.” —Flavorwire

“Everything about this book is exciting. First, it’s huge—some 750,000 words fill its 1,200 pages. Second, it’s been compiled by one of sci-fi’s coolest power couples—she’s a distinguished editor (Tor.com, Weird Tales), he’s a superb writer (2014’s Southern Reach trilogy). And finally, it’s not just another survey of white men in science fiction (aka Phillip K.’s dicks). For every Wells and Dick and George R.R. Martin, there’s work by Le Guin, Butler, and Katherine MacLean—not to mention stories from all over the world, from China (Liu Cixin) to Argentina (Silvina Campo). Gift it to a friend, then buy one for yourself.” —Jason Kehe, Wired (This Summer’s Must-Read Books)

“Borges once imagined an infinite book with pages of infinite thinness. The Vandermeers approach that event horizon with this double-columned paperback of more than 1,200 pages, containing some 750,000 words in more than 100 stories. . . . A review of a few hundred words can only begin to suggest both the contents and quality of this excellent collection of short fiction. The Vandermeers sidestep territorial quagmires by defining sci-fi, simply and effectively, as fiction that depicts the future in a stylized or realistic manner. This definition allows them a wide range of choices. . . . This book could serve as a portal to years of pleasurable and thought-provoking reading.” —Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

“Science fiction anthologies are a dime a dozen, but there’s that one that comes across every now and again that is truly essential. This is the case for Ann and Jeff Vandermeer’s Big Book of Science Fiction, an anthology that goes back to the genre’s roots in pulp fiction, all the way up to the end of the 20th Century, picking the best stories from around the world (including a number never before translated into English) . . . We took one look at this massive anthology’s Table of Contents, and fell in love at first sight.” —io9

“Whether you’re a life-long fan of science fiction or layperson diving deep into a new genre, this incredible anthology offers a comprehensive genre education between two covers. In more than 1,000 pages and upwards of 100 stories, the VanderMeers have compiled a truly representative history of SF from its early beginnings to its myriad modern incarnations. . . . This is an unparalleled achievement, and undoubtedly one of the most important books you’ll buy this year.” —Barnes and Noble Booksellers’ Picks

“When it comes to massive and comprehensive anthologies focused on a specific strain of fiction, the editorial team of Ann and Jeff VanderMeer has set the bar remarkably high.” —LitHub

“Ann and Jeff VanderMeer are a powerhouse editing team; their recent anthology of weird fiction helped define a genre, and took a smart historical global view while doing it. This anthology does a similar feat to science fiction, with an expansive aesthetic and work from a host of writers, including W.E.B. DuBois, Cixin Liu, Ursula K. Le Guin, and George R.R. Martin.” —Vol. 1 Brooklyn

“These stories were chosen for continuing relevance and arranged to interplay like voices in a great conversation: shifting and offering new insights. . . . Throughout this collection, every piece of wrack, scavenger bird, and sorceress contains multitudes.” —Locus Magazine

“A fun and solid genre education.” —Library Journal (Starred Review)

“At 105 stories—taken from around the world and since the genre’s very beginnings to its recent heights—and more than 1,000 pages, this extraordinary anthology handily earns its billing as the ‘ultimate collection’ of science fiction. . . . The VanderMeers, longtime SF/F editors (The Time Traveler’s Almanac and many others), provide a critical survey of the field as well as incisive biographies of the contributors.” —Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)

“If your readerly appetite is not quite novel-sized, you’ll definitely want to check out this month’s short fiction offerings. If you only choose one title, make it The Big Book of Science Fiction edited by Ann & Jeff VanderMeer.” —Kirkus

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