A banished warrior teaches her treacherous uncle that once made, some oaths cannot be broken…and some monsters cannot be chained.
The Puppetmaster
A banished warrior teaches her treacherous uncle that once made, some oaths cannot be broken…and some monsters cannot be chained.
Commander Niaja vrau Erezeng is up against an enemy that doesn’t just destroy all the beings, ships, and planets in its path, but also consumes their greatest arts, somehow scratching them from existence everywhere…
While all her friends’ fish are changing into mermaids, is 12-year-old Anissa’s fish becoming something else?
When the waters rose, the people who stayed on the River learned they weathered the storms best together, but what happens when one of their own becomes curious about the Land?
A photographer’s obsession with an unsettled subject exposes two friends to a darkness that won’t be contained by frames…
We’re excited to reprint “The Woman Carrying a Corpse” by Chi Hui, translated from Chinese by Judith Huang, from the groundbreaking anthology The Way Spring Arrives and Other Stories, edited by Yu Chen and Regina Kanyu Wang, out now in paperback!
“The Woman Carrying a Corpse” was originally published as 背尸体的女人 in December 2019 by Flower City (花城).
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 is a bumpy ride. When it works, it really really works. When it doesn’t, it can feel interminable. There were a couple points where I teared up, and at least two when I almost said,“Who is this movie for?” out loud, in the theater. There were moments that were the best an MCU movie’s had in ages, and scenes where characters say “friend” more than Dom Toretto says “family”, and I expected sap to start bubbling right out of the screen.
In other words, it’s very much a messy, overlong, ultimately pretty effective conclusion to the GOTG Trilogy.
Towards the end of Issui Ogawa’s 2003 The Next Continent we learn something about Tae Toenji’s true motives in establishing a moon base. I briefly noted this revelation in my recent moon base essay and commented that seeking therapy would have been far healthier and more cost-effective than the course of action Tae actually embraced. I then realized that this was an idea on which I wanted to follow up….
People will do ambitious but wildly irrational things (set up a moon base, try to conquer the world, etc.) rather than admit they have emotional problems they just cannot face without help. We see this in real life and we see it various science fiction and fantasy works. Here are five examples.
I never thought I’d get so obsessed with a show about a middle-aged cishet white man doing sports stuff, but Ted Lasso has become one of my all-time favorite shows. The current and presumably final season in particular has struck a chord with me in terms of how it has leaned in hard on Blackness with Sam and queerness with Keeley, Colin, and Trent…and don’t even get me started on headcanons and fanfic with Jamie x Roy x Keeley. One of the creators, Jason Sudeikis, has talked a lot about how heavily the show is influenced by Star Wars—everything from the Hero’s Journey to Nate’s Empire-inspired office decor—and as a huge Star Wars nerd and hella queer Black person, it’s no wonder I love this show so much.
Another thing I love? Reader’s advisory. So, in the spirit of book recommendations, here is a list of adult and young adult science fiction and fantasy books I’d give to each of the characters if they came into my library.
Sometimes, endlessly singing the praises of your favorite fictional universes can pay off. Such was the case with Brandon Sanderson’s Cosmere, when a friend who doesn’t read a whole lot finally picked up one of the books. It took some coaxing—in the form of a suggested reading order, a Please Adapt column, and this Stormlight primer (spoiler-free)—but my buddy finally made the leap into Sanderson’s interconnected world.
Still very new to the whole Cosmere thing but enjoying The Way of Kings, he called me and opened with this gem of a line: “Dude…you’re right. The Cashmere is sweet.”
The cruelty of a thirty-second teaser for a movie that looks this fascinating! Thirty seconds is not enough to get the faintest idea of what’s going on in Yorgos Lanthimos’s Poor Things, but it doesn’t matter that much anyway: When the director of Dogtooth and The Favourite makes a new movie, some of us will be there with bells on for opening night.
Especially when it includes a very baffled Mark Ruffalo saying, “… ow” to a slap from Emma Stone in a tone that implies that he has never before experienced the slightest discomfort in his life.
The 2007 indie film Teeth is a horror comedy whose title and story is inspired by the folk tale of vagina dentata, whose etymology confirms that its meaning is exactly what you think it is. The movie did well critically, and intrigued a lot of people—including, it seems, A Strange Loop playwright Michael R. Jackson.
Welcome back to Reading the Weird, in which we get girl cooties all over weird fiction, cosmic horror, and Lovecraftiana—from its historical roots through its most recent branches.
This week, we continue Hilary Mantel’s Beyond Black with Chapter 10. The novel was first published in 2005. Spoilers ahead! CW for medical and non-medical fatphobia, and slurs related to ethnicity and sexual orientation.
Last week, Babylon 5 creator J. Michael Straczynski revealed that an animated movie set in the original show’s universe existed and that we’d find out the title and the cast would be revealed next week. Well, it’s one week later, and as promised, both of those things have been revealed as well as a hint of what the plot of the film will be.
Descendants of the Fates are always born in threes: one to weave, one to draw, and one to cut the threads that connect people to the things they love and to life itself…
We’re thrilled to share an excerpt from brand new young adult fantasy Threads That Bind by Kika Hatzopoulou, out from Razorbill on May 30.
Jacqueline Holland, in her debut novel, avoids calling her blood-drinking immortals vampires. They don’t fear the sun or garlic, and no one here is turning into a bat. But when a previously dead creature rises from the earth, deathless and feeding only on blood, one might, I hope, be forgiven for using the shortcut. (Holland does, in multiple interviews; she clearly did her research.)
And what an odd vampire book this is. The story of an immortal named, over the decades, Anna or Anya or Collette, it feels at different times like a story about fear and loss; about not knowing what you want; about avoiding the world as often as engaging with it; and about ambivalence.
At long last, Good Omens 2 has a premiere date! It’s been almost two years since Amazon announced that the adaptation of Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett’s novel would get a sequel series—two years filled with hints and extras and not-totally-clear casting announcements.
But this announcement is quite clear: Good Omens 2 arrives July 28th on Prime.
I hope you like fantasy, because that’s the overwhelming majority of what you’re getting this summer in the realm of young adult speculative fiction. A few horror and science fiction/dystopian novels have squeezed through, but otherwise this is a season of magic, gods, and other paranormal beasties. Here are some of the YA speculative books coming out in May and June that have peaked my interest.
Once upon a time, I was trying to tell a story, only I didn’t know how it went. There wasn’t a main character, there wasn’t an adventure, and when I tried to begin the story I just disappeared into one thing after another. “Happily ever after”—after what?
I was trying to tell a story about motherhood, and each time I set out from home I got lost in the woods. I was in love, and motherhood had given me a basket full of new experiences. I had a body that astonished me by growing a new person (look, I made fingers! eyeballs!). I had a heart that surprised me with its fierceness. Motherhood challenged me and revealed me to myself. Yet I lost myself, too. My creative work wasn’t getting done. I was overwhelmed and thrown off balance by my needs and desires.
As mentioned in a previous essay, Dean Ing’s Ted Quantrill trilogy, which takes place during and after World War Four, is set in another’s author’s world. It borrows its backstory from General Sir John Hackett’s 1978 The Third World War. Where Hackett thought his conflict would lead, I cannot say. Ing used it as a springboard for an entirely more science-fiction-y scenario involving orbital weapons, biological warfare, and weaponized Canadian chocolate.
While it’s not exactly common for speculative fiction authors to write sequels to each other’s work, it is also not incredibly uncommon. I would imagine the usual process is something along the lines of an author reading someone else’s work, being inspired, and after getting permission, penning their own sequel. Do not disabuse me of this optimistic scenario.
I would like to propose a new award. The Who Asked for This? trophy gets awarded to the sequel or reboot that seems the most obvious and yet the most bothersome, the greatest act of cashing-in that is also somehow, insidiously, almost appealing, except that it’s been 35 years and we all just want something new to happen.
Why do I bring this up? Well, the Tim Burton-directed Beetlejuice 2 is official, with Michael Keaton and Winona Ryder returning to their roles, and Jenna Ortega playing Ryder’s character’s daughter.
A banished warrior teaches her treacherous uncle that once made, some oaths cannot be broken…and some monsters cannot be chained.
Remember way back in 2018, Netflix’s released the first Sandra Bullock-starring thriller, Bird Box, based on the book by Josh Malerman? The streaming platform sure does — the film was reported to be the most-watched film on Netflix at the time — and it’s no surprise that we’re going to get some more stories told in this universe, where aliens invade Earth and make anyone who look upon them go insane.
Lilith Saintcrow has written more novels than I care to count, in a variety of genres and under a variety of names. (Afterwar might be the novel of hers that left the most striking impact: a horrifying near-future imagining of the aftermath of war and genocide.) Spring’s Arcana is her latest, a vivid and atmospheric contemporary fantasy that opens in snowswept Manhattan and takes a roadtrip through an American landscape filled with otherworldly menace and uncomfortable secrets.