Does short fiction scratch the same itch for you?
1) The Machine Stops - Nothing beats it
2) The Futurological Congress - Best short SciFi novel
3) The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag - Freaking hilarious
4) Perfect Day for Bananafish - Not sci fi but amazing!
5) Blue Screen: How Peter Gustafson Defragmented the World - I wrote a short SciFi novel and my mom tells me its great :)
[1] https://www.amazon.com/Machine-Stops-M-Forster/dp/1609420667
[2] https://www.amazon.com/Futurological-Congress-Memoirs-Ijon-T...
[3] https://www.amazon.com/Unpleasant-Profession-Jonathan-Hoag-e...
[4] https://www.amazon.com/Nine-Stories-J-D-Salinger/dp/03167695...
[5] https://www.amazon.com/Blue-Screen-Peter-Gustafson-Defragmen...
I also used to enjoy lots of the stories from One Story which was a monthly single short story on Amazon Kindle. I found Caitlin Horrocks' "This is not your city" which is a great compilation.
Bruce Stirling has consistently good short fiction.
For science fiction you sometimes get great one off compilations. "Mirrorshades" is excellent; "Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet" has some great stories.
I used to love short stories, but I don't see as much of them anymore. I think that some of that has been swallowed by the more serial novellas that I see on platforms like kindle unlimited. I've long felt that this is incentivized by the ways that the platform pays writers (percentage of the book read). It encourages writers to write shorter gripping stories. That's not necessarily a bad thing. I've been going through quite a bit of great pulp fiction recently, but it is a bit of a departure from the more traditional novel or short story.
J.D. Salinger's "A Perfect Day for Bananafish" from "Nine Stories" is a good, but dark, introduction to the Glass family, who are the subject of many of his stories.
And a random one I cherish: "Boys" by Rick Moody (https://barringerlit.weebly.com/uploads/1/3/2/6/13263242/boy...)
His prose is one of a kind and his stories usually leave me floored.
I recommend the collection, "What we talk about when we talk about love" (the title of one story) -- which, by the way, is the play central to the (excellent) movie Birdman.
Man, typing this got me excited. Think I'm gonna pour a glass of Teacher's and see if anyone wants to dance.
David Foster Wallace - Incarnations of Burned Children
A random piece (yes, many, or even most, are like that):
---
Blue Notebook #10
Once there lived a red-haired man who lacked eyes and ears.
He was also lacking all hair, so he was called red-haired only with a large degree of generalization.
He couldn't speak, as he was lacking a mouth. The same with his nose.
Even arms and legs, he just didn't have any. Nor stomach, nor backside, nor spine. And no intestine. He didn't have anything! Therefore it is totally unclear who is being discussed.
In fact, let's not talk about him anymore.
---
More examples:
http://www.scn.org/realpoetik/Daniil-Kharms03.htm
http://polyhymnion.org/lit/harms/
And his Wikipedia page:
Some favorites that come to mind at the moment:
"Goodnight Mr. James" in 'All the traps of Earth' by Clifford Simak
"Neutron Star" and "What good is a glass dagger?" by Larry Niven
"Tales from the Vulgar Unicorn" by various authors
The Fafhrd and Grey Mouser series by Fritz Leiber (successive short stories)
"If all men were brothers, would you let one marry your sister?" and "The world well lost" by Ted Sturgeon
"The Tactful Saboteur" by Frank Herbert
"The Gold at the end of the Starbow" and "The Engineer" by Frederick Pohl
It seems to me that the best aspect of a short story is that the story can present an idea or twist without long characterization and world building, so that you get the idea in a purer form.
I think "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber" by Hemingway should be mandatory reading in high school.
The Lottery https://fullreads.com/literature/the-lottery/
https://marshallbrain.com/manna is also a great one.
Only because it paints such a perfect picture of the inanity of so much of the work that we do in the software engineering profession.
Larry Niven - The Jigsaw Man
Larry Niven - The Fourth Profession
Issac Asimov - The Last Question
I believe most of them are available online on The Register now.
They call that "flash fiction" these days.
I won the lottery, allowing me to quit my job.
It was originally just 1 story, Fiat Homo, and then was expanded into a novel. Fiat Homo is freely available in audio form from the BBC