Editorial
Editorial: December 2023
Here’s to another terrific year of speculative fiction! Don’t miss the Editorial for a rundown of this month’s content.
Here’s to another terrific year of speculative fiction! Don’t miss the Editorial for a rundown of this month’s content.
If we are to have any chance at averting a climate disaster, we must do more than just reduce our carbon output—we need to get to carbon zero or better. “Carbon Zero” explores the human cost of what may become humanity’s last chance.
Chris Kluwe finds light in the characters populating the new dark fantasy novel Tonight, I Burn by Katharine J. Adams. Find out why you might like it, too!
It started as most stories do: a what-if that wouldn’t leave my mind, that demanded an answer. What if you had someone with precognition that somehow couldn’t see their own future? Their own tomorrow, a mystery. Initially, there was something a little funny in that idea, but as often happens with my stories, the little bit of humor caved in.
This month, Arley Sorg checks out the newest issue of McSweeney’s, guest edited by Brian Evenson. It’s a little bit literary, a little bit speculative . . . find out why Arley thinks you should check it out.
I guess I am not the only one who feels that time flows faster and faster nowadays. The pace of life in the twenty-first century is much faster than that in the twentieth or before. We all try to do more things with the same amount of time and achieve more. If there is a product that can make you more efficient in a time unit, definitely some people will be willing to use it.
Our reviewer says The Reformatory by Tananarive Due is the scariest book she’s read all year. Find out why!
When I was much younger, I wrote a lot of stories that were told in the vein of traditional epic fantasy novels, and I wanted to write a more recent version of those. Specifically, one that involved dragons. I was really drawn to the idea of a story that portrayed the complex dynamics of romantic relationships within a fantasy world, and so this story was my attempt at capturing that.
Be sure to check out the editorial for a discussion of this month’s terrific content.
I’m a working scientist doing biological research. There is some overlap in my day-to-day work and the science of these stories, so doing the research to write them was a familiar, cathartic, and supremely challenging experience at the same time. I have to be vague now, but I hope there’ll come a time when I can share that in more detail.