3 Quotes & Sayings By Ellen Datlow

Ellen Datlow is the editor of many anthologies, including The Best Horror of the Year, Night Visions, Black Static, and others for Tor Books. She has edited collections for other presses as well. Datlow is the winner of the Bram Stoker Award for Best Editor (Non-fiction) and has won five World Fantasy Awards, including three for Best Non-fiction Work. Her nonfiction works include The Mammoth Book of Best New Horror, The Mammoth Book of Erotic Horror, The Mammoth Book of Vampire Stories, The Mammoth Book of Best New Erotica, and Best New Horror 19 Read more

She's also the winner of the World Fantasy Award for Best Anthology.

1
It was Joss Whedon's Buffy the Vampire Slayer (the television series, 1997-2003, not the lackluster movie that preceded it) that blazed the trail for Twilight and the slew of other paranormal romance novels that followed, while also shaping the broader urban fantasy field from the late 1990s onward. Many of you reading this book will be too young to remember when Buffy debuted, so you'll have to trust us when we say that nothing quite like it had existed before. It was thrillingly new to see a young, gutsy, kick-ass female hero, for starters, and one who was no Amazonian Wonder Woman but recognizably ordinary, fussing about her nails, her shoes, and whether she'd make it to her high school prom. Buffy's story contained a heady mix of many genres (fantasy, horror, science-fiction, romance, detective fiction, high school drama), all of it leavened with tongue-in-cheek humor yet underpinned by the serious care with which the Buffy universe had been crafted. Back then, Whedon's dizzying genre hopping was a radical departure from the norm-whereas today, post- Buffy, no one blinks an eye as writers of urban fantasy leap across genre boundaries with abandon, penning tender romances featuring werewolves and demons, hard-boiled detective novels with fairies, and vampires-in-modern-life sagas that can crop up darn near anywhere: on the horror shelves, the SF shelves, the mystery shelves, the romance shelves. Ellen Datlow
2
Dolls fire our collective imagination, for better and - too often - for worse. From life-size dolls the same height as the little girls who carry them, to dolls whose long hair can 'grow' longer, to Barbie and her fashionable sisters, dolls do double duty as child's play and the focus of adult art and adult fear. Ellen Datlow