I enjoyed several of Benford's earlier novels and loved his award-winning Timescape. I never connected with Great Sky River, however, and after reading that book Benford largely fell off my radar. When I came across a shelf of his books that I had never read, I picked up this anthology and decided to give him another try.
The collection explores the classic science-fiction question of humanity's distant future. The stories range from interstellar civilizations and post-human evolution to cosmic-scale speculation. As with many anthologies, the quality varies considerably from story to story.
Two stories are fantastic and justify reading the collection by themselves. One story is terrible. The remaining stories fall into the broad middle ground of competent but unremarkable science fiction. None of those middle-tier entries are bad, but few left a lasting impression.
The result is an uneven anthology that never becomes boring but rarely achieves greatness. I am glad I read it, mostly because of the strongest stories, but I would not place it among the essential science-fiction collections of the era. 3/5 stars.
