I'm probably among the very few people on this planet who did NOT buy this anthology just for the Song of Ice and Fire story. Having no high hopes for any of the authors is always a good way to start off an anthology.
For this year, Gardner Dozois decided to come up a sword and sorcery book made up exclusively of novelettes. The similar length of all stories here is also the reason why this was the first time I read all the stories in the order they are printed. Which was retrospectively a good idea, since the strongest come first.
• The Best Man Wins - K.J. Parker: 5*
Wow, stop it! This story hit me like the first taste of fresh vegetables after a winter of only eating out of cans. Young man approaches blacksmith with desire to forge a sword to off his father's killer. Superbly written, and, in spite of the fact that the plot twist was predictable after 10 pages, given the story's length, it was immensely enjoyable. I went ahead and added a K.J. Parker novel to my 'to read' list.
• Her Father's Sword - Robin Hobb: 5*
This is my first incursion into the Realm of the Elderling (having previously read only one other story by Robin Hobb). Damn good again. The main character in her novels appears in a village to warn its denizens about the return of their kinfolk recently kidnapped by some mysterious enemy. One girl proceeds to heed the warning and battles the returning zombie-like peasants.
• The Hidden Girl - Ken Liu: 5*
What's going on? Three 5* novelettes in a row? I must be dreaming. No I'm not. It's Ken Liu. Look, I'm saying it as if it were Stephen King in his heyday. Seriously, Ken Liu can write. Most appropriately for his origins, this story is Wuxia themed, and features a member of a high caste of assassins who can enter a 4th dimension taking mercy at one of her victims. Great pacing, great characters, super setting.
• The Sword of Destiny - Matthew Hughes: 5*
Four in a row now? Matthew Hughes' continuing homage to Jack Vance. Cool! While this is not exactly set in Vance's Dying World milieu, it uses the same syntactic tropes, and features the adventures of a rogue sent to steal a demon sword. I can't get enough of this kind of stories.
• "I Am a Handsome Man," said Apollo Crow - Kate Elliott: 2*
Some 'respite', although I was ready to go on for some more 5*. This story about a rogue sent to capture a beautiful spy's secret notes in some kind of alternate Roman empire didn't really catch me. The "he's a woman, she's a man" plot twists also didn't sit well with me.
• The Triumph of Virtue - Walter Jon Williams: 3*
Straight honest story about yet another rogue tasked with apprehending a would-be court assassin. Too much court intrigue and not enough world building killed this story's potential.
• The Mocking Tower - Daniel Abraham: 4*
This one started like a 5*: in a kingdom plagued by civil war between princes, the youngest son of the recently-dead king arrives in a mysterious tower to claim a powerful sword. The setting is fabulous, but the story became a little more difficult to read past midpoint when it got a little surreal.
• Hrunting - C.J. Cherryh: 1*
A sequel of sorts to the epic of Beowulf. I have not recently familiarized myself with the epic, and, being suddenly thrown in the middle of one hundred Norse names and places did not help at all (Hrunting, Unferth, Halli, Hrothgar, Ragnbjorg, etc). By midpoint I stopped it, because I had failed to understand a single thing.
• A Long, Cold Trail - Garth Nix: 5*
It's my opinion that with this "Sir Hereward and Mister Fitz" series, Garth Nix is attempting to create something Vance-ian, but with a slightly different tone. I had read another of this adventuring couple's stories elsewhere (can't remember where now), and was positively impressed. This one is even better, and the wandering knight and his magically enhanced paper-and-wood puppet must battle a "soul-eating inimical godlet". Their trek was full of adventures, and the climactic battle full of fun.
• When I Was a Highwayman - Ellen Kushner: 2*
It's time for a little romance now. Pair of con artists plan various romantic heists. There's some dueling, some sex, some "don't you love me any more" shouting... Not enough mystery or world-building. Ugh.
• The Smoke of Gold Is Glory - Scott Lynch: 5*
An almost incompetent thief is tricked into joining a party of adventurers who set out for a mysterious mountain where a dragon has hoarded a fortune. Not the most original of plots, but I really liked the characters' interactions, the setting, the writing style, and the resolution.
• The Colgrid Conundrum - Rich Larson: 2*
Two thieves appear at a locksmith's doorstop with a large safe that needs to be opened, but, as payment, they are requested to murder somebody, at which point the story diverged so much from the original starting point, that it was hard to follow.
• The King's Evil - Elizabeth Bear: 2*
A pair of humans and an... android(?) attempt to raid an undead king's castle on an island guarded by giant wasps. The idea seems cool enough, but the story is plagued by the author's dense descriptions. Each step taken by a character is minutely described. There are more adjectives in this story than in all the others combined. Plus, two of the characters are named "The Gage" and "The Dead Man". Live with that if you can.
• Waterfalling - Lavie Tidhar: 1*
Lavie Tidhar is one of the authors Gardner Dozois has been trying very hard to popularize lately, appearing in almost all of his recent anthologies, be they fantasy, or science-fiction, or whatever. He is also an author I had decided to stay away from, not having liked any of the seven or eight stories I previously read. I thought I'd make an exception this time. Shouldn't have. I tried, but just couldn't understand what I was reading. Gave up halfway through.
• The Sword Tyraste - Cecelia Holland: 2*
Clearly the editor saved all of the good stories for the beginning. Already into bonus/filler/left-over territory. Swordsman joins the ranks of king's bodyguard to have revenge on the king himself for killing his brother. The idea is okay-ish, but the world beyond the castle is completely neglected, and the style felt very rushed to me.
• The Sons of the Dragon - George R.R. Martin: 2*
Just like GRRM's previous novelette installment in a Dozois anthology ('The Rogue Prince' in Rogues), this is another 'narrated history' piece. In places it feels like the Old Testament: Jacob begat Rebeca, A begat B, C begat D, then for variation: E who was also known as the Tall Knight skinned F who was also known as the Brave Mountain, or Ser G the insert trait razed the castle of Ser H the insert trait. In other places it feels like Gabriel Garcia Marquez's 100 Years of Solitude: there must be at least three characters bearing the same name in this story only, let alone the entire saga. The only thing that made it feel like a story is that it was began with the birth of one character and ended with his death.
Overall conclusion: The original idea for this book was pretty good. Not that I'm an expert on the fantasy field, but I think a good 'sword & sorcery' anthology was due for a while. And the editor promises a similar "Book of Magic" anthology for next year. Let's see.