Send in your 2015 SF/F novel recommendations

Early next week I'll be updating my monthly tally of 2015 science fiction and fantasy novel recommendations. If you have SF/F novels to recommend send them my way. The only catch is the novels must have been published this year.

My contact information can be found here. Don't forget to let me know if I can publicly thank you for making a rec or if you prefer anonymity.

Limit recommendations to two novels per month per person. And yes, people who already recommended novels can send more recs each month.

In case you missed it, here are last month's recommendations.

Novel of the week: Lightless by C.A. Higgins

I have a love/hate relationship with most hard science fiction. I love scientific accuracy and insight in the stories I read, but I despise how many hard SF authors falsely believe a focus on accuracy and technical details are more important than fleshed-out human characters which whom the reader relates.

There's a reason most people don't read technical manuals for amusement. That's because a story without humanity is not a story. Without realistic characters and drama, all the SF hardness and softness and everything in between matters not a bit.

Thankfully, this is a truth which author C.A. Higgins knows full-well because her debut hard science fiction novel Lightless is the perfect melding of hard science fiction and human drama. Lightless is, in fact, one of those rare hard science fiction novels which even people who don't like hard SF will enjoy.

Lightless is set on the experimental spaceship Ananke, launched by the all-knowing System government to test a new propulsion drive. On board is computer scientist Althea, who, in her love of computers and programming, has learned to ignore the oppressive political system she works for. However, when a pair of fugitives gains access to the Ananke, Althea is pulled out of her computer-focused world and must deal with a series of human and scientific conflicts which could completely destroy everything she knows.

Lightlight has something to satisfy all fans of science fiction, with plenty of action, big ideas, and characters you can relate to. And as a sidenote, Lightlight would make a mind-blowing film if the right director optioned the story. Hollywood, take note.

Lightless is highly recommended.

Novel of the week: Red Girls by Kazuki Sakuraba

Viz Media first appeared on my radar in the late 80s and early 90s with their pioneering work bringing translated Japanese manga to the USA. Trying to strike translated gold twice, in 2009 Viz created its imprint Haikasoru to publish English versions of Japanese science fiction and fantasy novels. 

The results of this work are paying off. Their translation of All You Need Is Kill by Hiroshi Sakurazaka inspired Hollywood to buy the rights to the novel, which eventually become the Tom Cruise film Edge of Tomorrow. (Side note: Haikasoru editor and author Nick Mamatas wrote a synopsis of the book, part of which Hollywood absolutely loved. This resulted in the following bit of Nick's writing becoming the most widely read and quoted words he ever created: "Groundhog Day meets Starship Troopers".)

Now Haikasoru has released Red Girls by Kazuki Sakuraba, a novel which, if there's any justice, will be read by even more people than All You Need Is Kill.

The subjects of these two novels couldn't be more different. Described as a "multigenerational saga of matriarchs, manga, and murder," Red Girls fits more comfortably in the genre of magical realism than hard fantasy or SF. The novel follows the lives of three generations of women in the Akakuchiba family in a steel-producing town in rural Japan. Spanning the times from Japan's defeat in World War 2 to the modern day, Red Girls is — to play off Nick's quote above — Forrest Gump meets One Hundred Years of Solitude.

Except that the novel is also far more than that. Red Girls is gripping, beautifully written, and as insightful as any fiction I've read this year. The characters draw you in and keep you moving through life with them. And this is a novel even non-genre fans will love. My wife, who isn't a fan of SF/F stories, loves Red Girls.

With All You Need Is Kill and other translated novels and anthologies, Haikasoru has proved there's a market in the Western world for Japanese genre fiction. They continue their winning streak with Red Girls by Kazuki Sakuraba. I urge people to read this novel, which will be on my shortlists for next year's Hugo, Nebula, and World Fantasy Awards.

My story "Duller's Peace" is now online

The other day K. Tempest Bradford named my short story "Duller's Peace" among the five best stories so far this year.

Result: A number of people asking to read the story. Which turned bad, because the issue of Asimov's Science Fiction containing the story is no longer available. Which turned good because Asimov's said I could go ahead and post the story online for everyone to read.

Here's "Duller's Peace" to download. Enjoy.

Many thanks to Asimov's editor Sheila Williams for both accepting the story and allowing me to reprint it online. In case you need more convincing to read "Duller's Peace," here's a sample of reviews and feedback.

A "moral indictment of other nations trying to control a people or a country" and "a powerful story that is extremely relevant in the world today, yet is clearly true SF as well. Well done, Mr. Sanford, well done." — Bob Blough, Tangent Online

"Duller's Peace" is "another well-crafted story from Sanford" with a real chilling ending. — Sam Tomaino, SFRevu

Highly recommended "An intense distopian world in which a government achieves control through nanotechnology that reaches into everything, including your thoughts. The concept is creepy, mostly because it’s not far fetched. I can see people balking at the ending, I say it’s perfect."  —  K. Tempest Bradford, io9

To double-space or not to double-space in the age of e-subs

Forgive me oh ye mighty editorial gods because I have sinned. I know the rules of proper manuscript formatting, as set in stone by your prophet William Shunn in the glorious days of snail-mail submissions. And I try to follow the rules. I really do. I've been an editor. I know proper manuscript formatting improves readability and editing.

But despite this knowledge, I sinned in recent years with double-spacing the lines in my manuscripts. It started innocently enough — I'd heard that with electronic submissions being read on computers and e-readers and iPads, double-spacing was no longer necessary. That editors actually preferred single-space. And my friends were single-spacing. So, regrettably, I lapsed into sin. I submitted to editors using single-space.

But my sinning days are over. Because despite double-spacing being born in the days of print submissions, most editors still prefer it over single-spacing. Below are comments from some of the SF/F genre's top short fiction editors confirming this belief. And even those who prefer single-spacing or don't care either way still want authors to actually read and follow their publications' manuscript guidelines!

So don't believe double-spacing is no longer part of proper manuscript formatting in the age of e-subs — it absolutely is. Don't be a submission sinner like me.
 

SF/F editors on double-spacing

The comments below also share insight into how the editors read submissions. This is all extremely inside-baseball, but maybe people will enjoy the discussion even if it doesn't veer into more controversial formatting issues like two spaces after a period.
 

John Joseph Adams, editor of Lightspeed Magazine and many anthologies

"I prefer single-spaced submissions, because I do read submissions exclusively on either my Kindle or my iPhone--and for me, single-spaced just works better for that. Our guidelines currently say that it's fine to just submit using standard manuscript format, with the exception that we actually prefer single-spaced submissions, but it's not a strictly enforced thing--we don't want to make folks jump through a lot of different particular hoops to submit to us, so we just note it as a preference. "

Maurice Broaddus, editor of anthologies such as Dark Faith and Streets of Shadows.

"I prefer double spaced submissions. It's easier on my eyes frankly. Then again, I tend to print stuff out and read hard copies for stuff that makes it past the easy reject stage. I consider it standard format, so it's usually written into the guidelines, but I'm not especially hard-nosed about (other than noting that the writer can't follow directions). It's all a couple button pushes away from me formatting it to the way I want to read it."

Jennifer Brozek, editor of anthologies such as Bless Your Mechanical Heart and Human for a Day.

"As an editor, I tend to prefer double-spaced manuscripts but I can read single. That particular formatting doesn't matter nearly as much to me as other formatting bits. It's so easy to switch between single and double-spaced, that it's a non-issue. Now, if we're talking tabbed indents versus paragraph formatting indents, I'm going to go with paragraph formatting indents 100%. Do you know how annoying it is to remove tabbed indents from a manuscript? Try doing that multiple times for an anthology."

Sean Wallace, editor of Clarkesworld and founder of Prime Books.

Sean says he prefers double spaced. He adds that "In most cases, with Clarkesworld or The Dark I read submissions from my desktop or laptop, because it's often quicker. For The Dark I use gmail's preview feature, which allows me to quickly peek at the contents, and then move it the considering pile or automatic rejection with a form letter. The default reply feature in our gmail account is a rejection, which speeds things up even faster."

Edmund Schubert, editor of InterGalactic Medicine Show.

"Regarding single vs double spaced, I greatly prefer double spaced, to the point of occasionally finding myself getting irritated when one shows up single spaced. I do all my reading either on my computer or as a printout, and double spaced makes for the easiest reading, especially if I like a story and want to start making notes."

Sheila Williams, editor of Asimov's Science Fiction

Sheila says to definitely follow Bill Shunn's advice. "I read most stories on my computer in word or it's equivalent. If I think there's a chance I might take the story, I edit as I go along. Manuscripts MUST be double spaced. I'm not going to take the time to convert the stories to double spacing at this point. It's true that I read some stories on the Kindle, but those are the ones that automatically reformat to single space, so there's no contradiction there. Also, any story I buy needs to be double spaced for copyediting. Much better to arrive already formatted properly than for us to have to redo the formatting. Later, we will use macros to convert to single spacing for formatting into Quark, but writers don't need to worry about that stage.  Tabbed indents are fine at Asimov's. Macros get rig of them automatically when the story is flowed into type."

Ann VanderMeer, editor of anthologies such as The Weird and former editor of Weird Tales.

"It really doesn't matter to me as I can change it if I wish.  And when I do make those kinds of changes before printing out a manuscript, I usually change the spacing to 1 1/2 lines (ha!  between single and double 'cause that's how I roll). It is only an issue when I get a PDF instead and can't edit it.  More important than the spacing is the font.  I need a clear readable font with serifs.  A san serif font will keep me from reading a book, too. (although that is rare, some smaller publishers haven't learned this rule yet)."