
Amazon has posted their Editors' picks for Best Science Fiction & Fantasy Books of 2008:
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Posted by John DeNardo at Thursday November 06, 2008 at 12:15 AM
© 2008 SF Signal
Amazon doesn't have editors. It has buyers. Who do seem to favor bestsellers for their list of best books.
Posted by KatG on Friday November 07, 2008 at 2:47 PM
I dunno...it says they are Editors' pick. Customer picks are listed here.
Posted by John on Friday November 07, 2008 at 2:56 PM
The Amazon Book Blog has many fine editors if you poke around. (www.omnivoracious.com)
Their SF/F editor is none other than Jeff VanderMeer.
Posted by J M McDermott on Saturday November 08, 2008 at 4:01 PM
Those aren't editors. They're consultants. Don't get me wrong, if Amazon wants to promote any titles, that's always to the good. And no one is questioning Jeff VanderMeer's integrity. But Amazon isn't a publisher and isn't a magazine. It's a bookstore. So why isn't it just Amazon's top picks of what they sell? And why are we getting a 2008 list when 2008 isn't finished yet? I'll go check out the item on what VanderMeer has to say about it, but this just seems weird.
Posted by KatG on Sunday November 09, 2008 at 2:14 PM
Actually, my apologies, Mr. McDermott. You're a fine writer and good for you. I'm just being crabby about Amazon.
Posted by KatG on Sunday November 09, 2008 at 2:15 PM
Amazon has a book blog, which does have editors. And has correspondents. Of which I am one. I am the SF/F guy, although I also feature nonfiction, lit. mainstream, and graphic novels.
I would prefer that a 2008 list come out later in the year, but please remember that most everything one would see in advance copy form for 2008 will be sent to a reviewer by early November. It's unlikely I'll see anything new of note between now and the end of the year that I didn't already get an advance copy of. Readers who aren't reviewers often don't realize this fact.
The customer lists are the top sellers on Amazon, as I understand it. So it's not customers voting. Just what they bought. Which is something entirely different, since you might buy something and not like it, or only find it okay. Customer voting, though, would be a logistical nightmare.
JeffV
Posted by Jeff VanderMeer on Sunday November 09, 2008 at 5:03 PM