Two short speculative stories about coping and related struggles. “Dragons” by Teresa Milbrodt (published this year) has a hard-to-quit video game: “I’ve thought about getting glasses,” the dragon said as we sat on rocks with mugs in our hands and the …
“My best friend is a dolphin and sometimes it’s weird.”
“In your first conversations with them, you’ll probably want to refer to all you’ve learned in the past year’s intensive study of dolphin history, culture, and ritual. Maybe you want to put them at ease, or maybe you kind of want to show off. I’m tel…
“Sixteen Earth years. Not quite nine, Martian.”
Wanna read action-y scifi about girls solving problems by hacking electronics? (Previously.) “Power to the People” by Kiera Lesley is shorter: “Sorry, print took longer than I expected.” Sarah said, fishing in her pockets for her offerings, all in whit…
“But then her tiny nostrils flared, and I knew I was dead.”
“The Woman With the Long Black Hair” by Zach Shephard — “The string-dolls and paintings puzzled her. So much reverence . . .” — and “We Love Deena” by Alice Sola Kim (previously) — “I don’t remember which attempt it was, how many people I had been s…
“she is lonely, and skeptical of my ability to ease her loneliness”
“Unit Two Does Her Makeup” by Laura Duerr (published this year): “She is smiling, but I see and catalog and evaluate thousands of smiles every day. Hers is tentative.” “Maslow’s Howitzer” by Miriam Oudin (previously): “I shipped from the factory with s…
“observed the hunter’s nephew, with severely limited enthusiasm”
Light fantasy stories with some silly bits. “The Family Business” by Andrea Tang is a modern fairy tale about a Korean-American teen. “Janet and I Try to Get Frosted Strawberry Pop-Tarts at the Gilbert Rd Super Target. It’s the One in Scottsdale. No, t…
bamboo, beetles, gardening, and power balances
“The first time I tried to regreen our town, I was sixteen. I got sentenced to 150 hours of community service…” “Choose Your Battleground” by Andrew Leon Hudson is a short, light, triumphant science fiction story about urban ecology. “A bee man came …
scars, cracks, blood, and video games
“That Story Isn’t the Story” by John Wiswell (previously) is a fantasy story about escape and recovery from abuse (author interview). “Everything Anton owns goes in one black trash bag. His ratty yellow sketchpad, which he bought to draw the other fami…
Consciousness simulacra and a dusty mirror
The science fiction story “Proof by
Induction” by José Pablo Iriarte and the fantasy story “Basilisk
and Sons” by Timothy Mudie both center men trying to deal with
complicated emotions while grieving and carrying on their fathers’ work.
The former …
“Hazelnuts were from before.”
Vivid imagery about the future of our relationship with ecological surroundings in these three melancholy speculative stories. “The Wild Inside” by Angela Penrose: “We had to close up another building that day—bolt the doors shut, board over the window…