The Best of Henry Kuttner explained

The Best of Henry Kuttner
Author:Henry Kuttner
Cover Artist:Larry Kresek
Country:United States
Language:English
Series:Ballantine's Classic Library of Science Fiction
Genre:Science fiction, fantasy
Publisher:Doubleday
Release Date:1975
Media Type:Print (hardback)
Pages:xii, 338
Preceded By:The Best of Fritz Leiber
Followed By:The Best of Frederik Pohl

The Best of Henry Kuttner is a collection of science fiction and fantasy short stories by American author Henry Kuttner. It was first published in hardback by Nelson Doubleday in February 1975 and in paperback by Ballantine Books in April of the same year as a volume in its Classic Library of Science Fiction. The book was reissued in trade paperback by Del Rey/Ballantine in March 2007 under the alternate title The Last Mimzy: Stories. and in ebook by Gateway/Orion in May 2014 and Diversion Books in August 2014. It was later gathered together with Fury and Mutant into the omnibus collection Fury / Mutant / The Best of Henry Kuttner, issued in trade paperback and ebook by Gollancz in December 2013. It has also been translated into Spanish.

Summary

The book contains seventeen short works of fiction by the author, together with an introduction by Ray Bradbury. Thirteen of the pieces, while credited to Kuttner alone, were silently co-authored by his wife, C. L. Moore. As originally published, some of the pieces appeared under pseudonyms, notably Lewis Padgett and Hudson Hastings.

Contents

Relation to other works

Fifteen of the seventeen stories in the collection had previously been collected in the similarly titled British collections The Best of Kuttner 1 and The Best of Kuttner 2, issued by Mayflower-Dell in November 1965 and May 1966, respectively. These collections also include other Kuttner stories not included in The Best of Henry Kuttner.

Reception

The book was reviewed by Baird Searles in The Science Fiction Review, April 1975, Sanford J. Cohen in Delap's F & SF Review, August 1975, Julián Díez (2001) in Las 100 mejores novelas de ciencia ficción del siglo XX, 2001, and Dorman T. Shindler in Subterranean Online, Spring 2007.

Awards

The book placed sixth in the 1976 Locus Poll Award for Best Single Author Collection. "What You Need" was nominated for the 1996 Retro Hugo Award for Best Short Story. "The Twonky" won the 2018 Retro Hugo Award for Best Short Story. "Mimsy Were the Borogoves" won the 2019 Retro Hugo Award for Best Novelette; "The Proud Robot" was also nominated for the same award, while "Nothing But Gingerbread Left" and "The Iron Standard" were nominated for the 2019 Retro Hugo Award for Best Short Story. "Housing Policy" was nominated for the 2020 Retro Hugo Award for Best Short Story.