Short SF is the website where I review every Science Fiction Short Story anthology and collection that I read.

Austin Beeman

Clarkesworld 2025 Readers' Award Finalists: Short Stories

Clarkesworld 2025 Readers' Award Finalists: Short Stories

CLARKESWORLD 2025 READERS AWARD FINALISTS:

SHORT STORIES

RATED 86% POSITIVE. STORY SCORE 3.9 OF 5

7 STORIES: 1 GREAT / 4 GOOD / 2 AVERAGE / 0 POOR / 0 DNF

Clarkesworld Magazine is one of the most important science fiction magazines of the 21st Century. Under the editorial leadership of Neil Clarke, the online magazine has won numerous awards. I counted 146 major award nominations and 56 award wins. You can count for yourself here with the comprehensive listing. A combination of great fiction and posting stories free to read online, Clarkesworld is shaping the field.

Each year they post the finalists from their Annual Readers Award. Unlike others, they name the award based on the year in which the stories were published. Last year, I reviewed the 2024 Finalists all as one (Novella, Novelette, Short Story.). This year, I’m dividing it into two posts.

Here are my (non-spoiler) reviews - ranked by order of preference.

You can read them all for yourself at this link.

BEST SHORT STORIES:

  1. “Missing Helen” by Tia Tashiro

    Great. A woman learns that her ex-husband is marrying her clone, built from her DNA that she sold at a young age to fund her escape from a traumatic upbringing. We’ve had a lot of marrying a robot, marrying a clone, sexbot stories in science fiction over the years. This one really thinks about it differently. I love it.

  2. “Wire Mother” by Isabel J. Kim

    Good. In a future where digital people serve as partners, parents, and friends, a teenage girl struggles with a neurological condition that prevents her from feeling empathy toward them. Including the digital mother her father adores.

  3. “Abstraction Is When I Design Giant Death Creatures and Attraction Is When I Do It for You” by Claire Jia-Wen

    Good. Sapphic BDSM love story between a sports hero in a giant mech-suit and the woman who designs the giant monsters that she fights.

  4. “The Stone Played at Tengen” by R.H. Wesley

    Good. The Chinese discover that aliens are trying to communicate with them by playing a game of GO in the heavens.

  5. “In My Country” by Thomas Ha

    Good. In a world that claims have no king, but is always under the surveillance of the First Citizen, a father watches his two children choose different forms of rebellion. Complex symbolic literature vs risky direct action.

  6. “Pollen” by Anna Burdenko, translated by Alex Shvartsman

    Average. A melancholy story about a mother and daughter who are the last surviving members on a planetary expedition. They are surrounded by the ghosts of their family, created by the pollen of a local tree. The carnivorous tree uses pollen to make people see things and be eaten by the tree.

  7. “Numismatic Archetypes in the Year of Five Regents” by Louis Inglis Hall

    Average. Through the history of coins, we learn about the revolts, revolutions, and decline of a fantasy civilization.


Hugo, Nebula, & Asimov’s Reader’s Choice Awards

The Universe Box.  by Michael Swanwick. 2026

The Universe Box. by Michael Swanwick. 2026