Nonfiction
Book Review: The Misfit Soldier, by Michael Mammay
Reviewer Chris Kluwe compares The Misfit Soldier, a new military SF novel from Michael Mammay, to an explosive heist movie. Yep. You should read it!
Reviewer Chris Kluwe compares The Misfit Soldier, a new military SF novel from Michael Mammay, to an explosive heist movie. Yep. You should read it!
I’m fascinated by the process of translation from one language to another. I’m fascinated by how a foreign language might have the perfect word for something that has no single word in one’s native tongue (like the Japanese word “komorebi,” which means “sunlight filtering through the leaves of trees” or the German word “schadenfreude”—both words which have no single-word equivalents in English).
Is Tade Thompson’s Far From the Light of Heaven, a new locked room mystery set in space, the right read for you? Let reviewer Aigner Loren Wilson tell you why it just might be.
This story is based on a dream I had in spring 2019. A wild, sad dream, where I was desperately trying to jump to the moon. And on the jump, I saw these fantastic colors all around me. Purples and pinks streaking past me. And I remember waking up literally feeling like I was falling. Like I was being pulled into the Earth. It was terrifying and so intense. So naturally, I tried to recreate it with words.
It’s another terrific month—be sure to read the editorial for a run-down of all our terrific content!
I think that as I’ve developed as a writer, I’ve gained three main tools. The first is faith that I’m eventually going to get to the end, because I usually do, even if I have no idea how and it really doesn’t look like I will. The second is perseverance (rejections, blah blah). The third is actually knowing when to give up on something. I think that’s the real paradox of being a writer—you have to have so much blind faith and perseverance…
Chris Kluwe has a book recommendation for anyone ready to fight The Man or who feels like the world needs a little Nonsense: Where The Drowned Girls Go, by Seanan McGuire. Check out his latest review to find out why!
I had generated a flash piece based on the title, which was the list of tourist brochure entries that made it more or less intact, albeit totally reordered, into the final story. I realized that, although that list tells a story of its own, it isn’t one with the emotional impact I wanted, which led me to go back and imagine what kind of person might read such a brochure and visit these places. Once I had Mer in mind, I wrote his scenes out of order.
Arley Sorg loves short stories. Find out why he’s recommending this anthology of stories by acclaimed YA writers of the Latin American diaspora: Reclaim the Stars: 17 Tales Across Time & Space, edited by Zoraida Córdova.
I wrote this story at Clarion West, where one of our instructors was the Australian editor Jonathan Strahan. I’d grown up in Australia, so I got it in my head that I’d write an Australia story for him. I’d also been tempted to have a go at a classic space survival kind of plot, and the two ideas fused when I hit on the parallel between central Australia and Mars—two red, arid landscapes that, to an outsider, don’t seem capable of supporting life. That image was really important at the beginning.