SciFi/Fantasy Anthology Review: Lost Worlds & Mythological Kingdoms (ed. by John Joseph Adams), featuring stories by Kate Elliott, Darcie Little Badger, Dexter Palmer, Seanan McGuire, Becky Chambers and more
— Josh (garik16) (@garik16) March 1, 2022
Short Review: 8 out of 10
1/3
Short Review (cont): An anthology featuring 17 short stories dealing with discoveries of lost worlds, mythological worlds, past worlds, etc., sometimes dealing with colonization, sometimes imagination, sometimes horror, & more. A very solid if rarely exceptional collection.
— Josh (garik16) (@garik16) March 1, 2022
2/3
Full Disclosure: This book was read as an e-ARC (Advance Reader Copy) obtained from the publisher in advance of the book's release on March 8, 2022 in exchange for a potential review. I give my word that this did not affect my review in any way - if I felt conflicted in any way, I would simply have declined to review the book.
Lost Worlds & Mythological Kingdoms is the latest themed anthology edited by prominent anthologist, John Joseph Adams. As is typical for an Adams anthology, this collection is filled with stories from pretty well renowned members of the SciFi/Fantasy community, such as Becky Chambers, Kate Elliott, Darcie Little Badger, Seanan McGuire, and more.
These writers combine to write stories that all follow a single theme in a ton of different ways: each story deals in some way with discovery of a lost world, a mythological world, or some place or part connected to the distant past. It's a theme that in a different time would've resulted in a LOT of stories from the perspective of a colonizer and be problematic as a result. But this anthology's authors are aware of that, either taking the theme in an alternate direction altogether - portal fantasies, cute stories about exploration and imagination, horror stories - or take direct aim at those stories and provide and interrogate/critique them entirely.
The result is a whole bunch of very solid stories, although I don't think any wound up being an absolute standout that demands you read it right away. But still, if you pick this anthology up, you won't be disappointed.