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Best SF: 1968

Best SF: 1968 is the second in the Best SF series edited by Harry Harrison and Brian W. Aldiss, first published in a British edition in January 1969 by Sphere Books. The first American edition was released later that year by Putnam, with a Berkley paperback following shortly thereafter. Severn House issued a British hardcover edition in 1977.

Contents
• Introduction to Best SF: 1968 (1969) by Harry Harrison • "Budget Planet" (1968) by Robert Sheckley • "Appointment on Prila" (1968) by Bob Shaw • "Lost Ground" (1966) by David I. Masson • "The Rime of the Ancient SF Author, or Conventions and Recollections" (1968) by J. R. Pierce • "The Annex" (1968) by John D. MacDonald • "Segregationist" (1967) by Isaac Asimov • "Final War" (1968) by K. M. O'Donnell • "2001: A Space Odyssey–Some Selected Reviews" (1969) by Lester del Rey, Samuel R. Delany, and Ed Emshwiller • "Apeman, Spaceman—or, 2001s Answer to the World's Riddle" (1969) by Leon E. Stover • "The Serpent of Kundalini" (1968) by Brian W. Aldiss • "Golden Acres" (1967) by Kit Reed • "Criminal in Utopia" (1968) by Mack Reynolds • "One Station of the Way" (1968) by Fritz Leiber • "Sweet Dreams, Melissa" (1968) by Stephen Goldin • "To the Dark Star" (1968) by Robert Silverberg • "Like Young" (1960) by Theodore Sturgeon • "The House That Jules Built" (1969) by Brian W. Aldiss == Reception ==
Reception
In 1969, ''Publishers' Weekly''s Barbara A. Bannon called it "a must for SF readers." == References ==
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