My Favorite Fantasists in the Short Story Form

(Cover art to the amazing Tin House: Fantastic Women volume, guest-edited by Rick Moody)In thinking about reading for Best American Fantasy, two things really stood out for me: (1) the Tin House: Fantastic Women volume was the most spectacular single issue I read, holding up and in fact becoming more luminous and deep with each re-read and (2) most of the short fiction I've read recently that I've been most passionate about has come from female writers.So I thought I'd post a list of the newish or under-appreciated short fiction writers I'm most excited about these days, who just happen to be women (with a few notes). These are writers who exclusively or sometimes write fantasy in all of its various and diverse forms. For me, this is where the true energy in non-realistic short fiction is coming from--and hopefully for many of them, soon, in novel form, too.I've tried not to include obvious choices like Kelly Link, Kathe Koja, Karen Joy Fowler, M. Rickert, Theodora Goss, Ekaterina Sedia, Rikki Ducornet, Catherynne M. Valente, Margo Lanagan, Elizabeth Hand, Caitlin R. Kiernan, Elizabeth Bear, or Kage Baker, all of whom are familiar favorites to most readers. My list does not include writers known primarily for their novels. I'm also sure there are a few I'm leaving out, so please forgive me. Regardless, I highly recommend you check out all of these writers and buy the Tin House volume. It's great all the way through.JeffKelly Barnhill - romantic use of language in the best sense without being melodramatic, with a sharp and deep imagination behind it all.Aimee Bender - sometimes formally experimental, always mischievous and curiousKate Bernheimer - renovator of fairy tales, not afraid to get into uncomfortable placesJudy Budnitz - more removed at times, which allows her the distance to create an interesting space between situation and character; unique worldviewL. Timmel Duchamp - openly and bravely political, not afraid to play with form and structure, and should already be more widely knownJulia Elliott - skirts the edge of fantasy often, creating characters wherein the world is seen as fantastical through their eyes; a master of extended fantastical metaphorKelly Eskridge - dreamlike at times, sharp as nails at others, with a nice variety of approachesKaren Heuler - naturally surreal and with a sly sense of humor, an extremely underrated writerShelley Jackson - brilliant stylist who experiments with structure and approach and has the skill set and imagination to do practically anything she wantsStacey Levine - excellent pacing and unusual but successful decisions at the sentence-level support a naturally absurdist/surrealist worldviewBeth Adele Long - more traditional at times, with hints of the surreal, and a lovely prose styleMeghan McCarron - at times an unabashedly emotional style without being melodramatic, seemingly interested in the interplay of fantasy and the real worldMiranda F. Mellis - the real world is already surreal to her and thus even with a less lush style her work is rich with the fantasticalLydia Millet - cool, calm, and the master of the perfectly turned sentence; able to find the universal and surreal in even the minute details of modern lifeSarah Monette - flirts with the traditional and the surreal depending on her whim, with a strong voice and sharp intelligenceUrsula Pflug - Canada's best surrealist, and criminally underrated, most of her best fiction weds commentary on relationships with a fantastical elementHolly Phillips - a hybrid bridging old and new, she has a traditional bent but brings unexpected psychological insight or images at timesCat Rambo - traditional but modern, she brings a muscular style and unabashed love for fantasy to her workMichelle Richmond - known for her realistic bestselling novels, in the short form she has an approach to fantasy in which she's not afraid to engage the sensual and perverseNisi Shawl - a highly various writer who can flip from a retold fairytale to something approaching cyberpunk with equal successVandana Singh - unusual characters, ideas, and a sensual, unique styleRachel Swirsky - a powerhouse of ideas, imagery, approaches and dynamic writingGina Zucker - her story in Tin House is a disturbing, often horrifying, steely-eyed view of a girl in a kind of near-future or alt-universe sex trade, with absolute attention to specific detail and no turning away from the subject matter; I have not read her other work and cannot find a website to link to, just this online contributor bio: "Gina Zucker's fiction and journalism has appeared in numerous journals and magazines, among them Tin House, Salt Hill, Glamour, GQ, Cosmopolitan, Redbook and Rolling Stone. Her short story, "Big People," was chosen for the forthcoming fiction anthology Fantastic Women (Tin House Books, 2007) and her story "Punishment" is collected in the anthology Before: Short Stories About Pregnancy (Overlook Press 2006). She teaches creative writing at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, NY."

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