Dreamsongs: A Retrospective is a career-spanning collection of George R. R. Martin's short fiction. It was first published in 2003 as a single volume hardcover from Subterranean Press under the title GRRM: A Retrospective and debuted in Toronto at Torcon 3, the 63rd World Science Fiction Convention, where Martin was the Writer Guest Of Honor. The collection features 34 pieces of fiction (including two TV scripts), an introduction by Gardner Dozois, commentary by Martin on each stage of his career, a Martin bibliography, and original art for each story. Subterranean published the book in three formats: a trade hardcover, a signed, numbered, and slipcased deluxe hardcover, and a very limited, deluxe leather-bound, lettered hardcover. The Washington Post called Subterranean's single-author collection "the most ambitious volume ever to come from an American specialty press".
A UK first hardcover edition (right), running to more than 1,200 pages, was published three years later, in September 2006, by Victor Gollancz Ltd. Bantam then reprinted the collection in the United States in 2007 as a two-volume trade hardcover set. Both the 2006 UK reprint and 2007 USA reprint carry the new title Dreamsongs: A RRetrospective.
The collection is divided into nine thematic sections, with all the stories arranged in rough chronological order. The sections, and the stories they contain, are as follows:
A Four-Color Fanboy[]
#
Title
Year
Note
1
"Only Kids Are Afraid of the Dark"
1967
2
"The Fortress"
2003
Written in the 1960s
3
"And Death His Legacy"
2003
Written in the 1960s
The Filthy Pro[]
#
Title
Year
Previously published
4
"The Hero"
1971
"A Song for Lya" (1976)
5
"The Exit to San Breta"
1972
"A Song for Lya" (1976)
6
"The Second Kind of Loneliness"
1972
"A Song for Lya" (1976) / "Portraits of His Children (1987)
"Songs the Dead Men Sing" (1983) / "Nightflyers" (1985)
21
"The Monkey Treatment"
1983
"Songs the Dead Men Sing" (1983)
22
"The Pear-Shaped Man"
1987
Previously uncollected
A Taste of Tuf[]
This section features two stories in the Haviland Tuf series, about an overweight space trader encountering various civilizations.
#
Title
Year
Previously published
23
"A Beast for Norn"
1976
"Tuf Voyaging" (1986)
24
"Guardians"
1981
"Tuf Voyaging" (1986)
The Siren Song of Hollywood[]
This section features two television screenplays by George R. R. Martin. The former is a script for an episode of The Twilight Zone, and the latter is a pilot for a never-made science fiction series similar to Sliders.