Although science fiction imagines diverse, imaginative, and frightening futures, genre anthologies rarely achieve the brilliant range and diversity of voices of <i>The Best of World SF: Volume 1</i>... The anthology brings a fresh, revolutionary perspective in that its selections are intentionally curated to suggest that the horizon is both closer and brighter than Western readers might think. Vital and exciting, <i>The Best of World SF</i> blows the blast panels off the dusty, well-worn tropes of popular science fiction and lets in a dazzling burst of lunar light'
Foreword
This excellent anthology proves editor Tidhar's assertion that science fiction should no longer be thought of as 'white, male, and American' with 26 exemplary stories from 21 countries... Worthwhile both as a survey of international sci-fi and on a story-by-story level, this wonderful anthology should be a hit with any sci-fi fan'
Publishers Weekly
This is one of those books in our seasonal listing that warrants doing well. Some may say Lavie is doing foreign writers a favour. He's not. He's doing English-speaking readers one
Concatenation
Tidhar gives a cheerful, fannish introduction to the stories, drawn from 26 countries on five continents, and encompassing a dizzying range of tones and approaches
The Times
An excellent, lovingly curated collection that is also uniformly well translated
Financial Times
Stories like these are the ones you sometimes want to foist upon readers who claim not to like SF, and <i>The Best of World SF: Volume 1</i> reminds us that such stories can come from anywhere these days, if only we get to see them. I look forward to future volumes
Locus Magazine
The variety and diversity of the material on offer is refreshing, the quality does not waver, and the translations are top-notch
Financial Times
Hopefully the little rocket on the cover will let readers know what they'll find inside this 26-story, 575-page cinder block of a collection. We're talking spaceships and nanobots, creeping horrors and astral wonders, cyberpunk dystopias and cold, empty places where no one can hear you scream. It's true the sci-fi world is always expanding, writes Israeli author/editor Lavie Tidhar in the forward, but this sort of international compendium – which includes the works of mostly non-white, non-famous authors from such far-flung homeworlds as Singapore, Brazil, Croatia, and the Philippines – is still something of a novelty in our timeline. Embrace the unknown
Philadelphia Inquirer
You can't read this and not be changed by it, which always seemed like the point of [science fiction]
Amazing Stories
This handsome volume from Head of Zeus is a major step on a 45-year journey to bring global speculative fiction to Anglophone attention... The print edition of <i>The Best of World SF: Volume 1</i> is truly a thing of beauty, providing gravitas and a wider audience for the authors it collects... There are many striking stories in the collection... This anthology is just the start of a whole new game for speculative fiction authors around the world'
LA Review of Books
Fizzes with great ideas and wonderful writing... Now this book exists, it feels absurd it didn't exist sooner
SFX Magazine