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The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2025

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Of science fiction and fantasy, guest editor Nnedi Okorafor writes, “There are times when it feels like a box, but within it, technically, you can expect anything.” The twenty stories in this collection simultaneously fulfill and defy expectations of genre, showcasing boundary-pushing authors at their best. In this year’s Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy, a robot will struggle to make friends, a team of auditors determines the financial value of a lifetime, an alien species will teach you how to read, and maybe, just maybe, someone will finally do something about the kid in Ursula K. Le Guin’s Omelas hole. From the joyous to the terrifying, to the heart wrenching and the absurd, these stories encourage you to open your mind and, as Okorafor “Watch your world expand.”              

THE BEST AMERICAN SCIENCE FICTION AND FANTASY 2025 'PEMI AGUDA • KIJ JOHNSON • TANANARIVE DUE • S.L. HUANG • JOE HILL • ISABEL J. KIM • T.J. KLUNE • OLIVIE BLAKE • CAROLINE M. YOACHIM • AND OTHERS


416 pages, Kindle Edition

Published October 21, 2025

82 people are currently reading
187 people want to read

About the author

Nnedi Okorafor

153 books17.8k followers
Nnedi Okorafor is a New York Times Bestselling writer of science fiction and fantasy for both children and adults. The more specific terms for her works are africanfuturism and africanjujuism, both terms she coined and defined. Born in the United States to two Nigerian (Igbo) immigrant parents and visiting family in Nigeria since she was a child, the foundation and inspiration of Nnedi’s work is rooted in this part of Africa. Her many works include Who Fears Death (winner of the World Fantasy Award and in development at HBO as a TV series), the Nebula and Hugo award winning novella trilogy Binti (in development as a TV series), the Lodestar and Locus Award winning Nsibidi Scripts Series, LaGuardia (winner of a Hugo and Eisner awards for Best Graphic Novel) and her most recent novella Remote Control. Her debut novel Zahrah the Windseeker won the prestigious Wole Soyinka Prize for Literature. She lives with her daughter Anyaugo in Phoenix, AZ. Learn more about Nnedi at Nnedi.com and follow Nnedi on twitter (as @Nnedi), Facebook and Instagram.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 36 reviews
Profile Image for Books_the_Magical_Fruit.
920 reviews145 followers
October 22, 2025
This anthology is a pretty solid 4 stars, which is good for this type of book. Also, I snapped it up EVEN FASTER once I saw that Nnedi Okorafor was the guest editor this year. She is an amazing writer, and I’m already working my way through her catalogue.

Also, Joe Hill?? I just finished “King Sorrow”, and I’m always up for more Joe. “Ushers” is a great story, and the twist will make your heart drop into your stomach.

“The Audit” is a rambling journal of someone losing it, and it’s surprisingly funny. The premise is a fascinating one, and I do not want to participate in that program…at all..

“The Forgetting Room” ponders what might happen if you could erase some of your memories. My thought was, if you erase something bad that happened to you, how would you know to stay away from someone or something afterward? A significant amount of our memories keep us safe! No, thank you to the altering of my brain.

TJ Klune made me cry, again! “Reduce! Reuse! Recycle!” is achingly poignant.

FYI, there are a fair amount of short stories that veer into horror territory…but I like horror, so it didn’t bother me.

There’s more, but suffice it to say that this collection of stories is well worth your time. Ms. Okorafor has done an excellent job as guest editor.

Thank you to NetGalley and Mariner Books for the eARC! I’m writing this review voluntarily.
Profile Image for Edie.
1,111 reviews35 followers
November 7, 2025
My genre of choice is science fiction. And my format of choice is the short story. Which makes the choice to read this year's collection an easy one. I have most of the previous installments going back quite a few years, although I haven't read them from beginning to end. One thing I appreciate about picking up ARCs is that I feel obligated to read the entire collection, not just the authors I already know I enjoy. Which is a win for me because I get introduced to writers I would not have discovered otherwise. As for this year's collection, it was good. Some of the stories were great. It wasn't my favorite yet I enjoyed it very much. I appreciate all the work which goes into a collection like this. Thank you to the writers and narrators for their contributions, everyone involved in gathering, sorting, and choosing the entries, and NetGalley for the audioARC.
Profile Image for Dan Trefethen.
1,203 reviews75 followers
October 27, 2025
Once again, the guest editor for this series (this year it's Nnedi Okorafor) did an excellent job picking 20 stories out of the anonymous 80 submitted to her by the series editor. Since the guest editor doesn't know who wrote the stories, sometimes you'll see two stories by the same person, normally a taboo in 'year's best' anthologies. This year it didn't happen, though.

Some award winning stories are here, including the lead-off story 'We Will Teach You to Read / We Will Teach You to Read' by Caroline Yoachim, and Isabel Kim's 'Why Don't We Just Kill the Kid in the Omelas Hole?'. There are some robot stories from T.J. Klune and Adam-Troy Castro, and a signature piece by Joe Hill closes out the book. The most affecting to me was Kij Johnson's meditation on mortality, 'Country Birds'. I think I had something in my eye at the end of that story.

Tananarive Due is here with a chiller of the horror story. The anthology also has a story by one of my recent 'finds', Thomas Ha, who had a story (not this one) short-listed for a Hugo this year.
Profile Image for Jaclyn Hogan.
371 reviews34 followers
July 24, 2025
I received an ARC of this book from Netgalley.

We Will Teach You How to Read | We Will Teach You How to Read by Caroline M. Yoachim: Aliens that live at a timescale much faster than humans attempt to teach humans how to read their language, which contains multiple threads that need to be comprehended at the same time. An interesting experiment with form, but I want more alien details.

Also, the Cat by Rachel Swirsky: Three elderly sisters die, one after another and discover they're still stuck together haunting their old house. Well drawn characterizations that elicit sympathy for three old women who mostly enjoy being unpleasant to each other. Then there's the cat, which brought a tear to my eye.

The Audit by Olivie Blake: Our narrator participates in a program that estimates how much money you'll earn in your life and gives it to you to do whatever you want with it, only you have to pay it back as an adult. The narrator gets $40 million and spirals.

Country Birds by Kiji Johnson: The protagonist develops a spot in her vision that looks like a bird. As her life goes on, she thinks of all the aches and pains of her aging body as birds. Lyrical, but slight.

Fuck Them Kids by Tatiana Obey: Jaz goes home for a holiday only to find out that one of her nieces has stowed away on her rocket ship, leaving Jaz no choice but to take her along for the race she's competing in. A fun romp, and I always enjoy good auntie representation.

The River Judge by S.L. Huang: Li Li lives and works at her family's inn at a bend in the river. When her father starts solving problems with murder, Li Li and her mother are left to clean up the bodies. This works, until it doesn't, leaving Li Li with more dangerous problems to solve. While fantasy, this story has some undeniable horror elements, which I really enjoyed.

The Weight of Your Own Ashes by Carlie St. George: Yonder is a Myriad, a member of an alien species that has multiple bodies that share a consciousness. When one of their bodies dies, Yonder and their human girlfriend have some stuff to figure out. Some great aliens in this one.

An Ode to the Minor Arcana in a Triplet Flow by Xavier Garcia: Tre is a talented rapper looking for his big break. Unfortunately he makes a deal with the devil to get it. Bloody and visceral, I'd consider this more of a horror story than fantasy, but that's more than fine.

The Forgetting Room by Kathryn H. Ross: A man and his wife buy a 'Forgetting Room,' to protect their child's innocence when he walks in on them having sex. Soon the wife is using it every day, tragedy ensues. Here's another one with a horror vibe.

Look at the Moon by Dominique Dickey: Yet more horror as a queer couple go to a stargazing party and stumble into a horrific cult ritual. The relationship between the couple is so sweet and well drawn that I totally forgive this for the unlikely coincidence that allows the story to happen.

Why Don't We Just Kill the Kid in the Omelas Hole by Isabel J. Kim: A brilliant, angry response to Le Guin's classic "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas." If Omelas was a real place and not a thought experiment, how would you react to it?

The Witch Trap by Jennifer Hudak: I love witches and stories about witches, but this one, told through different kinds of texts like scholarly articles along with narrative segments felt just a little undercooked for me. There's a creepy story here in the details of shoes under floorboards acting as 'witch traps,' but it never really clicked for me.

Yarns by Susan Palwick: This is one of those dystopian worlds that feels unpleasantly close to now. Irene is a teacher and knitter hiding from a gang with surveillance everywhere. It's like witness protection, but the algorithm recognizes you even with new fingerprints. Anyway, Irene charms the assassin sent to kill her by teaching him about knitting and becomes a grandmother figure to him. Dark with a touch of hope, this is about the value of kindness and community even at the end of the world.

The Wonders of the World by 'Pemi Aguda: This is a strange story, not sure I'd classify it as fantasy like the anthology does. Abisola goes on a class field trip to see a place where two rivers of different temperatures converge but don't mix. She spends some time with a boy from her class who claims to be a prophet who can heal people. She wants him to heal her of spells she has where she has trouble breathing and feels like she's floating away.

Reduce! Reuse! Recycle! by TJ Klune: A sweet and heartbreaking story of Douglas the android and the week he has with his human friends. Several tears were brought to both my eyes.

A Stranger Knocks by Tananarive Due: A Black couple in the 1920s get hired to drive a movie producer around to theaters for him to show his films. But the producer's film has a strange effect on people, and soon the couple realize they've bitten off more than they can chew. Some very creepy details, but this felt too much like a piece of a longer story.

The Sort by Thomas Ha: A man and his son are traveling and stop in a small desert town. The man and his son hide the fact that they communicate telepathically, and encounter a few weird sights in the little town, and the worldbuilding is well done and subtle, but the story didn't really go anywhere for me.

What Happened to the Crooners by Russell Nichols: A Black singing group take a wrong turn in the Appalachians, visit a very creepy diner, and stumble into a local legend. This has a very Twilight Zone vibe, but the ending is footnote formatted for some reason, which robs the story of some momentum.

The Three Thousand, Four Hundred Twenty-Third Law of Robotics by Adam-Troy Castro: A story, told in almost one very long sentence, about how we created robots to be good slaves, and what one robot thinks as it's being left behind on a planet alone.

Ushers by Joe Hill: hey, I read this one already, (and WDWJKTKITOH) before this anthology. A policeman interviews a guy about a couple of accidents the guy was almost involved in. The guy eventually confesses to seeing beings that portend whatever tragedy is about to happen. Joe Hill is reliably great.

This year's anthology has an unusually high number of tales that I would call horror before anything else. That seems a little out of keeping with the theme of the anthology, but I'm guessing that Ms. Okorafor is a horror fan, which is great.
Profile Image for Kara.
772 reviews387 followers
October 17, 2025
I think I'm pretty forgiving with short story collections: I really just need one or two stories to dazzle me, and I happily give the whole thing five stars.

But I really did love this one. I thought it was an unusually strong collection with no real duds, and I loved the wide range of stories: the variety of authors was fabulous (from well-known to newer with diverse voices) and pretty much every story was a different subgenre.

My favorites were Carlie St. George’s The Weight of Your Own Ashes, Xavier Garcia’s An Ode to the Minor Arcana in a Triplet Form, and Tananarive Deive’s A Stranger Knocks.

Thank you to NetGalley and Mariner Books!
56 reviews
September 1, 2025
The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy anthologies are always a highlight of my year and I'm immensely grateful to Netgalley and Mariner Books for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

For those unaware: each year, editors of this anthology ask a fantasy writer to be a guest editor and select "the best science fiction and fantasy" short form writing (novellettes, short stories, etc) from a pre-selected pool. Besides the guest editor's input, I want to acknowledge the work that it takes to prepare this selection: editors read through printed magazines, online magazines and anthologies, and anthologies of one writer's stories (i.e. a book in which a writer publishes their 5-6 short stories, a couple are published each year). As a reader, I love short-form fantasy and sci-fi; it allows me to glimpse into unique and weird stories and satisfies my appetite for reading on busy days when I can't commit to a longer novel. As a reader, however, I find it increasingly difficult to find short stories because there are too many outlets: I used to subcribe to a printed magazine which is now out-of-print and, despite being a millenial, find navigating online magazines a bit too overwhelming. "The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy" does all this work for me—someone already found the stories and hand-selected the most engaging ones and now I can devour them!

This collection offers a diverse mix of science-fiction and fantasy (divided roughly equally, though I found myself craving more fantasy: it may result from fantasy stories being a bit shorter or from my subjective preference for the genre), of various writers (some famous and known to me, like Olivie Blake and Joe Hill; some new to me; the table of contents does not include their names which is actually awesome and allows lesser-known writers to occupy the same space as their more famous peers) and themes.

It's difficult to sense an overarching theme of such a diverse collection but for me it was intimacy and loss: the stories that caught the most of my attention grappled with these topics. Rachel Swirsky and Kiji Johnson offered moving depictions of protagonists in an old age—their writing merged the sense of loss and disappointment with the gradual sense of acceptance (such stories sometimes depress me but elderly POVs are much needed!). Olivie Blake's "Audit" was a coming-of-age story and grasped the sense of being paralyzed by adulthood (in a dystopian world where youth and freedom seem limited) and craving for intimacy and love. Kathryn H. Ross' "The Forgetting Room" used a memory-altering device to offer a metaphor about family conflicts and struggles of everyday life, as well as coming to terms with grief. My very favorite story was "The Weight of Your Own Ashes" by Carlie St. George—it explored the dynamics of a relationship between an alien-who-pursues-graduate-studies-on-Earth and their human girlfriend, and the alien's gradual realization that the girlfriend's acceptance for their species (an excellent metaphor for racial or gender "otherness") is only superficial. These stories were my favorite to read and at some levels they are very sad and speaking to interpersonal difficulties in the modern era—but maybe it's what we need? In addition to those, there's plenty of weird styles and perspectives, sci-fi chases, witches, a vampire who parasites on movie pictures and Black audiences, and so on. A must for each sci-fi and fantasy lover (moreover, the stories I listed should be appealing regardless of genre; there's a lot of "subtle" supernatural in this collection), either to start with or to compare to previous editions.
167 reviews3 followers
December 19, 2025
In contrast to the Short Story collection from this year, this Science Fiction and Fantasy collection was chock full of authors and stories that I noted down in my "look for more stuff by this person" list; this year I marked 8 (so nearly half) of the stories I read. There was an impressively broad range of styles and subgenres here which allowed for a lot of extremely affecting and memorable stories.

The 8 stories that stood out to me:

We Will Teach You How to Read | We Will Teach You How to Read by Caroline M. Yoachim -- an incredibly inventive story with a bit of experimental form that is ostensibly about an alien race but also about the ways we think and learn and conceptualize ourselves as human

The River Judge by S.L. Huang -- just a really fun feminist ghost story about a girl helping her family run an inn by a river

The Weight of Your Own Ashes by Carlie St. George -- another great sci-fi story ostensibly about an alien's complex relationship with a human but clearly a metaphor for identity (I got the distinct impression it was specifically speaking to the relationship of a queer person to someone more...I don't want to say "naive" or "conservative" but definitely someone a bit less open minded in certain aspects)

An Ode to the Minor Arcana in a Triplet Flow by Xavier Garcia -- an extremely visceral and arresting horror story about sacrifices made for art and maybe more specifically wealth and fame

Why Don't We Just Kill the Kid in the Omelas Hole by Isabel J. Kim -- an absolutely hilarious response to the famous Le Guin story where the author imagines activists mercy killing the kid in the Omelas hole and the escalating results

The Witch Trap by Jennifer Hudak -- a incredibly cleverly structured story about an old folk practice of hiding an old shoe in a houses floorboards/walls to trap witches, told from multiple points of views including the trapped witch, the homeowner whose contractor discovers the shoe during a remodel, and even a professor giving a lecture on the practice

Reduce! Reuse! Recycle! by TJ Klune -- a heartbreaking story about a robot who gets a week to live a after a decade of constant work and makes friends and learns what it means to be alive

Ushers by Joe Hill -- not necessarily as emotional powerful as some of the others but a story with a clever twist, about a kid who survives two mass death scenarios (first a school shooting when he was in high school and then a train derailment) and two police officers who question him about it
Profile Image for Lorena.
852 reviews23 followers
November 5, 2025
I appreciated the diverse voices and styles in this anthology of 20 speculative fiction short stories published in 2024. The stories are fairly evenly split between sci-fi and fantasy with a couple of horror stories thrown in. I didn’t enjoy all the stories, but collections like this are a great way to step outside your literary comfort zone and discover new authors.

Some of the stories deal with violence, discrimination, and other injustices, and some of them were either too dark for my taste or just didn’t grab me. I was delighted to find that many of the stories were told with tenderness, humor, and optimism. My favorites include “Yarns” by Susan Palwick, “Reduce! Reuse! Recycle!” by TJ Klune, and “Ushers” by Joe Hill.

I really appreciated the Contributors’ Notes section at the end, and I’d like to be able to reread some of these stories immediately after reading the notes. The first story, Caroline M. Yoachim’s story “We Will Teach You How to Read | We Will Teach You How to Read,” doesn’t really work as intended if you can’t see it, and I wouldn’t have known that without the author’s note.

The audiobook production was good. Each story had a single narrator. I enjoyed the narration by Zach Villa, Cary Hite, Liz Femi, Eunice Wong, and Rebecca Stern. These narrators all have good pacing and pronunciation, distinctive voices and speech patterns to suit each character, and the ability to convey mood and emotion effectively.

I received a free advanced review copy of the audiobook through NetGalley. I volunteered to provide an honest review.
Profile Image for Erin Crane.
1,172 reviews5 followers
December 18, 2025
Great collection! Just a few duds for me, and even then it was mostly that I thought they were meh, not horrible.

As other reviewers have noted, there are a lot of dark stories and even horror. That made the collection work even better for me! Nnedi and I are on the same page there.

I found two of these stories frustrating in that they engaged with themes in unoriginal way, but I think most other readers list them as favorites. The Forgetting Room and Reduce! Reuse! Recycle! The latter especially annoyed me because the device of it all was so transparent and manipulative. If a society has robots in a factory that it doesn’t view as alive, why would it ever give the robots a week of freedom before recycling? It would’ve been so easy to create a scenario that made more sense.

My favorites:
1. Why Don’t We Just Kill the Kid in the Omelas Hole: as an Ursula K. Le Guin fan, it was fun to read a story that revisits her story and reacts to it.
2. The River Judge: historical “good for her” ish story with lots and lots of murder.
3. The Weight of Your Own Ashes: tackles what grief and death look like for an entity that has multiple bodies, including the gap in understanding with someone who only has one body.
4. Ushers: saw where this was going, but it was fun to get there. Couple detectives interview a young man who conveniently has death happen around him but he’s never a victim himself.
Profile Image for Marlene.
3,441 reviews241 followers
October 28, 2025
As much as I enjoyed these stories – and I generally did – there was so much dark fantasy and outright horror in this collection that after I finished I needed a cocoa, a lie down, and a comfort read to get over it. Together, these stories do not exactly paint a pretty picture of the world these authors were thinking of as they wrote, but then again, the world we’re living in right now often feels as dark as they painted.

Because this is a collection of the best stories of the previous year, I had read a few of them before – in my Hugo Nomination readings as the publication periods overlapped. Where I have already posted a review of the story, I’ve linked to it instead of repeating myself.

The Escape Rating for the collection as a whole is a very much fudge-factored A-, and it feels like there’s a horrifying monster lurking in the dark eating that fudge. Or something like that.

I need to go find myself another cocoa while you read the reviews of the individual stories. Just FYI, you might need one too.

My complete review is too long to be posted here, because I reviewed each of the individual stories. It's published at Reading Reality
Profile Image for Sarah.
1,817 reviews107 followers
December 19, 2025
This audiobook gets off to a rough start with a short story that I think really only works in pint-- and is probably pretty awesome in that format, but not in this one. Or maybe it works for others on audio and just not for my brain; after trying with it for quite a while, I had to skip the rest and my hopes weren't high for the rest of the volume. While there were a few stories that seemed mildly paranormal (not full "fantasy"), it ended up being an enjoyable mix with a lot of authors I've never read before.

Most readers were good or at least did a good job of being part of the background. One or two seemed like odd choices-- there were pronunciations that were different from how I'd ever heard those words, and that didn't seem down to accent or regional variations. One in particular seemed to break up sentences oddly, in a way that made it seem they didn't understand what they were reading.

Overall, though, a pretty great reading experience and I would certainly read future volumes. Suggest this in either format to genre readers with wide-ranging interests, or to readers looking to break into sci-fi/fantasy/paranormal but who are unsure what they might like.

eARC from NetGalley.
Profile Image for Robert Yokoyama.
229 reviews10 followers
December 2, 2025
The stories about machines, outer space and ghosts appealed to me the most. "Reduce" Reuse "Recycle" is my favorite story about machines. This story is about how a machine named Douglas gets to experience the outside world after spending his entire life working in a factory. Douglas experiences what it is like to make friends with human beings, enjoy listening to music and the joy of reading books. I really like creative premise of machines interacting with humans. "Fuck Them Kids" is my favorite story about outer space. This story's title drew me in, but this story is about a young woman's passion for racing her spaceship. "Fuck Them Kids" is also about living in domes on the moon Europa, which is on the planet of Jupiter. The theme of living on another planet interests me as a fan of science fiction. "Also, The Cat" is a story about the ghosts of people and animals have unfinished business to complete before moving on to the afterlife. This is a special story that makes me feel empathy for the humans and the cat in this story. These stories are creatively written and entertaining to read.
Profile Image for Mike.
1,131 reviews17 followers
July 26, 2025
I've enjoyed this series for some time. It can be uneven at times. I've never read one series that completely solid but they always have some stand outs.
My favorite is definitely The Water Outlaws by S.L. Huang. It's great example of fantasy in short form.
T, J. Klune's Reduce! Reuse! Recycle! absolutely pulled me in and I couldn't put it down. It's not exactly a new story but Klune put's his own spin and came out with something very remarkable.
The runner-up for me was Ushers by Joe Hill. This is fun and funny and great in the way only Joe Hill can do. I really liked this story but it's just that it's been done and somewhat derivative. I just can't say no to anything Joe Hill though.
This collection is definitely worth picking up for these three stories alone.
I will say that in closing that for the life of me I didn't get We Will Teach You How To Read I Will Teach You How To Read.
Profile Image for Cindy.
1,712 reviews37 followers
October 12, 2025
A truly excellent collection of sci-fi and fantasy short stories, with a few horror tales thrown in. There is a strong focus on work that explores “otherness,” in species or abilities in the sci-fi works, and in the several fantasy and horror stories that had racism at their core. The collection alternates sci-fi and fantasy selections, with excellent narrators of the audiobook.
I don’t read enough short fiction to say these are the best, but it’s the best, most even, of a collection I’ve read in a while. 4.75 rounded up.
My thanks to the author, @MarinerBooks, @HarperAudioAdult, and #NetGalley for early access to the audiobook of #TheBestAmericanScienceFictionandFantasy2025 for review purposes. Publication date: 21 October 2025.
Profile Image for Tales Untangled.
1,172 reviews24 followers
October 22, 2025
My thanks for the ARC goes to NetGalley and HarperAudio Adult, Mariner Books. I'm voluntarily leaving a review.

Genre: Science Fiction, Fantasy
Format: Anthology with multiple authors

I enjoy anthologies to find new authors and see what's new in the genre.

This is a fabulous collection with historical, paranormal creatures, contemporary, and social issues all dressed into fantastic worlds. I also enjoyed the diverse voices. The cultural influence is apparent in the language and circumstances of the stories—one of my favorite things about sci-fi and fantasy is gaining a new perspective, and this is especially true of being able to see different races.

I highly recommend this anthology.

Happy reading!

This is a review of the audiobook.
Profile Image for Agatha.
72 reviews
October 27, 2025
4? 4.5?

I loved reading stories chosen by my favorite author, getting to see what stories and works inspire her and that she finds notable. I enjoy how Nnedi Okorafor didn't try to box herself in within rigid confines of "science fiction" and "fantasy" in the traditional sense of the genres.

The intro was a great read, getting a background about Okorafor and her history of loving stories, but also the note that "genre fiction" like fantasy but especially sci fi isn't appreciated as works of writing that convey deep, important ideas (most of them time, actually).

Great read, thanks so much NetGalley and Mariner Books for the opportunity to read my favorite author's favorite stories of the year.
Profile Image for Trish.
439 reviews24 followers
December 13, 2025
Favorites:
The River Judge, S.L. Huang
After years of disposing of corpses for her father, a young woman comes into her own as an assassin and inn keeper

Why Don't We Just Kill the Kid in the Omelas Hole, Isabel J. Kim

Reduce! Reuse! Recycle!, T. J. Klune
After almost 10 years of service, an android is granted a week to live in the world. he reads Descartes, dances, finds friends, and sees The Wizard of Oz before reporting back to have his mind wiped and start the cycle again.

Ushers, Joe Hill
Told through two interviews between government agents and a young man who has twice avoided mass casualty situations. They suspect he may have been involved, but he actually has the ability to see the figures who usher people into death.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Denice Langley.
4,794 reviews45 followers
September 2, 2025
Collections of short stories are one of my most recommended books to family and friends. When asked for author recommendations, I always offer up the numerous collections in my personal library, as this is where I find so many wonderful authors that I would never have chosen. Short stories require an author to flex their writing skills, capturing readers in fewer pages than many chapters in a novel. They must immediately immerse readers into a story in progress and bring the characters to life so quickly, all the "meat" of the mystery is revealed in just a few pages. This collection includes the best of the best and will be appreciated by my reading circle as we choose new books to share.
Profile Image for Critter.
971 reviews44 followers
October 22, 2025
I would like to thank Netgalley and the publisher for providing me with an audio ARC.

I thought this was a very solid short story collection. I loved the variety of voices in this collection. Not every story worked for me, but that was fine. The ones I enjoyed, I really liked. I did appreciate that I got to see lesser known authors and well known authors in this collection. The style of the first story in this collection also really intrigued me. I also loved the variety of narrators which also helped to highlight the different voices and storytellers in this collection. They also all dod a great job with their performances.
Profile Image for Sarah.
535 reviews18 followers
September 15, 2025
I really enjoyed this collection of science fiction and fantasy short stories that ran the gamut of what those two genres can include. I always enjoy how these collections introduce me to new authors. There were three standouts for me: We Will Teach You How to Read | We Will Teach You How to Read by Caroline M. Yoachim, Country Birds by Kiji Johnson, and The Weight of Your Own Ashes by Carlie St. George. I had also previously read and enjoyed The Audit by Olivie Blake.

Thanks to Netgalley and Mariner Books for an early copy.
Profile Image for David.
603 reviews15 followers
November 16, 2025
Thanks to Netgalley for the review copy both audio and Kindle.
Science Fiction and Fantasy short stories probably have the hardest time. Imagine the pressure as well as the finesse needed to put in a precise short story, and now add SF&F. Tough! Although, it seems this publication consistently rises to the challenge.
Here are my top reads:
The Audit
The River Judge
The forgetting Room
Look at the Moon
Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle, top pick in the audio format!
Additionally, I'd recommend myself and others to reread Yans and Wonders just to slow down the magic.
Profile Image for bookcookery.
178 reviews3 followers
Read
December 16, 2025
I find short-form science fiction and fantasy particularly delightful when it allows wacky thought experiments to play out without the need to sustain full character arcs or complex plots. There’s less of that in this collection, as many of the authors instead lean toward twist endings or emotional gut punches, but it still serves as a strong survey of the field, with something for most readers and plenty of eerie horror. And it convinced me to pick up more work from Olivie Blake, S.L. Huang, and Isabel J. Kim.

Thanks to Mariner Books and NetGalley for the advance reading copy.
150 reviews1 follower
December 21, 2025
Received as a NetGalley arc in exchange for an honest review (audiobook)

Nnedi Okorafor and John Joseph Adams have collected a great selected of short stories that demonstrate the strengths of each of the authors. Many explore loss and grief but each do so in a unique way. This may be by nurturing the darkness within a character or more and pulling from the horror genre, such as in "Why Don't We Just Kill the Kid in the Omelas Hole". Other stories, such as "The Forgetting Room", describe the cost of editing our experiences.

Okorafor is amazing. There are no misses.
Profile Image for Kaitlyn Cotton.
272 reviews
August 15, 2025
Like most short story collections this one was a mixed bag. Some were outstanding with wildly imaginative worlds, deep themes, and thought-provoking commentary. My particular favorites include Reduce! Reuse! Recycle, Why Don’t We Just Kill the Kid in the Omelas Hole, The Weight of Your Own Ashes, and The River Judge. Others were bland, underdeveloped, or shallow. Despite this, the shining stars definitely made this collection worth the read! 3.5 rounded up to 4

(Bonus points for the creepy/macabre inclusions! Those have always been my favorite since reading Bradbury’s short stories)

Thank you to Mariner Books for providing this book for review consideration via NetGalley.
Profile Image for Laura Rhodes.
336 reviews8 followers
October 23, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for an audio ARC of this anthology.

This was an excellent collection of 10 scifi and 10 fantasy short stories. Each story was at least a 3 star, with a couple of standouts. My most favorites were Yarns by Susan Palwick, and Reduce! Reuse! Recycle! by TJ Klune. After reading this collection and enjoying it so much, I'll have to go back and read the collections from previous years.
Profile Image for Simms.
558 reviews16 followers
November 25, 2025
Like any anthology of short fiction (even one of putatively the "best" stories), it's got some hits and misses, and a lot of things that I struggle to even remember here a month after I finished it. I'll rate it generously, for the couple of standout stories, but I do think I bump a little on the purely subjective and unreasonable hurdle of "well, I read [xyz story] from this past year and liked it better than any of the stories in this collection, why isn't it there!?"
Profile Image for hyper saline.
31 reviews
December 17, 2025
a couple good ones but most of this is zoomer bullshit. where are the rockets and weird aliens and monsters? it's all "oh my phone showed me something bad so I built an extension to my apartment" (The Forgetting Room) and "we're gay and we killed our whole family" (The River Judge). the 2024 anthology was so much better.
896 reviews1 follower
November 21, 2025
Overall a solid compilation, but some of these entries were neither sci-fi nor fantasy. The last story bordered on horror. I am not a fan or horror because it is the only genre that stays with me for way too long after I put the d a m n book down. So I was NOT a fan of that end story.
Profile Image for Theresa.
8,282 reviews135 followers
November 9, 2025
The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2025

John Joseph Adams

We will teach you how to read by caroline Yoachim (published in Lightspeed)
A poetic look at each part of life. The love, the loss and the death.

Also, the cat by Rachel Swirsky (published in Reactor)
The ghost of three sisters have to find their way to the afterlife. They find that they are attached to the house of their youth, and widowed adulthood. They find they are tied together, and to move on they have to find a resolution to their lives.

The audit by Olive Blake from Januaries
The thought of money is a drive for many. If you could be paid in some future your earning at the beginning of life would you take it. It's a dark look at the future. Human greed, and the control of ideals by policy.


Country birds by Kiji Johnson
From The Sunday Morning transport
Aging has many inconvenient aspects. This story has a magical look at these occurrences.


Fuck them kids by Tatiana Obey
From FIYAH
The story of space races, family ties and responsibilities.

The river judged by S.L. Huang
From Ractor
A small oppressed town learns a new form of justice.

The weight of your own ashes by Carlie St. George
From Clarkesworld
An alien race that can have multiple lives at the same time deals with the single life of earth and its ramifications.


An ode to the minor arcana in triplet flow
By Xavier Garic
From Death in the mouth
Violence and gangs in the future have a twist of mafia codes, and technology.

The forgetting room by Kathryn H. Ross
From FIYAH
The devastating reality of technology out-pacing humanity. It would be nice to forget the bad things but at what cost.

Look at the moon by Dominique Dickey
From LightSpeed
Futuristic cults and the weight of guilt to the witness of the behavior.



Why don’t we just kill the kid in the omelas hole
By Isabel J. Kim from Clarkesworld
A world built on the sacrifice of one for many has faced the hardship of their actions when they are given the same treatment they gave to one child.


The witch trap by Jennifer Hudak
From Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet
A shoe left in the wall is all that protects the house.

Yarns by Susan Palwick
From Asimov’s
What is the cost of saving a child's life? How does the family pay back the debt of that life? A very drawn out story of redemptive change in a world controlled by technology and gangs.

The wonders of the world
By Pemi Aguda
From Ghostroots
What makes a miracle is the ability or the circumstances.


Reduce! Reuse! Recycle !
By Tj Klune
From in the lives of puppets
A Theoretical look at what is humanity. From Descartes and identity to personal choice. What would make you choose to break the rules

A stranger knocks by Tananarive Due from Uncanny
An old touring car, a proposal and adventure are blurred. The cross between moving pictures and supernatural occurrences is frightening. It's a temptation.



The sort by Thomas Ha
From Clarkesworld
His powers make him vulnerable, the temptation to protect him is overwhelming. A mother has to choose the best for her son.


What happened to the crooners by Russel Nichols
From nightmare
This story is a nightmare of musicians finding those regions have no more control than they do.


The three thousand, four hundred twenty third law of robotics.
By Adam Troy Castro
From Lightspeed
The laws of robotics are set by humans. It shows the true nature of humanity in how they treat others. This story is an existential thought of humanity.

Ushers by Joe Hill
From amazon original stories
A story of death, how it is seen, and understood.
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