2013 anthology edited by George R. R. Martin and Gardner Dozois
The anthology includes 15 stories:[1][4]
- "Red Planet Blues" (Introduction) by George R.R. Martin[2]
- "Martian Blood" by Allen M. Steele; a doctor explores the Martian wilds in search of a blood sample from a native Martian.[2]
- "The Ugly Duckling" by Matthew Hughes; an archaeologist explores "the ruins of the Martian past in a place from which few have returned."[2] The story draws heavily from the setting of Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles.
- "The Wreck of the Mars Adventure" by David D. Levine; in 1701, pirate William Kidd must journey to Mars to earn a pardon for his crimes.[2] In 2016, Levine published a novel sequel, Arabella of Mars.
- "Swords of Zar-Tu-Kan" by S.M. Stirling; a "tale of kidnap and rescue."[2] This story is a prequel to Stirling's 2008 novel In the Courts of the Crimson Kings.
- "Shoals" by Mary Rosenblum; disabled Maartin is one of the few people who can see the native inhabitants of Mars.[2]
- "In the Tombs of the Martian Kings" by Mike Resnick; "an Indiana Jones-type story set on the ruins of Martian civilization."[2]
- "Out of Scarlight" by Liz Williams; a story involving "a missing dancer, romance, and a sorcerer."[2]
- "The Dead Sea-Bottom Scrolls" by Howard Waldrop; a tale "like a journalistic account from a man of science."[2] Nominated for a 2014 Locus Award.[3]
- "A Man Without Honor" by James S. A. Corey; a story with a premise reminiscent of Edgar Rice Burroughs' Mars.[2][5]
- "Written In Dust" by Melinda Snodgrass; a story about a family and a strange Martian illness.[2]
- "The Lost Canal" by Michael Moorcock; an adventure about a man in search of a bomb he needs to disarm.[2]
- "The Sunstone" by Phyllis Eisenstein; "the analogue for White Man’s intrusion into North America, with added mysticism."[2]
- "King of the Cheap Romance" by Joe R. Lansdale; a girl and her father try to bring the cure to Martian Fever back to their village.[2]
- "Mariner" by Chris Roberson; a "swashbuckling tale" featuring Roberson's Jason Carmody.[2]
- "The Queen of the Night’s Aria" by Ian McDonald; "a tale of people on the front lines of a Martian war."[2]
Robert H. Bedford wrote that "the majority of these stories were strong, fun and evocative," noting "only a few out of the dozen plus didn’t fully engage me." He called the works of Eisenstein, Corey, Roberson, Rosenblum and Steele "definite standouts."[2]
Old Mars won a 2014 Locus Award, and Howard Waldrop's story "The Dead Sea-Bottom Scrolls" was also nominated.[3]