Nebula Award Stories 11

Nebula Award Stories 11 is an anthology of science fiction short works edited by Ursula K. Le Guin. It was first published in the United Kingdom in hardcover by Gollancz in November 1976. The first American edition was published in hardcover by Harper & Row in February 1977. Paperback editions followed from Corgi in the U.K. in July 1978, and Bantam Books in the U.S. in August 1978. The American editions bore the variant title Nebula Award Stories Eleven.[1]

Nebula Award Stories 11
Cover of first edition
EditorUrsula K. Le Guin
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SeriesNebula Award Stories
GenreScience fiction
PublisherGollancz
Publication date
1976
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages255
ISBN0-575-02151-9
Preceded byNebula Award Stories 10 
Followed byNebula Winners Twelve 

Summary

The book collects pieces published in 1974 and 1975 that won or were nominated for the Nebula Awards for novella, novelette and short story for the year 1976 and nonfiction pieces related to the awards, together with an introduction by the editor. Most of the non-winning pieces nominated for the awards were omitted.

Contents

Reception

Kirkus Reviews assessed the anthology as having "some good things" that "don't add up to a balance of approaches and themes." Judgment of individual pieces was mixed; of the non-fiction, Nicholl's survey of the year was called "nice but slapdash, and McIntyre's essay on the state of the art "shallow ruminations." In regard to the fiction, the reviewer characterized Plauger's piece as "a wry and dry turn," Ellison's as worked out with "negligent finesse," Zelazny's as having a "promising" start but ending "with something of a sugary thud," Leiber's as an "ironic ... exercise," Strete's as a "deft little fable," and Reamy's as a "sad, charming story."[2]

The book was also reviewed by P. Schuyler Miller in Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact, v. 93, no. 4, June 1974, W. N. MacPherson in The Science Fiction Review Monthly, issue #7, September 1975, and Richard Delap in Delap's F & SF Review, v. 1, no. 7, October 1975.[1]

Awards

The anthology placed tenth in the 1977 Locus Poll Award for Best Anthology.[1]

Notes

  1. Nebula Award Stories 11 title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  2. Kirkus Reviews (review), Feb. 1, 1976.
gollark: America's central government is also much more powerful than the EU and it has more shared cultural institutions maybe.
gollark: IIRC the total population is less than Europe too.
gollark: Isn't there that bit of America with horribly lead contaminated water?
gollark: Yes.
gollark: https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/800373244162867234/843966459449049138/unknown.png
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