Subterranean Press has just announced three new titles which sound interesting.
First up, in March 2008, they’ll be publishing Dark Integers and Other Stories, an 80,000-word collection of previously uncollected stories by Greg Egan. The book will include “Dark Integers,” “Glory,” “Luminous,” “Oceanic,” and “Riding the Crocodile.” It will be limited to 1500 copies.
As a companion to their nearly sold-out Jack Vance Treasury, they’ll be publishing The Jack Vance Reader in July 2008. The book will “bring together three of the master’s very best planetary adventures: the internationally acclaimed Emphyrio; the classic interplanetary whodunnit, The Domains of Koryphon; and the provocative and unforgettable The Languages of Pao.” As is their style, Subterranean will be publishing a trade edition at $38, a limited edition (250 numbered, signed, slipcased copies) at $125, and a lettered edition (26 signed, traycased copies) at $300. Jacket art will be by Tom Kidd, and they’re warning collectors that there will be 100 fewer copies of the limited edition than there were of the Treasury.
And sometime in 2008, they’ll publish The Last Science Fiction Writer, a “catchall of uncollected tales from throughout his career,” by Allen Steele. This edition will be limited to 1500 signed copies at $25 each. Steele says of the book: “While The Last Science Fiction Writer consists of stories I wrote during a relatively short period of time, in some ways it also represents a cross-section of my career thus far. ‘Moreau2’ and ‘High Roller’ are later entries in the Near-Space series not included in Sex and Violence in Zero-G; ‘The War of Dogs and Boids’ is a stand-alone episode of the Coyote cycle. “Take Me Back to Old Tennessee” and “Hail to the Chief” are related to one another; “An Incident of the Luncheon of the Boating Party” shares the same background as an earlier story, “…Where Angels Fear to Tread” (along with its novel-length expansion, Chronospace). “World Without End, Amen” is the latest in a loosely-linked series that includes “Agape Among the Robots” and “Jake and the Enemy” (both in my previous collection, American Beauty) while continuing the same thematic concerns of my novel The Jericho Iteration. Other stories stand on their own. “Escape from Earth” was originally intended to be a young-adult novel until Jack Dann and Gardner Dozois invited me to contribute a novella to an anthology of YA science fiction. “The Teb Hunter” is straight-out satire, a comment on hunters and hunting; “The Last Science Fiction Writer” is much the same, although this time the target is science fiction itself, in particular some of its beloved and well-worn tropes.”