Apex Magazine #75 Now on Sale
Last month Charlotte Ashley reviewed the Hugo Award short stories nominees in her short fiction column; this month she tackles the novelettes. Long before the awards were announced, she had no trouble picking the winner — the only one not nominated by the Rabid Puppies: “The Day the World Turned Upside Down” by Thomas Olde Heuvelt.
“The Triple Sun: A Golden Age Tale” by Rajnar Vajra
The plot holes in this piece are gaping. The story is ushered along by bad decisions made by people who should know better, all culminating in an excuse to showcase Cadet Asgari’s mediocre problem-solving skills using standard military scifi technology. Big-thinking, innovative science fiction this was not.
“Championship B’tok” by Edward M. Lerner
“Championship B’tok” by Edward M. Lerner (Analog, Sept/Oct. 2014) suffers from many of the same weaknesses of the Vajra piece… the result is a jumbled assortment of vaguely related incidents. Characters are introduced and disposed of once they have fed Carl information (Grace, Corrine, Robyn, Danica,) but the clues they supply don’t add up to much more than an introduction. There’s a conspiracy. So what? The story fails to demonstrate the consequences of any of its events.
“The Day the World Turned Upside Down” by Thomas Olde Heuvelt
Heuvelt’s story is the only one on this list that is Hugo-caliber. While I’m disappointed that it hasn’t any real competition in this slate, I could vote for it without reservations.
Read the compete article online here.