A grieving mother wakes up to find all traces of her lost son have been erased as if he had never existed. Only in the hallway mirror is she able to see a glimpse of the reality she remembers having lived—the reality she wants back.
The Counterworld
A grieving mother wakes up to find all traces of her lost son have been erased as if he had never existed. Only in the hallway mirror is she able to see a glimpse of the reality she remembers having lived—the reality she wants back.
A two-person crew embark on a mind-bending deep space mission inside a living wormship capable of burrowing through space. What lies on the other end is unknown—as is what they will do once they get there.
A man is offered the opportunity to partake in an exclusive, subscription-based eating club for those who wish to dine on human flesh. But he may have bitten off a little more than he can chew.
Graff isn’t quite human. His people move through the galaxy collecting memories and experiences, recording their lives and passing them on. Then, one day, he breaks: he discovers a chunk of his memory is missing. This should be impossible—he’s never forgotten a moment in his life. Now, he has to learn to forget, and to remember, and this has consequences for all his people, his culture, and his whole world.
A talented bookbinder is tasked with creating a copy of a text so inflammatory it threatens to alter the very existence of Truth itself.
Judge Dee must himself stand trial before his fellow vampires for the loss of a valuable manuscript, even as those vampires are murdered, one by one, by an unknown hand.
Decompression. Not a dangerous one. More like old air leaving a vault that’s just been opened. An asteroid. A meteor? No, a comet! Hurtling through space. Empty space? An empty patch. But the kind of empty patch that makes the rest of it feel just as empty. Empty, except for this one thing. A ship. Where’d it come from?
Oh! Another thing! A space station.
Sheepishly entering the screen as if it’s the first day of class. It dares to be there. Under the brass and the strings emboldening its existence. A space station, the titular one, as you’re soon informed by text. The last holdout of something in nothing. It’s a pebble, and not a particularly smooth one, that wants to skim across an ocean but, aware of its breccia-like composition, says not “I’m doing this!” but, “I’m doing this?,” and only when it can eke out the affirmative does it earn the jump cut that proves, in its details, it is not an “I” but a “we,” tirelessly working to make sure the pebble can make, if not all its skips, then at least the next one.
Since it first aired, I have regularly taken a strange comfort in the first thirty seconds of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine’s opening credits.
People complain about the oddest things, sometimes; apparently including too many women authors in a given article is an affront to those who prefer a more macho approach to SF. Never let it be said that I don’t respond to criticism! To help reassure that type of reader, here are five ineluctably masculine works by the Dean of SF, Robert A. Heinlein.
Our scene opens in a New York Diner—the kind that would have been bustling at 3:00am only a few years ago, but in our rent-hiked, COVID-ravaged city only a few people are sitting. They’re engaged in a heated discussion—or at any rate, two of them are, while a third seems to shrink into a corner of their shared booth. One man is short, boisterous, flinging his hands with each word. When he laughs his whole body shakes as if he’s being electrocuted. The person he’s yelling at is taller and broader, leans back laconically against the naugahyde, his mouth in a permanent smirk. Their companion is lean, soft-spoken. For some reason, his face is nearly always obscured. Sometimes he appears to be listening to another conversation entirely.
[The following totally real conversation contains spoilers for Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania]
It opens with a departure. From the opening pages of her novel Our Share of Night, Mariana Enriquez brings the reader into the visceral lives of her characters, zeroing in initially on a man named Juan who’s pondering the heat outside and taking preventative steps for “the headache he wasn’t feeling yet.” He wakes his young son Gaspar and they set out on a long journey—one that Juan is convinced that they must make. That journey begins in Buenos Aires. The year is 1981.
Depending on your knowledge of Argentine history, that combination of time and place might set off a few alarms.
Natalie Haynes is a comedian, writer, and broadcaster, and along with Professor Dame Mary Beard, is probably at the moment the UK’s most well-known female classicist. Stone Blind is her third novel to draw directly from the well of classical mythology, after A Thousand Ships and Jocasta’s Children, and in Stone Blind Haynes turns her gaze on Medusa, the mortal Gorgon, daughter of Phorcys and Ceto.
The latest Hellboy adaptation co-written by comic book creator Mike Mignola has found its titular character.
Terry Pratchett was adamant that any works in progress of his would be destroyed (by a steamroller, no less) after his death. And when he passed away in 2015, his former assistant and friend Rob Wilkins did just that. So how could their be unknown works to his name?
A big part of the appeal of the TNG reunion that we have been promised in season three of Picard is answering the question, “What’ve they been doing for the last two decades?” The first two seasons answered that question for the title character, and various episodes of Lower Decks and this show have done likewise for Riker and Troi.
This week, we get answers for both Crusher and Worf, and that, at least, is a mixed bag. It’s the best episode of the season so far, though, because everything is starting to come together in a manner that has some delightful surprises, not just for TNG fans, but fans of DS9 as well…
We’ve finally got our first real glimpse of this year’s Haunted Mansion movie, a film based on the legendary Disney theme park attraction that centers around Rosario Dawson playing a woman who, along with her son (Chase W. Dillon), move into a home with some spooky squatters.
Is it spring yet? No? Well, let’s pretend it is by checking out this big ol’ list of some exciting forthcoming young adult science fiction, fantasy, and horror books. We have time loops, space horror, god magic, ghosts, and more!
Photo: Olga Tutunaru [via Unsplash]
We’ve all been there. Perhaps you were drawn in by a beautiful cover, hooked by the summary on the back of a paperback, or intrigued by the way a book was being discussed on Twitter. You read a great review; your favorite author was raving about a book; your group chat wouldn’t shut up about a twist. So you started the book. And you knew, whether immediately or 50 pages in, that it wasn’t for you.
Oh my storms, my Cosmere Chickens, this is a heck of a ride. This is a very long chapter and we’ve got a lot to cover here, from new Radiant Oaths being sworn, revelations about Heralds and spren and highly Invested swords, and bad guys getting their just rewards. (Hmm, that almost rhymed!) Let’s jump right in, shall we?
A mythic tale of disgruntled gods, revenge, and a heist across two worlds…
We’re thrilled to share the cover and preview an excerpt from Shigidi and the Brass Head of Obalufon, the debut fantasy novel from award-winning Nigerian author Wole Talabi. Shigidi and the Brass Head of Obalufon publishes August 8, 2023 from DAW Books.
The animated Netflix series Agent Elvis is coming to the streamer in mere weeks, and we’ve got a trailer that gives us a taste of what the star-studded show will be like.
The Blackening takes a racist horror trope and turns it on his head by asking, if everyone’s Black (and fully aware of all the other tropes that are found in horror films), who dies first?
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 5. The novel was first published in 2005. Spoilers ahead! Content warning for racism, and physical scars from child abuse.
[“…how can I believe it, when it’s against the laws of nature?”]
Dune: The Sisterhood, the HBO Max series in the works about the origin of the Bene Gesserit, is having some shakeups behind the scenes, with several key creatives leaving the production.
Emry Merlin should be living her best life as a wizard’s apprentice.
We’re thrilled to share an excerpt from The Future King by Robyn Schneider, the second book in the Emry Merlin YA fantasy series, out from Viking Books for Young Readers on March 21.