Celebrating a Century of Science Fiction in Animation

Science fiction conceits and the cartoonist’s will to anarchic fancy accommodate each other quite well, and over the one-hundred-odd years that the two mediums have been playing together, they have managed to capture the technological preoccupations of their times, document humanity’s concerns for their present moment, and speculate on people’s hopes for the future.

So let’s step into our time machine (Science! That’s impossible to implement! ‘Cause paradoxes!) and travel through the decades to see how cartoons have used the lexicon of spaceships, robots, and electronic gizmos to tell their tales. In so doing, we may well discover a bit of reverse time travel, the past reaching out to our present—to entertain, to provoke, and most importantly, to remind us that it’s always fun ‘n games with ray guns until someone gets disintegrated…

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Fall in Love With SFF’s Hottest Royals

There are few archetypes as exquisite as a wonderfully written royal. The rogue, the runaway, the wrathful. Whether it’s in a fantasy kingdom or catapulting through the stars this character is truly *chef’s kiss*. Winter’s Orbit by Everina Maxwell is just one recent addition to make good on that promise. This debut is bursting with romance and the escapism of a good space opera.

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Ironheart Will Soar Into the Cast of Black Panther: Wakanda Forever

An inspiring young hero just joined the cast of Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. According to Variety, Dominique Thorne will appear in the sequel as Riri Williams AKA Ironheart. The backstory for this Marvel heroine and the current cast of the second Black Panther (pictured above) film makes this announcement incredibly exciting.
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Steve Perrin’s Worlds of Wonder Changed the Game for RPGs

Emmet Asher-Perrin’s worthy obit for Steve Perrin mentions such Perrin-related projects as Stormbringer, Call of Cthulhu, Thieves’ World, Elfquest, Robot Warriors, and (of course!) Superworld. One fascinating Perrin work that often goes unmentioned, probably due to the fact that it has become a comparatively obscure work, is 1982’s groundbreaking Worlds of Wonder. You may not have encountered it, but odds are that you’ve seen and played later games that it inspired or influenced.

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Star Trek: Voyager Rewatch: “Body and Soul”

“Body and Soul”
Written by Michael Taylor and Eric Morris and Phyllis Strong & Mike Sussman
Directed by Robert Duncan McNeill
Season 7, Episode 7
Production episode 255
Original air date: November 15, 2000
Stardate: 54238.3

Captain’s log. Kim, Seven, and the EMH are on the Delta Flyer charting comets and collecting bio-samples. They’re attacked by the Lokirrim, who have detected the EMH and declared him a photonic insurgent. Apparently, the Lokirrim are having issues with uppity holograms….

[Never play hard-to-get with a hologram.]

Series: Star Trek: Voyager Rewatch

Past and Future Lives: Six Books About Reincarnation

I’ve always been intrigued by reincarnation, whether as a metaphor for life as a long-term curriculum, a spiritual conceit (who can really know about such things?), or simply as literal truth: that life is continuous. After an around the world spiritual pilgrimage, reading countless books, and even braving the guru/disciple relationship—from both sides—I realize that now, as an author, it doesn’t matter to me what’s true or not true. That’s the glory of speculative fiction. Whatever the deal really is, utilizing past lives as a vehicle for introducing a novel crisis into the life of my boy genius narrator served my purposes well in Prodigy Quest, my latest release.

As in all my novels, I started with an idea that bubbled up from nowhere—what if someone were handed a mission from their previous lives? What if the character had to embark on a hazardous quest to find a book of wisdom? When I loosely patterned my protagonist after my arrogant, somewhat gifted ten-year-old self, I was off and running. The rest was an organic, seat-of-the-pants rollercoaster ride for both myself and my readers.

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Series: Five Books About…

Comfort Me With Sadness: Grief, Hope, and a Different Kind of Comfort Read

It’s been a year for comfort reads. There are so many lists of books like a hug, books like a warm blanket, books like a hot cup of cocoa (with your preferred variety of milk). They’re really good books of a certain kind—books where there may be drama, but things work out; where people are kind and problems are manageable; where the laughs are rich and meaning is found in unexpected, welcoming places.

None of those lists have my kind of comfort reads on them. 

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Final Trailer for Marvel’s Eternals Shows Their Purpose on Earth

When Marvel released the first look at Chloe Zhao’s Eternals, back in May, it showed off the barest hints of what the film might be about: a group of super-powered individuals who have watched humanity from the sidelines for eons, never interfering with our development.

Last night, Marvel released a full trailer for the upcoming film, and it showcases not only the Eternal’s mission on Earth, but the stakes for the next big crisis facing humanity.

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DeCandido, His Review Mixed — Star Trek: Lower Decks: “Kayshon, His Eyes Open”

One of the most talked-about episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation was the fifth-season episode “Darmok.” It introduced the Children of Tamar, a species who communicated only in metaphor and allusion. The Universal Translator translated their words, but they still had no meaning, unless you understood the references. A Tamarian captain named Dathon, played by the late great Paul Winfield, kidnapped Picard and put them together to try to communicate.

It’s one of the great TNG episodes, but was only ever followed up on in tie-in fiction. Until now. [SPOILERS AHOY!]

Revealing Akata Woman, the Third Book in Nnedi Okorafor’s Nsibidi Scripts

From the moment Sunny Nwazue discovered she had mystical energy flowing in her blood, she sought to understand and control her powers…

We’re thrilled to share the cover of  Akata Woman, the third installment of Nnedi Okorafor’s Nsibidi Scripts series—publishing January 18, 2022 with Penguin Young Readers/Viking Books for Young Readers.

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