Managed another reading category for the Hugos this year! Will review the other categories I’ve read through after tonight’s voting deadline, but figured I’d start with the next fastest to read: the nominees for Best Novelette.
As is my wont (but not Doug’s!) we’ll go from my favorite on down. Tho I must say that I definitely noticed the difference between my enjoyment of this category vs the short stories this year, a conversation that Doug and I have previously indulged in regarding prior nominees. Some years the novelettes feel far superior; this was not one of those years, alas. Still some good reads here, beginning with Naomi Kritzer’s The Four Sisters Overlooking the Sea.
Morgan is a former academic who is justifiably annoyed by her husband Stuart’s old-fashioned attitude towards the distribution of their family responsibilities. Moving to the coast only makes things worse, as she learns of the local legend of the Four Sisters, the four large rocks that stand guard over the town of Finstowe. When her proximity to the water reminds her of whom she used to be, will she be able to fight to reclaim her true self?
The supernatural elements of this story work perfectly as a metaphor to remind people who lose themselves in relationships that it is possible to find yourself once more. It’s fascinating how the legend referenced here has so many variants worldwide, and almost never a bad time to retell it in hopes of finding a reader who desperately needs to apply its lessons to their own lives.








