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Science Fiction Magazine/JournalNew science fiction short stories, poetry, art, reviews and articlesThe Commute of the Valkyries - Rebecca ZahabiGenerative Leaf-Mould Transformer - Vikram RamakrishnanA Blood of Silver Stars - Raymond W GallacherSoulmark - Brandon CrillyCozack and Wallie Got the Zoomies! - Marc A. CrileyEngine Room - Alice GauntleyFragments Against the Fire - Andrew KnightonSocial Climber - Anna Ziemons-McLeanSmall Talk - Louis Evans and Angus McIntyreNoise and Sparks - Ruth EJ BoothBeyond Conventions: Unleashing the Palestinian Struggle through the Lens of Science Fiction - Yasmin KanaanAre Comedy and Horror made of the same stuff? (With apologies to Alien and The Simpsons) - Emma LevinSF Poetry byJudith TaylorMorgan L. VenturaAnna IdelevichBook Reviews: Sistersong by Lucy HollandDragonfall by L.R. LamEquinox by Ruth Aylett and Greg MichaelsonWriting the Future
Climate Change SpecialGuest Editor: Lyndsey CroalNew Stories Gessica Sakamoto Martini - The Fox, the Hen, and the Green HillsRhiannon A Grist - A Change of DirectionAndrew Knighton - Shelter From the StormSara Kate Ellis - If Cooler HeadsChristopher R. Muscato - The Best Taco in San AntonioTania Chen - Pure White, Ocean GlassGreta Colombani - AmaranthineMarisca Pichette - The Leaves Echo what the Body ForgetsThoraiya Dyer - Beirut Robot HyenadromeElis Montgomery - An InstitutionKelley Tai - red and green, orange and blue, me and you SF Poetry: Somto Ihezue, Goran Lowie, Carolyn Jess-CookeXR Wordsmiths 2023 Solarpunk ShowcaseKim Stanley Robinson - A Q&A with Guest Editor Lyndsey CroalRuth EJ Booth - Noise and Sparks: Letter to a Future ArchitectDenise Baden: What is Thrutopia and how can it Save the Planet?Book Reviews
Once Upon a Biofuture: Tales for a New Millennium is an anthology of stories, from fiction to memoir, written by scientists about a powerful new technology that is re-engineering our world: synthetic biology. The authors, an international group of scientists, are based at the University of Edinburgh - alma mater of Darwin and home of Dolly the Sheep.The stories were recorded and transcribed, or workshopped and edited, by Jessica Fox, the former storyteller for NASA and artist-in-residence at the UK Centre for Mammalian Synthetic Biology in Edinburgh. The process allowed the scientists to lead the storytelling and retain their creative voice while working with an experienced writer to shape the narrative.Many of the stories are biographical, offering insight into how scientists become scientists, or taking us to new imaginative worlds. Once Upon a Biofuture is a captivating mix of biology, philosophy and mythology while, in classic anthology tradition, still being connected to a common theme: the very human lessons we learn through the maze-like quest of modern scientific exploration.
As the follies and absurdities of the powerful are destroying the world through war, pandemic, and climate change, what better time to release The Daily Squib: Anthology from 2007 to 2022? Over the last 15 years, the Squib has held a crazy distorted fairground mirror to global events. Sometimes its spoofs have even been mistaken for real news―what higher accolade is there for a satirist? Its mock report on the Ku Klux Klan declaring its support for Barack Obama in the 2008 US elections and its fake interview with Henry Kissinger (2011) fooled serious outlets across the world. More than that, the Squib has somehow become an unholy satirical oracle by predicting an EU army 5 years before anyone else was talking about it and, in 2018, the COVID-19 pandemic, even pinpointing somewhere in Asia as the source. Though like lots of other good things this has been overlooked by the mainstream media, the Squib has played an innovative role in shaping internet-based comedy since 2007 and has fought hard for free speech in a climate of increasing puritanism on both the political left and right. Read these articles with the same gusto and passion with which they were created, as they form an alternative historical record of a turbulent time of conflict, disease, terrorism, official stupidity, and mass-delusion. Alternatively, the less pretentious reader can flick through it while taking a dump and either chuckle to themselves as they plop away ... or if they don't find it funny can use its luxuriously produced pages as bog paper.
A kidnap, a theft, and a murderous moon-worshipping cult: Detective Sergeant Milburn has his work cut out to solve several cases that all appear at once. Milburn's job is trickier as both victims are friends with his girlfriend. He desperately needs to solve the cases but has to keep his personal involvement secret. With the clock ticking down on the fate of the second missing woman, the pressure ramps up.Penfold, the detective's enigmatic surfer friend, is called on to help investigate. His puzzle-solving genius helps sift real clues from red herrings. The struggle for leads is constant, until it becomes clear that Penfold and Milburn are, in fact, central to all the crimes.
In Shoreline of Infinity 25New science fiction stories: E.M. Faulds - A Flight of BirdsSimon Nagel - They Came To Hear Him Play His Music When The Sun Went DownGary Gibson - The President is PossessedElana Gomel - DanaePoetry:Cat Hellisen - The Death and Resurrection of Mantis-Class Destroyer 'Sentimental Journey', previously 'General Patty Styne', deceasedNon-fiction:David L Clements on: "What is Hard Science Fiction?"Book Reviews:Citizens of Nowhere: an Anthology of Utopic Fiction - Rowan B. Fortune (Ed), Review by Matthew CastleTen low by Stark Holborn, review by Callum McSorleyAxiom's End by Lindsay Ellis, review by Andrew ChidwickFlash Fiction Competition details - science fiction ghost storyCover ArtworkAlex Storer
Award Winning Science Fiction MagazineNew SerialEpisodes 1 & 2 of ''Approaching Human''by Eric BrownNew fiction fromLeda BaolLyndsey CroalRaymond GallacherGary GibsonCat HellisenChristopher R. MuscatoTeika Marija SmitsCover by StrefPoems byJoshua St. ClaireAndreea Iulia ScridonRichard WeaverSF Indie Press Spotlight Francesca T. Barbini of Luna Press PublishingThe SolarpunkStorytelling ShowLottie Emily DoddBook Reviews
StoriesAdriana Kantcheva - The LibrarianBeatrice Alder - City of Corporate-Sanctioned DelightsBeth Faulds - A Flight of BirdsCallum McSorley - Great NothingJack Schouten - Requiem Played on a DecastringLouise Hughes - RelayMaya Chhabra - The AnchoressRichard Gregson - The Cactus FarmersTim Major - The Living MuseumFlash-fiction Competition Science Fiction Ghost StoriesBen Blow - How the Orchard Became HauntedIda Keogh - The ReminderLeigh Loveday - Dvina's DaughterInterview: Ken MacLeodSF PoetryRhoda NevilleSarah BricaultWilliam StephensonAlex Storer - The Museum of Classic Sci-FiRuth EJ Booth - Noise and SparksBook reviews
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