![]() ![]() ![]() Unfortunately, I’ve lost the bit of paper we wrote down our conclusions on, but I remember feeling that for every novel I was sure should be in a top ten - Tricia Sullivan’s Maul Gwyneth Jones’ Life Sarah Hall’s The Carhullan Army Justina Robson’s Living Next-Door to the God of Love Jan Morris’s Hav - there was one I hadn’t read - Susan Palwick’s Shelter Maureen McHugh’s Nekropolis Jo Walton’s Farthing Kathleen Ann Goonan’s In War Time Elizabeth Bear’s Carnival. But seeing the list made me wonder: What would this top ten list look like if we restricted the timeframe to books published in 2000 or later? So let’s hear it: What’s in your top ten? (Keep in mind we’re specifically talking about SF here, not fantasy.)įunnily enough, I was having this conversation over dinner not too long ago (after the Gresham symposium, if memory serves). Which is fair enough, considering it’s a Top Ten of all-time sort of list. ![]() It’s an interesting list, though I note that only two of them are from the 21st century. ![]() In the Guardian, Gwyneth Jones has a Top Ten list of SF novels written by women. Before I dash off again, John Joseph Adams has a question: ![]()
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