; "The Dragon of Pripyat", 1999
Tesseracts 8 anthology, Tesseract Books, 1999.) Malianov enters the
Chernobyl exclusion zone to investigate an
extortionist's threat to breach the
nuclear containment "sarcophagus" and dump the
radioactive waste into the
Pripyat River. Also there are rumors about a
dragon in the area. ; "Alexander's Road", 2005
The Engine of Recall Malianov's search of missing stolen uranium leads him to a search of two stolen Soviet nuclear bombs, ; "To Hie from Far Cilenia", 2008
METAtropolis: The Dawn of Uncivilization Malianov is tracking some stolen plutonium to be smuggled, and finds that the illegal deals are carried out in
virtual states. The story is set in near future, with advanced developments in the area of
virtual reality and information networking. ; "Deodand", 2010 Originally published in
METAtropolis: Cascadia In the story, a deodand is an
artificial intelligence that represents some system of the
nature: a lake, a pack of wolves, etc. As such, the deodands try to optimize the interests of the systems they represent. Malianov runs into them during a temporary gig after the events from the Cilenia story: a robotics company hires him to figure out why their AI misbehave. ; "Laika's Ghost", 2010
Engineering Infinity, edited by
Jonathan Strahan, December 2010
Paul Kincaid in his review of the 2012 "Best of the Year" anthologies called it one of the best stories in the reviewed collections. He sees it as a reflection of the growing pessimism in science fiction: [Malianov] "discovers that the only people ready to take up the dream of flight to other worlds are aged remnants of the former
Soviet Union". Schroeder disagrees with Kincaid's judgement: in the broader context of Malianov stories, the world is not exhausted in its energy, it merely shifts the gears. An Achille Marceau builds solar updraft towers in Siberia, which generate electricity while taking CO2 out of the air, thus supposedly helping to combat the
global warming while profiting from the market in carbon. However, Malianov notices an environmental disaster in the area. With the help of an ally, who is Achille's sister and UN's arms inspector, the sinister design is thwarted in an action-packed story. Shroeder describes "Kheldyu" as "my most pessimistic Gennady Malianov piece". ==Notes==