Thursday, September 28, 2023

2023 read #108: The Truth Is a Cave in the Black Mountains by Neil Gaiman.

The Truth Is a Cave in the Black Mountains by Neil Gaiman
Illustrated by Eddie Campbell
Original novelette published 2010; illustrated version published 2014
75 pages
Read September 28
Rating: 3 out of 5

This is a collaborative volume, a novelette by Neil Gaiman illustrated by Eddie Campbell. The result is almost a picture book for grownups. It doesn’t quite find the evocative synergy of Simon Stalenhåg’s work (of which I’ve only read The Electric State). Campbell’s art clearly draws from Gaiman’s narrative, added after the fact, rather than the words and art feeding into one another. At times — such as with certain exchanges of dialogue — the format even becomes a distraction. While striking, the art does little to deepen the story. The result is lovely, and certainly worth taking the time to read and admire, but less than I had been hoping for.

The story on its own works well enough. The plot involves cursed gold on an island that is not always there; talk of funding the exiled Stuarts inevitably reminds me of KidnappedGaiman’s descriptions evoke misty Scottish isles, a curse that saps joy and drains conscience, vengeance old and withered to bone.

2023 read #107: The Black God’s Drums by P. Djèlí Clark.

The Black God’s Drums by P. Djèlí Clark
111 pages
Published 2018
Read from September 27 to September 28
Rating: 3.5 out of 5

It is 1884 in New Orleans, a free and nonaligned city in a land still divided between Union and Confederate. Creeper is a teenage street kid blessed by Oya, goddess of storms, life, and rebirth. She overhears CSA officers plotting to obtain a supernatural weapon that helped free Haiti: the Black God’s Drums, also called Shango’s Thunder. No one in their right mind wants that kind of power in the Rebs’ hands, but Creeper also wants to get something back from exchanging the information. Enter the captain of the airship Midnight Robber. The trade Creeper asks of her: letting Creeper join her crew.

Another solid outing from Clark, who has unmatched skill at spinning vivid, immersive alternate histories. This one mingles airships and divine magic with dangerous repercussions. Echoes of Haiti's use of Shango's Thunder linger as tempêtes noires, which "turn the skies into night for a whole week." The mix is unique and engrossing, as always brought to life by Clark's quick prose.

Wednesday, September 27, 2023

2023 read #106: The Necessity of Stars by E. Catherine Tobler.

The Necessity of Stars by E. Catherine Tobler
71 pages
Published 2021
Read September 27
Rating: 4.5 out of 5

“Memory is a form of fiction — a story that keeps the days threaded together in proper order.” Memory is the central motif in The Necessity of Stars. It’s a quiet novella of layered beauty, the sea-level rise of tragedy and loss.

Bréone is an aging diplomat in a climate-ravaged future, one where capitalist interests and authoritarian governments maintain the fiction that humans didn’t cause climate change, that there was nothing poor little humanity could have done on such a vast scale, even as the Earth burns and floods and ecosystems collapse. Delphine, once a science advisor, ekes out her days alongside Bréone, both of them occupying the Normandy garden estate of Irislands. Bréone narrates, “Why fight for a thing that is falling apart, she asks. Because it is falling apart, I say each and every time.” Words slip from Bréone, lost one by one.

And then Bréone finds an alien in the garden. Tura is one of the last of their kind, a species exploited nearly to extinction, hiding away on Earth because they thought it was already a dead world.

The thematic parallels — aging and ecocide, the loss of faculties and species — are elegantly understated, welling up through Tobler’s magnificent prose. “Humans are often foolish, when it comes to squandering a heart, or a planet.” This brief book feels expansive, freighted with the grief of our species, personal and vast.

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

2023 read #105: The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, September/October 2023.

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, September / October 2023 issue (145:3-4)
Edited by Sheree Renée Thomas
258 pages
Published 2023
Read from September 25 to September 26
Rating: 3.5 out of 5

As I hinted at in my review of the January / February 2023 issue, I’m continuing to stay current with new issues of F&SF as a gesture of support for Sheree Renée Thomas, the finest editor in the magazine’s nearly 75 year history. I may be deeply skeptical of the institutional structure of the magazine now, but Thomas is putting together an unparalleled run at the editorial helm, and needs more readers behind her.

“Shining Shores” by Max Firehammer. Slow-burn eldritch horror in a coastal resort town. It’s a promising story, full of creepy imagery: colossal sea gods, gouged eyes, joints popping out of socket, a shotgun battle in the back of a cop car. You know, the classics. It escalates into one of the goriest pieces I’ve ever read in F&SF. To my personal taste, while the bones of the story are quite good, “Shores” has too much of the developing author tendency to transcribe every action of the narrator’s progress instead of trusting the reader to fill in the blanks. (Sample: “I had the name of Paul’s hotel punched into my phone, and before long, I was there.”) It’s something I struggle with in my own writing, but still, I found it harder to slip into the rhythm of the story as a result.

“Bayanihan” by Maricar Macario. Atmospheric and absorbing tale of culture, immigration, and family bonds across two worlds. It is heavy with the loss of language, the loss of place, the dislocations inflicted by colonialism and its influence. Our second-person narrator’s childhood in what little global warming has left of the Philippines leads to an alienating teenhood on cosmopolitan Mars, where a galaxy of beings intermingle with humans — but the rich and privileged, alas, are still the ones in charge of everything; the world with money culturally colonizes the world that lacks it. Great story, vulnerable and moving. One of the best Mars colony stories I’ve ever read.

“Sort Code” by Chris Barnham. I’m tired of men who slip “bitch” into their stories — and damn, they just love finding ways to jimmy it in. This one checks it off the basic male lit to-do list on the first page. (What is this, 1990?) It predisposed me against this story right from the get-go. “Code” is competent enough, a standard tale of dying and finding oneself unstuck in time with a manic pixie dream girl, but it didn’t rouse sufficient interest to overcome the odor of Dude Writing 101. Any story along these lines is going to have to distinguish itself against Kim Stanley Robinson’s “A Short, Sharp Shock” (reviewed here), so it had an uphill battle even without that “bitch.”

“What We Found in the Forest” by Phoebe Wood. This one is gorgeous, a spore-clouded journey of self-discovery and love that feels much vaster and more immersive than its mere three pages would suggest. Outstanding!

“Three Sisters Syzygy” by Christopher Mark Rose. Ordinarily, I appreciate a good thematic through-line in a magazine issue. However, presenting another “I’m in a different timeline and I don’t quite know who these people are or what I’m doing here” story so quickly after “Sort Code” was a touch monotonous, at first. This tale of reality-hopping astronauts finding themselves among the sisters they had always wanted, the three of them exploring Earth’s three moons during their rare alignment, is far superior to “Code.” In fact, it’s quite good: technicolor, strange, moving, thematically interesting. It’s threaded with old pulp imagery — rocketships! moon banquets! robots! space pirates! Plus, syzygy was one of my favorite words growing up, so I’m pleased to find it in a title. As far as the “what universe am I in?” repetition goes, I suppose it’s understandable. We’ve all felt dislocated to an alternate universe since early 2020; multiversal stories touch a deep, collective trauma in our lives, and they’ll keep popping up until our culture finds new ways to approach and process that trauma.

“Mixtapes from Neptune” by Karter Mycroft. Another brief but evocative piece that feels more substantial than its length would suggest. Hard science fiction that feels as sentimental and dreamy as the best fantasy.

“To Pluck a Twisted String” by Anne Leonard. Another solid though short piece, a sharp-edged domestic fantasy of parenthood, loss, and the pressures of the world.

“My Embroidery Stitches Are Me” by A Humphrey Lanham. A lyrical flash fabulist piece that examines generational trauma, abuse, and learning to separate ourselves from what our parents have pressed upon us. Heartbreaking and beautiful, a three-page story that left me weeping. F&SF has truly come into its own as a market for transcendent flash fic.

“Upstairs” by Tessa Yang. This is an excellent piece that thrums with the tension and tragedy of our stratified future. Our narrator Sadie has “won” the housing lottery — i.e., her wife Eileen was recruited by Recyclon, a vast capitalist conglomerate, so their family just happened to get selected to move into the climate-controlled habitats of Upper Michy, towering above the concrete and pollution of old Lower Michy. Yang draws domestic details with an emotional precision that heightens the uneasiness, winding us into Sadie’s misgivings, her suspicions that the elevated world will get pulled out from under her family, her need to whatever it takes — even selling out — to keep them all up there. Small spoilers: The “organized criminals smuggling meat into a vegan dystopia” plot feels like it should be silly, a throwback to the “EPA is out to get us!” libertarian strain of late ’80s sci-fi, yet the emotional groundwork is established with such care that it all has real stakes. (Pun only partially intended.) 1980s dystopian writers could never put together anything this nuanced.

“Teatro Anatomico” by Getty Hesse. This is half of an excellent story. Hesse presents this macabre mood piece in a somewhat archaic cadence, most reminiscent of 1920s modernists approximating a florid Victorian style. It works well with its scene, an Early Modern anatomical theater exhibiting a dissection during Carnival, when the dead don’t truly die. I’m a sucker for fantasy with an Early Modern setting. This tale was doing so well up until some male-gaze pseudo-incestuous BDSM creeps into the narrative. It feels like it would be right at home in a 1990 issue of Asimov’s Science Fiction. Oh well.

“Night Haul” by Andrew Crowley. This one, meanwhile, feels like it could have come from a 1989 issue of F&SF. (Or else maybe a tossed-off tale from Stephen King's cocaine days.) It’s the voyage of the Demeter but make it a big rig, complete with CB radio. It's moderately entertaining.

“On the Matter of Homo sapiens” by Kel Coleman. A wonderfully sweet little tale about two robot friends who go geocaching together. An unexpected tearjerker.

“Sugar Steak” by Jenny Kiefer. Absolutely revolting (but ghoulishly entertaining) piece of dental horror. The strength of this story is in the specificity of the descriptions. Made me dry-heave a few times, in a fun way!

“Growths” by Nina Kiriki Hoffman. A sharply described story of growing up different, learning that you can't always rely on your parents, and refusing to make things easier for yourself by giving in and blending with everyone else.

Two poems by Alexandra Elizabeth Honigsberg: “Expedition” and “Shapeshifter.” Of the two, I like the latter best.

“If I Should Fall Behind” by Douglas Smith. Some spoilers: Tumble has the power to jump between branching multiverses of possibility; Piph has been tagging along with him, on the run for six years, ever since he saved her from a boat accident at the summer-camp they shared as foster kids. They're being chased because, unbeknownst to either of them, Tumble's probability jumps are destabilizing the multiverse. This story feels like an artifact of late '60s or early '70s sci-fi, not quite New Wave but clearly inspired by it, moving in an artsier direction with its prose but still telling stories of steely supermen (and the babes who love them) eluding enemy toughs in something approximating the modern day. Not a bad story, but it isn't my favorite thing, either, particularly once Piph's life becomes a plot device. 

We close out this issue with “Crossing the Universe,” a poem by Vanessa Taal. Some nice imagery.

This issue was more of a mixed bag than most from the Thomas era. Several amazing stories, some all-time favorites, but also quite a few tales that felt stale, dated, like leftovers from another time.

Sunday, September 24, 2023

2023 read #104: The Haunting of Tram Car 015 by P. Djèlí Clark.

The Haunting of Tram Car 015 by P. Djèlí Clark
131 pages
Published 2019
Read September 24
Rating: 4 out of 5

It is 1912 in Cairo. The release of djinn and other spirits, and the harnessing of magic, has made Egypt a world power. Cairo is a vast, modern metropolis, populated with diverse people and “boilerplate eunuchs,” crisscrossed by djinn-made aerial trams. Agent Hamed of the Ministry of Alchemy, Enchantments, and Supernatural Entities is accustomed to working alone, but has been assigned a rookie partner, Agent Onsi. They’ve been given a particularly difficult case: the haunting, or possession, of Tram Car 015. Meanwhile, the women of Egypt campaign for the vote, and some machine-people are discovering their own identities.

This is another outstanding, atmospheric outing from the author of Ring Shout. Clark finds new life and fresh energy in his steampunkish world. Haunting itself is brilliantly constructed, laying out the characters, the setting, the situation, and its complications with exemplary and efficient pacing. While many books this length (long novella? short novel?) feel compressed or hurried, Haunting has the rare distinction of feeling like it’s exactly the length it should be. No wasted paragraphs, but also nothing squeezed to fit. The different plot threads all pull together in the end. Wonderful!

Friday, September 22, 2023

2023 read #103: The Long Walk by Milton J. Davis.

The Long Walk by Milton J. Davis
145 pages
Published 2019
Read September 22
Rating: 3 out of 5

You never know what you’ll get with self-published (and, to an extent, small press) books. Sometimes you’ll get a fully polished and professional-grade novel like Exodus 20:3 or Robbergirl. Sometimes you’ll get something full of potential, but needing just a tad more editorial nurturing, like The Worm and His Kings. Sometimes, yes, you’ll get something borderline unreadable. I always DNF those and never review them, because I’m not in the business of tearing down anyone just trying to make a buck from their words. (Capitalism does enough of that for everyone.)

The Long Walk falls around the middle of the self-pubbed spectrum, a bracing story and a fascinating world relayed in flat prose. The writing isn’t bad, by any means, but it serves merely to pull us from A to B. We rarely get the chance to linger, to experience, to feel. Even character deaths pass by in a blink.

Twelve year old Patience de Verteuil leaves Trinidad in the company of her father, Maurice, a scholar and a soldier in a supernatural war. They’ve been summoned to Nicodemus, the Black-founded town in Kansas, at the behest of Harriet Tubman. But things quickly go wrong, and Patience finds herself in the company of other fighters, forced to wield her family’s ancestral bois in the fight against a vast evil. With her new companions, Patience must fight her way across the Reconstruction-era South, pursued by hell hounds, a ghoulish hunter named Cain, and a sinister figure called Jedediah Green.

The story feels a bit like a quest fantasy, with an adventuring party composed of a bard, a healer, and a dance-fighter, and a bit like a superhero narrative, all of it suffused with the righteous fury of history. I think if this were to be remade as a graphic novel, it would be outstanding.

Thursday, September 21, 2023

2023 read #102: Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine, February 1992.

Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine, February 1992 issue (16:2)
Edited by Gardner Dozois
176 pages
Published 1992
Read from September 20 to September 21
Rating: 2 out of 5

Much like the November 1988 and November 1990 issues of IASFM, I sought this one on eBay solely because it has dinosaurs on the cover. I don’t hold high hopes for this month’s cover story, for… reasons. However, IASFM from this era — in my quite limited experience — seemed to feature at least one or two stories that make each issue worthwhile. Fingers crossed for more of those!

Best of all: there's no story from Isaac Asimov in this issue!

Tucked between letters to the editor and a full-page ad, I almost missed the poem that begins this issue: “From: A Child’s Garden of Grammar: Adverbs” by Tom Disch. It reads like a cheap imitation of Shel Silverstein. Kinda hokey but not, like, bad. Though I’m confused why it’s in a sci-fi magazine.

“Sugar’s Blues” by Allen Steele. When last we met Steele, he treated us to the mediocre cloned dinosaur technothriller “Trembling Earth” in the November 1990 IASFM. “Sugar’s Blues” is apparently the third and final tale in a series centered on Diamondback Jacks, a Merritt Island dive bar down the road from Kennedy Space Center. It’s the sort of gator country booze shack where “spacers” go to drink pitchers of Budweiser, play pool, and get into brawls in the distant future of 2023. Steele strains toward a pulp voice befitting his industrial roughnecks-in-space milieu, despite the fact that our narrator is a reporter. Our narrator intervenes in a bar fight, and gets rewarded with an explosive scoop about high-level coverups, the manufacture of memory-enhancing drugs, and general skullduggery in orbit. It’s a competently conveyed story but nothing I found interesting; it’s just manly men in a manly men’s world. The closest thing to a female character is the Vargas pinup painted tits-out on the fuselage of a privatized space shuttle. It’s the sort of sci-fi that Elon Musk’s fanboys read while they touch themselves at night, dreaming of libertarian space exploitation and boundless testosterone. C-

Another Tom Disch poem follows: “From: A Child’s Garden of Grammar: Quotation Marks.” This one ends with a punchline about kids these days and their Walkmens.

“Pickman’s Modem” by Lawrence Watt-Evans. “The title [for this tale] originated during a real-time chat on a computer network,” marvels the editorial introduction. The story begins: “I hadn’t seen Pickman on-line for some time; I thought he’d given up on the computer nets…. The nets will eat you alive if you let them.” Ah, 1992. As someone who first encountered the internet via an orange-on-black monochrome monitor in 1993, this humorous trifle about a Lovecraftian modem stirring a flame-war has a musty, nostalgic charm for me that outshines its other modest qualities. C

“Overlays” by Joel Richards. Another trip to the well of memory-enhancing drugs — clearly this was the sci-fi topic du jour in 1992. This is an atmospheric story set on the Danish island of Fanø, narrated by an aging British biologist who’s summered there for decades. Her first husband, love of her life, was downed in his Hurricane near Farø; she thinks he’s the reason she feels a connection to the cemetery and its monuments to the dead of war. This story nicely pairs the titular “overlays” of invasions and sea level changes that shaped Denmark with the “overlays” of genetic “past-life memory” putatively discovered by a visiting American neurophysiologist. (I always appreciate a title that means more than one thing.) The sci-fi element is a bit silly for the wind-swept mood of the piece; likely it would work better as contemporary fantasy, without all the set-dressings of neuropeptides and newly discovered receptors. Still, the story works well enough as it is. A respectable B

“Gate Crashing” by Jennifer Evans. Oh look, it's a near-future consumer electronics piece. (I almost always detest these.) In a world where interpersonal communication is mediated by customizable “gatekeeper” avatars, our point of view is some shitty dude named Jackson, who’s being a whiny brat because he has to talk to some gatekeepers in his quest to find some girl he saw (but never talked to) at last night's party. As Jackson pines over this hypothetical soulmate, he frets, “What if she turns out to be an absolute bitch[?]” He flips out and punches things when the girl's gatekeeper turns out to be a replica of herself, then somehow gets a date with her anyway. Tedious stuff. F

“Kingdoms in the Sky” by S.P. Somtow. A whole lot of grody tropes get wrapped up together in this one. Antonio, part-Incan son of a Chicago crime boss, gets taken down to Peru for a “business trip.” Unbeknownst to Antonio, his father made a deal with the gods to protect his coca fields, and Antonio himself is to be offered up as a mountaintop sacrifice. Antonio’s mute brother Matt has magical-autistic powers, à la Stephen King, and talks to Antonio in his dreams. It's an overlong story, and on top of everything else, it’s written in an annoying approximation of a young teen’s voice. F+

One last Tom Disch poem, “From: A Child’s Garden of Grammar: Not.” More of that same quasi-Silverstein vibe. Though it makes even less sense that this one is in Asimov’s.

“The Heaven Tree” by Jamil Nasir. This would be some solid ’90s sci-fi, immersive and atmospheric and melancholy, exploring a world where a sexually transmitted virus reverses your aging and turns you into an elfin waif with the mind of a child. Of course, this being the ’90s, we can’t have a good story without some heinous shit going on, and it isn’t hard to guess which direction this one goes. The story performs an uneasy balancing act between that requisite ’90s shock value and the much more interesting meditation on aging, fear, and death at its core. Maybe B-?

“The Virgin and the Dinosaur” by R. Garcia y Robertson. At last, here’s the reason I bought this issue. I don’t trust any story from Garcia y Robertson, who (in my admittedly limited experience) is one of the horniest SFF writers of his generation. He brings a certain Heinleinian smarm to his writing that I don’t enjoy, the vibe that he’s constantly writing one-handed. And with a title like that, I don’t expect good things. Sure enough, the story opens with our point-of-view character Jake watching a tall young redhead slink naked through the Cretaceous greenery. Glad we established our expectations for this one ahead of time, because at its heart, “Virgin” is a novella-length exploration of Jake’s quest to manipulate his uninterested coworker Peg into sex. I’m not a prude by any means, but hetero horniness is so predictable, you know? So rote and unoriginal, so eager to ignore boundaries. Oh, and Peg is still a “virgin,” according to the narrative, because she’s only ever been sexual with women before. Which — what the fuck? It’s a shame, because how often do you get an airship tour of the Late Cretaceous? This could have been a quality story in someone else’s hands — perhaps a 2020s queer author. Once again I have to shake my head at the bad luck that made dinosaur fiction’s peak coincide with the grody 1990s. Can we get a new dinosaur renaissance, pretty please? I’ll be munificent and give this one a D

And that’s it for this issue. No real surprises, just some disappointment that there weren’t more salvageable stories to counter that ’90s stink.

Monday, September 18, 2023

2023 read #101: Dragon’s Blood by Jane Yolen.

Dragon’s Blood by Jane Yolen
245 pages
Published 1982
Read September 18
Rating: 1.5 out of 5

This is middle-grade science-fantasy from Jane Yolen, whom I mostly know from her poetry and original fairy tales for adults. I’d never heard of Dragon’s Blood before I happened upon it in a used book store. A near-contemporary of Alanna: The First Adventure and The Blue Sword, it seems to have had less cultural impact than either of them — though, according to Wikipedia, Yolen herself says the Dragon Pit series is among her best-known and most widely translated work. Either way, I picked it up for two reasons: Yolen’s name, and the scrungkly dragon friend on the cover.

In the deserts of Space Australia — sorry, Austar IV — descendants of convicts live in a caste system beneath the descendants of guards, laboring until they have enough gold to buy out their bond. The place names are all along the lines of The Rokk and Left Forkk; people drink takk and hunt drakks and have names like Balakk and Slakk and Frankkalin. (It gets kind of obnoxious.) The planet’s main claim to fame is its fighting pits, where trained dragons battle and vast sums are bet on the outcome. Young Jakkin, a poor “bonder” laboring as a stallboy at a dragon nursery, wants to get rich and break free of the labors and restrictions of his class. His plan: steal a hatchling dragon and raise it to fight.

Yolen creates a thoroughly unpleasant culture for her Space Australia, whose entire economy consists of dragon-keeping for the men and prostitution in the “Baggeries” for the women. Jakkin's crush Akki is a mysterious girl who works in the dragon nursery instead of a Baggery, much to the disdain of Jakkin's friends. Which isn’t even touching on the system of bondage servitude Jakkin and his fellow bonders are subject to. The bonders all wear bags that they must fill with gold before they can pay off their bond; their overseers can empty their bags for even the slightest infraction. It is heavily implied (in the words of a “master,” but still) that those in bondage somehow lack the drive, discipline, and talent to actually break free of servitude.

It’s 95% Pern, 5% Misty of Chincoteague, all of it slimed up in class and gender hierarchies from a Westerosi fever dream.

I get that it was the 1980s and it was fashionable to write grimy fantasy allegories of real world atrocities, but come on, it’s a chapter book about a boy and his psychically bonded dragon in another galaxy. This level of ’80s grittiness doesn’t feel artistic and meaningful here, it feels cheap and exploitative. Maybe even a bit tacky. (Or would that be takky?)

The story itself is rote. Jakkin gets injured by a shitty overseer, then unexpectedly gets himself a “snatchling” dragon despite the delay. The book gets padded out with a drakk hunt before the training can even begin. When it does, Akki gets involved, they take the yearling to its first fight, etc. Honestly, I would have DNF’d this one if the dragon on the cover hadn’t been so damn cute. Perhaps all of this would have hit different if I’d read it as a kid. Who knows?

2023 read #100: Washington Black by Esi Edugyan.

Washington Black by Esi Edugyan
337 pages
Published 2018
Read from September 15 to September 18
Rating: 4 out of 5

I don’t feel stuck in a reading rut, necessarily, but in recent months I find I’ve been reading a lot of fantasy novels and dinosaur fiction and not much else. I miss the variety of genres and topics I used to read. As a writer, it’s insufficient to read only the genre you write. So when I found this historical fiction novel at my local library, I thought, why not?

It is unsurprisingly excellent, an assured work from the sort of literary author who makes you realize genre writers rarely bother with good prose. Edugyan weaves a marvelous, absorbing descriptive flow and makes it look effortless. She could write rings around most fantasists, even 21st century fantasists.

George Washington Black is born into the horrific conditions of chattel slavery in Barbados. His cruel “master,” Erasmus Wilde, has a scientifically-inclined brother, nicknamed Titch, who arrives with the makings of an aerostat, with which he proposes to make the first aeronautical crossing of the Atlantic. Titch requests eleven year old Wash as his personal and scientific assistant, planning to have Wash along as “ballast” on the trip. Wash discovers a natural talent for drawing, but knows this brief reprieve is not to last.

When family dramas, stoked by their own cruelties, convulse the Wildes, and leave one of their own dead, Wash is blamed. Commandeered by Titch into his aerostat, Wash escapes Barbados in the night, but the balloon doesn’t get them far. Turns out that escaping structures of power and violence isn’t as easy as spinning away in a balloon.

Washington Black is an intimate, subtle examination of one man’s navigation through the structures of white supremacist power, a Bildungsroman of Wash’s maturation against a backdrop of vicious cruelties and ingrained attitudes. Would-be white savior Titch commandeers Wash’s life; years later, a scientist who treats Wash as his intellectual equal nonetheless accepts that Wash’s name will never be given due credit in their shared projects. The book is horrifying and delicate and beautiful. I quite liked that Wash is never under any narrative pressure to forgive anyone. Rather, he is driven by an almost scientific need to understand, even — or perhaps especially — to understand those who have wronged, used, abandoned, and brutalized him.

“We had been estranged from the potential of our own bodies,” Wash narrates in the coda, “from the revelation of what our bodies and minds could accomplish.”

Friday, September 15, 2023

2023 read #99: The Worm and His Kings by Hailey Piper.

The Worm and His Kings by Hailey Piper
116 pages
Published 2020
Read from September 14 to September 15
Rating: 3 out of 5

Hailey Piper is highly regarded as an indie horror author; nowadays she also seems to be enjoying a touch of mainstream success, relatively speaking. I’ve wanted to read her oeuvre for a while. I bought this book maybe a year ago, but wasn’t drawn into it at the time. The book feels like indie press work, in both good and bad ways. It takes on subjects that big presses would shy away from, but (especially in the first couple chapters) the paragraphs are often disjointed, the descriptions often flat. The opening is a big exposition dump that tries to explain too much all at once. Some more editing could help it immensely.

In all fairness, there’s a lot to establish here in an abbreviated space. It’s 1990 in New York City. Monique Lane, homeless thanks to her family’s bigotry and the relentless rent-hikes of capitalism, is searching for her missing girlfriend, Donna. For three months now, ever since Donna disappeared, more unhoused women have been vanishing every day. Rumors link the disappearances to a cloaked monster dubbed Gray Hill, which shambles through abandoned tunnels, ten feet tall, armed with enormous hands and raptor feet. And then there's the empty place. And the Worm. And the cult of the Worm. And a song to pierce the universe.

Some spoilers ahead.

I did adjust to the rhythms of the prose eventually. I quite like the worldbuilding Piper does here, presenting a cosmic horror once summoned by the descendants of dinosaurs, who are retroactively undone by the Worm after they displease it. The raptor-clawed being is the last of the original summoners, though other creatures from her timeline linger in the sunless depths. (Not enough for me to classify this as dinosaur fiction, but I appreciate it.) The cultists below the city — pampered and privileged but craving more, craving kingship even at the cost of sacrificing the world to unspeakable horrors — sing to summon the Worm once again. Which honestly isn’t that different from real life politics in the 2020s. Allegory!

There’s so much potential here, in need of just a little polish. If Piper’s craft has grown alongside her reputation, I’m excited to check out her subsequent books.

Thursday, September 14, 2023

2023 read #98: Space Opera by Catherynne M. Valente.

Space Opera by Catherynne M. Valente
295 pages
Published 2018
Read from September 12 to September 14
Rating: 4 out of 5

This is another book I’ve avoided for a while. My ex read this maybe a year after we both read The Refrigerator Monologues; I’d introduced him to Valente’s writing, but he gravitated toward the books of hers I hadn’t read. My ex devoured and adored Space Opera, and I always meant to read it afterward. But my time with my ex was also a dark age in my reading life, and I just never got around to it until that whole era imploded in a shitshow of trauma I don’t need to be airing out in a book review. In the years since, I’ve kept Space Opera on my to-read list, but never got any further with it than that.

My first and lasting impression of this book is the sensation of being blasted in the eyeballs by a hyperactive firehose of too-clever-by-half prose that never lets up and never lets you breathe. Valente’s words can waltz into precious on occasion, but this book rockets directly into exhausting. It reads like you gave Terry Pratchett amphetamines, all the candy he could eat, and a fistful of glowsticks. (Or maybe the apposite comparison is Douglas Adams? I don't know, I haven't read him yet.)

I love the characters and the concept. Decibel Jones is a glittery pastiche of every glam rock superstar, rolled in a fine coating of Gen X burnout. Yoinking Decibel and his former bandmate Oort St. Ultraviolet into space for a win-or-get-annihilated Eurovision contest beyond the stars is brilliant. But that narrative voice makes it hard for me to stay engaged for even a chapter at a time.

Like, I appreciate a unique voice for a story. It’s all too rare in SFF. Taken by itself, almost every page here scintillates. Three hundred pages of baroque run-on sentences, now — each stuffed with six different pop cultural allusions and eight sci-fi puns and unrelenting technicolor hyperbole — that adds up. The prose certainly reinforces Valente’s thesis statement that “the opposite of fascism is theatre,” and I approve of that idea. Give us more glitter, more queerness, more lushly explosive orgiastic life! It’s just that my attention span wasn’t fully up to the task this time around.

But Valente, at her best, is almost unmatched when it comes to framing the grief, the rage, the hope, the scale, the fragility, the helplessness, the transcendence of being alive, of being human in this fucked up and pointless but somehow still worthwhile universe. The emotional climax and coda wrecked me in all the best possible ways.

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

2023 read #97: The Ojja-Wojja by Magdalene Visaggio and Jenn St-Onge.

The Ojja-Wojja: A Horror-Mystery, or Whatever by Magdalene Visaggio and Jenn St-Onge
189 pages
Published 2023
Read from September 11 to September 12
Rating: 3.5 out of 5

I hadn’t heard of or known anything about this graphic novel until my partner R randomly found it while browsing the library. Fae enjoyed it enough that I wanted to try it out afterward.

This is a sweet, wholesome middle-grade paranormal adventure following two girls, Valentine and Lanie, who investigate local ghost stories for a school project and end up uncovering way more than they bargained for (and possibly summon a horror from another dimension along the way). Val is autistic and Lanie is trans; both get bullied and marginalized for who they are, but also find support and validation. Much like ParaNorman, the plot hinges on generations of bullying, trauma, and forced conformity, all in the name of puritanical control. It’s a solid kids-on-bikes mystery, which is always welcome.

I’m somewhere in the nebulous fluid regions of the gender spectrum myself, and most likely some flavor of autistic, both realizations I reached in my late 30s (though I knew both deep down in my heart when I was 19, I just didn’t have the words for it at the time). I immediately cherished both Lanie and Val as characters, though I felt that their representation here ranged at times into stereotype. Val describing her social interactions as an “algorithm,” which she followed while pretending to be a robot, felt especially trite. (My autistic teen self pretended to be a raptor, damn it. I had taste.)

That note aside, this is a charming book, full of lovely art, excellent character design, and an affecting storyline.

Monday, September 11, 2023

2023 read #96: The World We Make by N. K. Jemisin.

The World We Make by N. K. Jemisin
357 pages
Published 2022
Read from September 7 to September 11
Rating: 4.5 out of 5

I’d been avoiding this book, consciously or not, for a while. The first book in this duology, The City We Became, was one of my favorite books of all time. I read it early in the pandemic, shortly after libraries had opened back up, but when the species-level trauma we were experiencing was still strange and new. I found myself unwilling to read the follow-up volume in part because of those associations, both with that period of time and with the person I cohabitated with back then. And looming over everything was the apocalyptic realization that Jemisin sums up in her acknowledgements: “The New York I wrote about in the first book of this series no longer exists.” COVID has forever altered the urban social landscape. The eldritch horrors of fascism and white supremacy have exploded outward in all directions, throwing tentacles into every area of life. As Jemisin goes on to say: “I realized my creative energy was fading under the onslaught of reality.”

I also avoided World because I knew I’d be crying. A lot.

I was already crying in the prologue, not because anything had happened in the narrative but because of the ache and fierce love Jemisin weaves into her description of that old, already passed away NYC. By no means can I claim to have ever been a New Yorker, but I spent enough time orbiting the city, dipping the occasional toe into its momentum, marching in protests and slipping through museums and attending basement concerts, that I feel that same love in my chest. “I need the sidewalks rising to meet my feet the way bodega cats lift their asses when you knuckle near their tales,” narrates Neek, the newly chosen avatar of the city. That was enough to spring my waterworks; it didn’t abate much from there.

Cities are the apotheosis of our species: diverse, energetic, creative, an ecology of thought and life and love, a collective that is more than the sum of individuals. Xenophobia, Christian nationalism, white supremacy, fascism — these spew rage at cities because they hate what it means to be truly and fully human. It makes all too much sense that any eldritch horror bent on killing the heart of a city would weaponize gentrification and real estate speculation. Hell, looking at the world in 2023, is any of this even fantasy anymore? (Maybe the tentacles are still fantasy, but considering the Republican party, I’m not so sure anymore.)

If any aspect of this book could be said to be a step down from The City We Became, it’s the pacing. What seem to be pivotal twists or setbacks get resolved by the end of each chapter. Each borough avatar faces a crisis and solves it, chapter after chapter. This isn’t that different from the structure of the first book, looking back on it, but it feels slightly creakier this time around. It feels a bit like a string of vignettes rather than a cohesive novel. And before you realize it, suddenly it’s the runup to the finale.

All that aside, there's nothing wrong with a book where the good guys keep winning and we get to hang out with some cool characters — the forces of good face enough setbacks in the real world as it is. It's always a fuck-yeah moment when the City flexes its power over some white supremacist shitheads. The real world needs way more of this energy. That need, in the end, is what made this book so hard to read with a dry eye.

Saturday, September 9, 2023

2023 read #95: The Ultimate Dinosaur, edited by Byron Preiss and Robert Silverberg.*

The Ultimate Dinosaur: Past • Present • Future, edited by Byron Preiss and Robert Silverberg*
343 pages
Published 1992
Read from September 7 to September 9
Rating: 2 out of 5

* Denotes a reread.

It’s impossible to imagine a book like this getting published any time but the early 1990s.

It’s a hefty coffee-table tome that mixes pop science essays on aspects of dinosaur paleontology with short stories from many of the top names in 1980s sci-fi. You’ll find an entire generation of Discovery Channel-famous paleontologists — Philip Currie, Sankar Chatterjee, Catherine Forster — cheek by jowl with the likes of Harry Harrison, Connie Willis, and Ray Bradbury. There are also sumptuous illustrations (though not enough) from Doug Henderson, William G. Stout, and Wayne D. Barlowe, among others. 

The result is both a coffee-table book too sparsely illustrated to make a good coffee-table book, and an anthology too unwieldy to read with any comfort. But there was money behind this project, that’s for sure. Bantam Books expected to make bank off of it. Retail price was $35 — in 1992 money. I doubt we’ll ever see its like again.

Which is a shame. Why’d the heyday of dinosaur fiction have to happen in the nineties? It truly was one of the grodier eras of sci-fi.

The essays here are predictably dated. I’ll be honest, I only skimmed most of them. As expected, Sankar Chatterjee trots out his usual “birds secretly evolved from crocodylomorphs in the Triassic, I swear” routine. There’s an entire chapter dedicated to Marsh and Cope’s Bone Wars. Other chapters offer little beyond beginner stuff, like “bird-hipped vs. lizard-hipped” and so on. Paleontology has undergone several revolutions since the early ’90s, and it doesn’t seem like much of the nonfiction end of this book is worth revisiting.

The stories in this book, however, had as much influence on my early writing as Jurassic Park and Raptor Red combined. I first encountered The Ultimate Dinosaur sometime around 1993, as a 10 year old prowling unsupervised through the stacks of the Amarillo Public Library. I read most of them far too young to understand half of what was going on. But rereading them now, the first time I’ve read these stories all in sequence, has been a process of rediscovering ancient core memories. As a 17 year old in the Y2K era, I titled a story “Surrey @ Midnight” in clumsy, unconscious tribute to “Siren Song at Midnight.” At 19, one of my first attempts at non-linear storytelling was almost identical in structure to “Major League Triceratops.” And of course “Herding with the Hadrosaurs,” via nearly three decades of convoluted evolution, is the distant origin of my own Timeworld setting (see my story “Across Gondwana’s Heart” in HyphenPunk).

However, as an adult, I’ve found that dinosaur stories are seldom good. Have any of the yarns here held up?

“Crocamander Quest” by L. Sprague de Camp. I read and reviewed this one recently, in de Camp’s time-hunter collection Rivers of Time. (That book, bad as it is, was what inspired me to reread this tome at long last.) In that review, I said, “On one hand, I always had a soft spot for this story because it’s one of the few time-tourist narratives that takes us before the classic ‘Age of Dinosaurs’: Reggie [Rivers] and Chandra Aiyar bring their charges to the Triassic…. On the other hand, this is the tale of their firm’s first and only time safari with a ‘mixed’ company of women and men, which reads just about as badly as you might guess.” I’ll be generous and say C-

“The Feynman Saltation” by Charles Sheffield. This one is a serviceable near-future medical sci-fi piece about a dying artist who gets an experimental cancer treatment and begins to dream scenes from the geological past. There's also a subplot about his doctor beginning to date his sister — which is a bit weird, right? For its time, this is perfectly adequate, though it has little to do with dinosaurs in the end. Maybe C+

“Siren Song at Midnight” by Dave Wolverton. Ah, our first foray into paleo-DNA. In the over-exploited Earth of the nearish future, vast fleets trawl plankton from the sea while, in the deeps below, genetically-engineered “Sirens” fight to keep themselves from starving. It's the kind of intensely nineties future that's full of thumbed commlinks, holo-broadcasts, jacking into the computer network, mem-set, and a capitalized Alliance. BYU alum Wolverton, straining toward his own ideas of Cartagena atmosphere, makes sure to let you know that a Colombian orderly smells of “sweat and beans.” So why is this story in The Ultimate Dinosaur? Our narrator Josephina Elegante has a pet Euparkeria, but otherwise paleo-DNA doesn't play much of a role in this story beyond vibes. Today this reads like reheated leftovers; maybe it seemed better fresh? D

“Rhea’s Time” by Paul Preuss. This story is narrated in the form of a medical case history; the neurologist-cum-hypnotist narrating it can’t help but emphasize the “striking” beauty of Rhea K., as well as the fact that she isn’t wearing a bra in a mountain climbing photo. That feels accurate to male doctors in any era, I suppose. The big twist was pretty obvious to me early on, but in case you don’t want spoilers from a 30+ year old short story, look away: Rhea’s ski accident scrambled her brain waves into recreating the tectonic history of the Earth over the course of twelve months. I imagine Preuss saw the standard “geological history condensed into a calendar year” comparison and thought, “What if this were a hot comatose redhead in a hospital?” The concept is mildly interesting, and there are bits of poetry to be found in the juxtaposition, but the good is outweighed by the narrative choices. D

“Shakers of the Earth” by Gregory Benford. We’ve had two “technobabble in the brain creates subjective experiences of Deep Time” stories, so of course it’s time for our second paleo-DNA story! (Writers in the ’90s had such a limited palette of tropes, didn’t they?) For the maximum ’90s experience, this one gives us a viewpoint from a young Japanese woman playing it cool despite the way some gruff American paleontologist “quickened her body.” I debated whether I should stick an eye-roll emoji here and be done with it. The second half of the story, set five decades later, with cloned Seismosaurus giving rides across Kansas Sauropod Park, is fine, but overall this story is just… there. D+

“Hunters in the Forest” by Robert Silverberg. Desperately conventional “23rd century society has eliminated risk, so a man must travel back in time to Feel Something” bullshit, paired with one of the earliest manic pixie dream girl characters I ever happened to read. I loved this story when I was 10. I’m pretty sure you’d have to be 10 to appreciate it. D

“In the Late Cretaceous” by Connie Willis. Out of every genre writer active in 1992, you’d expect Willis to deliver a solid, well-researched time travel yarn, wouldn’t you? Alas, that is not what we have here. Instead, we get a mildly amusing burlesque of academia, and a still-relevant satire of buzzword-spewing “consultants” hired to slash departments and destroy higher education. Willis manages to maintain loose allegorical parallels to dinosaurs, mainly through the names of the characters (such as the sharp-toothed consultant Dr. King) and recurring motifs of extinction, predation, and evolution. This went far over my head as a tween. Rereading it now, I find it adequately entertaining and fully Willisian, albeit well outside the scope of what I’d expect to read in a dino anthology. B-

“Major League Triceratops” by Barry N. Malzberg. God, I thought this story was the artsiest shit ever when I was a tween. I didn’t understand half of it at the time, but I fully recycled its nonlinear structure (and the Dollar General Cormac McCarthy affectation of leaving out the quotation marks) in my late teen years. Rereading it now, you get slimed by ’90s excess from the very first page. We open with a grody hetero age-gap relationship and the au courant fetishization of a part-Japanese woman, who knows the man doesn’t listen to her. To better condescend to her, he shapes his words into haikus. And then she asks that they go home to fuck. Beyond that, this story tries really hard to be literary, spitting stream of consciousness couplings that sometimes even work, but more often trip over themselves into grandiloquent yammering about some white dude feeling unfulfilled ennui even in the latest Cretaceous. Every man here is serious and existential, every woman air-headed and horny. (One of the women is actually named Muffy.) This was what pretended to be high sci-fi literature at the time, I suppose. Glints of promising prose aren’t enough to save this from its utter lack of having anything interesting to say. All those years I spent emulating this style were built on nothing but muck. D-

“Herding with the Hadrosaurs” by Michael Bishop. More than anything else, this story (and its accompanying artwork) has dominated my writing subconscious for the last thirty years. This isn’t to say it was good. I was absolutely overwhelmed by this story as a wee tween; I spent an inordinate amount of time poring over the painting of a bow hunter, gone mountain-man in the Cretaceous, smoking a pipe atop a dead Corythosaurus. My Timeworld setting has passed through countless permutations over the decades, but ultimately it all goes back to this story and that image. More so than any other story here, I’ve revisited this one over the years; I knew ahead of time that it doesn’t stand up under the weight of nostalgia and adolescent fixation. It feels tossed off on a deadline. Our narrator’s parents are named Pierce and Eulogy in the first paragraph; in the next he writes that their loss “pierces me yet,” and that this story serves as their “eulogy.” That’s some first draft placeholder shit, you know? But that didn’t matter to my younger self. I saw myself and my brother, itinerant and often living in a car, in the siblings at the center of this story, orphaned when their dad drives their New Studebaker wagon through the time-slip into the Late Cretaceous. I yearned to escape our father and follow corythosaurs on their migrations. And honestly, out of all the fiction here (with the exception of Connie Willis’ story above), “Hardosaurs” has aged with the most dignity. Though maybe that’s my nostalgia talking; it certainly has its share of iffy business. B-

“Besides a Dinosaur, Whatta Ya Wanna Be When You Grow Up?” by Ray Bradbury. Bradbury, of course, was a big name to score for any anthology — big enough that he skated into The Ultimate Dinosaur with its only reprint, a story originally published in 1983. It’s exactly as Bradburyan as you’d expect: Midwestern fabulism rooted in an idyll of white middle class 20th century childhood, full of the tender-sweet bruises of loss and that childhood summer night feeling that nothing is in your control. B+

“Unnatural Enemy” by Poul Anderson. Rote “nature red in tooth and claw” stuff, nothing especially interesting. In typically Andersonian fashion, this story grunts and throbs with masculine fantasies of mating season, of battling other males, the victor rutting as he pleases. (Even here in the Late Cretaceous seas, every named character is male.) It could almost be one of Anderson’s turgid Viking fantasies. I will note that this was my first exposure to fiction told from the perspective of prehistoric animals, pre-dating my first read of Raptor Red by a couple years. Raptor Red is a feminist masterpiece in comparison. D-

“Dawn of the Endless Night” by Harry Harrison. Standard stuff about intelligent, society-building reptiles struck down by the terminal Cretaceous asteroid. Nothing much to note beyond that, aside from my distaste for the old trope of “this alien society was biologically engineered into its hierarchy.” At least it’s a step up from the previous story. C-

“The Green Buffalo” by Harry Turtledove. Closing out with the de rigueur tale of a living dinosaur in the Wild West. Of course Cope and Marsh are involved. More indirectly than they were in Sharon N. Farber’s “The Last Thunder Horse West of the Mississippi” (read and reviewed here), but still, this is basically the same story, retreading the same plot with less panache four years later. The way Joe and the other hunters pass from dusty 19th century Wyoming into the verdant Cretaceous found its way into a lot of my teenage time-slip writing, though. C

And that’s it for the stories! Overall, about what I expected. I’ve carted this copy with me through many moves over the last two decades — it still has the sticker from the used bookstore where I purchased it in 2003. It feels weird to have revisited it at long last. Nostalgic, of course, but also the usual icky feeling stirred by so much of ’90s sci-fi. I’m definitely carting it along with me in future moves, too, though who knows if I’ll ever read it again. Maybe I’ll revisit “Herding with the Hadrosaurs” again in a few years.

Friday, September 8, 2023

2023 read #94: Rivers of Time by L. Sprague de Camp.

Rivers of Time by L. Sprague de Camp
259 pages
Published 1993
Read from September 7 to September 8
Rating: 1.5 out of 5

This is a sequence of stories narrated by Reginald Rivers, time-traveling big game hunter and guide, a character best known from “A Gun for Dinosaur.” The series was revived at the start of the ’90s thanks to the anthology / coffee table book combo The Ultimate Dinosaur, a strange beast that I’ll be reviewing soon.

Rivers begins with a poem de Camp published in 1968, “Faunas.” It’s possibly a sonnet, definitely rhyming, and about what you’d expect from 1960s sci-fi poetry. I can’t tell if it’s meant as epigraph or part of this collection, but I’ll treat it as part of the collection.

“A Gun for Dinosaur” (1956, revised version published 1993). One of the classic dinosaur safari tales, which I read and reviewed a geological era ago in the Martin H. Greenberg Dinosaurs anthology. Because it’s been almost a decade since I last read it, I went ahead and read it afresh. It’s fine, I guess? All the casual sexism and low-key racism you’d expect from a midcentury de Camp joint. There are more thorough descriptions of guns than of the Cretaceous fauna. But it’s crisply written and goes down with minimal fuss. That's de Camp's main selling-point as an aithor: his baseline is reliably readable and (usually) mildly entertaining.

“The Cayuse” (1993). Almost four decades after writing the original Reginald Rivers tale, de Camp comes back with somehow even more casual racism and sexism, which immediately soured me on this one. The “Cayuse” of the title is a new off-road vehicle (appropriating the name of the people) that Rivers’ new client, an automobile magnate, insists they bring with them into the Cretaceous, resulting in predictable mishaps. Aside from that, and a Parasaurolophus phallus, this story is more of the same, even returning to the same time period as “A Gun for Dinosaur.” Kind of blurs together with the first one. Shrug?

“Crocamander Quest” (1992). I first read this story about three decades ago, in the previously mentioned Ultimate Dinosaur book. On one hand, I always had a soft spot for this story because it’s one of the few time-tourist narratives that takes us before the classic “Age of Dinosaurs”: Reggie and Chandra Aiyar bring their charges to the Triassic, when early dinos were just one burgeoning group of archosaurs among many. On the other hand, this is the tale of their firm’s first and only time safari with a “mixed” company of women and men, which reads just about as badly as you might guess.

“Miocene Romance” (1993). To follow up on that note, here we have a young woman who’s an “animal rights fanatic” stowing away to be a nuisance on a hunt. She ends up seducing the son of the Texas oil magnate bankrolling the trip. I’d had high hopes for this one — how often do you ever read a Cenozoic time safari? — but it was my least favorite so far. So many lecherous comments, so much oozy misogyny, and at one point the n-word gets tossed into the mix. Blech all around.

“The Synthetic Barbarian” (1992). That last piece disgruntled me, and this one — in which Rivers takes two well-heeled ignoramuses to trophy-hunt in the Oligocene — does nothing to improve the vibe. Both clients are quietly racist, and one wants to live his “Viking barbarian” fantasies by bow-hunting brontothere. De Camp adds a pinch of homophobia, because why wouldn’t he? 

“The Satanic Illusion” (1992). A smug pair of fundamentalists pay Rivers to hop them through time to help them “disprove” evolution; as is the way of fundies, they refuse to see what’s in front of them and continue to insist on their particular interpretation of Genesis. This story is a slight improvement, in that I’m mad at the characters and not at de Camp. Still, I’d rather just read fun time adventures with neither fundies nor musty weird 20th century bigotry. Is that too much to ask here?

“The Big Splash” (1992). A coterie of scientists hires our guides to take them to the end of the Cretaceous to settle the extinction debate once and for all. This could have been a step up for this book — the terminal Cretaceous extinction is rote material for fiction, but at least it’s straightforward enough to discourage de Camp’s casual bigotry — but of course we can’t have nice things. (The time safari’s head camp boss, a Black man named — wait for it — Beauregard Black, refuses to accompany them on this mission, and de Camp burdens him with an especially Twainian dialect. Ugh.) I’m just speeding through these at this point to get to the end and be done.

“The Mislaid Mastodon” (1993). An indigenous non-profit wants to repopulate modern times with Pleistocene megafauna, and hires Rivers to help capture a mastodon. De Camp gives us the usual ’90s white author treatment of an indigenous character, naming him Norman Blackelk and repeatedly emphasizing the color of his skin at every opportunity. Inevitably, Blackelk gets talked into performing a “ghost dance” in a last-ditch effort to bring a suitable mastodon close to the time chamber. Otherwise this is another unremarkable tale in a book of quite repetitive stories.

“The Honeymoon Dragon” (1993). Oh, hey, with that title, wanna bet which ethnicity de Camp broadly pantomimes in this story? I expected Japanese, but de Camp keeps us on our toes by introducing an indigenous Australian scientist. (If you wondered if Dr. Algernon Mulgaru would bring along a hand-whittled boomerang, he does, because what else would a white author have him do?) This time Rivers and his wife Brenda are the tourists, popping into the Australian Pleistocene via the time chamber newly opened down under. I appreciate some good Diprotodon and Megalania action, but like all too many stories in this collection, the narration barely gives us any immersion in Deep Time.

And that’s that. Overall, disappointing but not especially surprising. Somehow the story published in the 1950s was one of the least casually bigoted entries of the lot. 

Thursday, September 7, 2023

2023 read #93: Binti by Nnedi Okorafor.

Binti by Nnedi Okorafor
93 pages
Published 2015
Read from September 6 to September 7
Rating: 3 out of 5

Binti is the first of the Himba people to be accepted into the galaxy’s prestigious Oomza University. Himba folk never leave their Namib homeland, however, let alone travel between the stars, so by leaving in the dead of night to follow her dreams into the university, Binti has cut herself off from her family, her friends, her community. Worse still, she finds herself in the midst of a conflict between the pale Khoush people of her own world and the deadly, jellyfish-like Meduse.

This is a promising novella, humming with potential, filled with fascinating worldbuilding and detail, weaving deep mathematics and destinies. There are starships grown from shrimp! And we always need more stories that incorporate the repatriation of remains from museums into their plots.

Unfortunately, Okorafor’s prose is uneven, wavering from good to mechanical on the same page. Certain lines were awkward enough to snap my always-delicate concentration: “I could hear the [other Meduse], their near substantial bodies softly rustling as their transparent domes filled with and released the gas they breathed back in.” At its worst, the prose feels like a first draft. The pacing, too, sometimes makes Binti feel more like an outline — Big Emotional Loss goes here, fill in the groundwork for it later.

I’m intrigued enough to check the next two out of the library. Fingers crossed they feel a bit more realized than this first novella.

Tuesday, September 5, 2023

2023 read #92: Dinosaur Sanctuary: Volume 3 by Itaru Kinoshita.

Dinosaur Sanctuary: Volume 3 by Itaru Kinoshita
Research consultant: Shin-ichi Fujiwara
Translated by John Neal
198 pages
Published 2021 (English translation published 2023)
Read September 5
Rating: 4 out of 5

Volumes one and two of the Dinosaur Sanctuary manga were among my favorite pieces of dinosaur fiction. They balanced a straightforward tale of zookeepers caring for prehistoric animals in a struggling wildlife park with a light helping of interpersonal drama. It’s a simple, winsome combination in a field all too often burdened with alien parasites and magic kung-fu. Truly, this is all dinosaur fiction ever needed to give me, and it so rarely meets even this minimum standard. Not even Jurassic World — ostensibly a movie about an operational dinosaur zoo — bothered to give us anything like this, to its shame.

Volume 3 offers few surprises and little variation on the formula. Which isn’t really a bad thing with a story this dialed-in on what I would like to see. New characters — specialist dino-keepers in different enclosures — keep things fresh as Suzume-chan rotates through their departments during this next stage of her training.

For the most part, Kinoshita emphasizes the dinosaurs and the caretaking aspects of life at Enoshima Dinoland. The little human dramas mostly recede out of sight. Admittedly, the main characters are little more than archetypes, so perhaps it’s best to let the dinosaurs — and the fantastic art — take over. That said, the side story “Dinosaur Fans Forever!” is a sweet, moving little interlude, possibly the best self-contained story arc so far in Sanctuary.

2023 read #91: The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, January/February 2023.

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, January / February 2023 issue (144:1-2)
Edited by Sheree Renée Thomas
258 pages
Published 2023
Read from August 20 to September 5
Rating: 4 out of 5

Awkward timing…

So. After the August 1990 issue of F&SF, I needed a palate-cleanser. What better way to rinse out the rancid aftertaste of the ’90s than with an issue from the best era of F&SF?

Halfway through reading this issue, I learned that F&SF had inadvertently accepted a story by a known white supremacist author, and (so the word initially went) wouldn’t walk back the publication upon receiving this information. It was a hugely disappointing development that negatively impacted my view of the magazine.

But as so often happens with these online cacophonies, a bunch of (mostly white) opportunists dog-piled on editor Sheree Renée Thomas, a Black woman who (obviously) would not deliberately platform a Nazi — instead of going after the actual Nazi in question, or the publisher who initially refused to pull the story. Thomas has published more Black and queer authors during her brief tenure than the rest of the magazine’s seventy-plus years put together. As many Black authors have pointed out, Thomas deserved grace and the benefit of the doubt — and received neither from all too many internet activists.

Eventually, the publisher — the one with the real power at F&SF — begrudgingly agreed not to publish the piece and made a half-hearted apology through a proxy. I fear some sort of professional reprisal against Thomas, who, again, has been the best editor in the magazine’s 75 year history. Even worse: white supremacists are already threatening violence, because terrorism has always been a tool of white supremacy.

So it was with some conflicted feelings that I (after a hiatus of a couple weeks) read the back half of this issue.

“Cowboy Ghost Dads Always Break Your Heart” by Stefan Slater. Absolutely killer title for an ethereal tearjerker of a story. As someone who’s often felt see-through, this one hit me right in the chest. Plus: ghost T. rex! Excellent.

“A Creation of Birds” by Tegan Moore. A languid, surreal, occasionally unnerving journey through an evocative afterlife. Much to my liking, there are birds everywhere. All the women Rose meets have a Secret, a bird whose name becomes theirs; Rose’s is a Hoopoe. (I’ve often mentioned how much I want more bird-centric fantasy.) But all is not well beneath the pleasant, empty, banal small talk affected by the other bird-named women. Something (or someone) is tearing the bloody heart out of Secrets, and the others don’t seem to like that Rose keeps getting called back by her mother’s memories. The posthumous murder mystery is less compelling to me than the setting and its mutable unreality — but, of course, the two quickly prove intertwined. Overall, I found this novelette most enjoyable.

“Dzherelo (The Source)” is a poem by R. B. Lemberg, author of The Four Profound Weaves, one of my faborite books. It is fully as compelling as you would hope.

“Floating on the Stream that Brings from the Fount” by Prashanth Srivatsa. As a teenage sci-fi writer, I had the misfortune to read one of those “how to write and sell a novel” self-help books. One bit of advice was particularly etched into my brain: magic systems rooted in creativity, said the book, were old-hat, tiresome, on the same level as “it was all a dream.” No editor would ever want to read your book if the setting’s special magic was worked by singing, or writing, or dancing. That admonishment sank so deep into my teenage brain that, not only do I avoid creativity-magic a quarter century later, I actually have to remind myself that it's okay when someone else uses it. I had to fight that internalized skepticism to get into this novelette, a sprawling space opera set in a galactic Empire where stories are fed into an all-important Engine to create starship fuel. Captain Draupadi is dispatched by the Empire on the Marammat to hunt for a lost Library said to exist in the far edge of the galaxy. The Library is rumored to hold enough Old Earth stories to power the Engine for three centuries. But the loyalties of the motley crew are far from alignment — least of all Draupadi’s. The concept of a monolithic entity squeezing creativity into a product is reminiscent of Ai Jiang’s excellent I AM AI. Clearly, there can be life left in any trope — so long as you have something interesting and relevant to say with it. Quite good.

“The Past Is a Dream (The Launch of a Blacktopia)” by Maurice Broaddus. This story is an oral history of the namesake character of Broaddus’ Astra Black series, which I haven’t read. An oral history format for the backstory of a character I’ve never encountered feels like a double dose of narrative distance, an emotional arm's length. But this is Broaddus, so the setting — and how he links it to our modern colonialist-capitalist world — is compelling, with his usual mix of humor, a righteous stand against exploitative injustice, and classic funk references.

So, it was right in between these stories that I learned that F&SF had accepted that piece by a known Nazi author; the retraction wouldn’t be made public for a full week, while the publisher dragged his feet and let Sheree Renée Thomas face the outcry without support. That isn’t the fault of the authors here, of course. It isn’t Thomas’ fault, either. It does sour my opinion on F&SF as an institution, especially when you consider how many heinous authors it published without equivalent protest during its lengthy history. Only the Black woman editor got singled out, for some strange reason…

“To Give Moon Milk to a Lover” by Madalena Daleziou. A wondrous and lovely tale of moons and magic inspired by Greek folklore, full of herbs and self-discovery and delicate glints of feeling. Excellent.

Two poems by Beth Cato and Rhonda Parrish: “The Deal” and “Lucky Shot.” Of the two, I liked “The Deal” best.

“The Bucket Shop Job” by David D. Levine. This is a tale of illegal deals and backroom baits-and-switches set in the industrial wastelands of Titan. Our narrator Kane, stranded on Titan with no way to afford a ticket out, lives in the refinery stink and makes his living with his fists. Imagine the libertarian space utopias of Heinlein, but reevaluate them from the perspective of the proletariat indentured and forced to labor off their corporate oxygen debt, and give them a not-quite-noir flavor of space-tommyguns and organized crime. I dig where this novelette is coming from, but I never quite gelled with it. Quippy heists never were my favorite trope, not even when paired with low-gravity fisticuffs and a socialist ethos. Honestly, this just goes to show the quality of the Thomas era of F&SF. This would have been a standout story in any given issue from the Ferman or Van Gelder eras. Here, it just recedes into the background excellence.

“Oracle” by Morgan L. Ventura. Haunting, lyrical, brief microfic. Gorgeous.

“Sis’ Bouki: the Hyena Gifts” by Rob Cameron is a staggering standout of a poem, one of the very best I’ve ever read in F&SF.

“Off the Map” by Dane Kuttler. It’s especially harrowing to read this near-future tale of corporate-bureaucratic “family values” now, as right-wing authoritarians around the country continue to innovate new ways to destroy queer and BIPOC families and cycle their children into the prison-industrial complex — and as real estate grifters profit in the aftermath of climate catastrophes. A gripping story that doesn’t go where you expect.

“Save Me, Sister, You Said” is a poem by Gerri Leen, retelling (and reframing) the story of Ariadne and the Minotaur. Quite good.

“Persephone’s Children” by C. B. Channell. This mythological retelling reframes Melinoë as a moody goth teenager who reluctantly accompanies Persephone up to the sunlit world to hang out with her half-brother Dionysus — who, in the way of gods, is up to something shitty. The prose skews a bit YA. Not my cup of tea, but I didn’t dislike it.

“Best, Last, Only” by Robert Reed. A novella in full late ’90s mode, a sprawling depiction of a vast starship older than any galaxy, technological immortality, recreational cannibalism, and alien beings resembling Quetzalcoatlus imbued with boundless arrogance. Tens of thousands of years pass; species and invasions rise and fall. I’ve never read any of Reed’s Great Ship stories, but Reed is enough of a professional to convey the setting’s strangeness and scale without requiring familiarity with what went before. That imagery is the main strength of this story, which doesn’t offer much in the realm of emotional connection. Still, a fine experience that brought me back to being a teen, enthralled by the rococo vastness of galaxy-spanning stories fashionable at the time.

And that’s it. Another strong entry from what remains F&SF’s finest era. I’ve debated whether to continue to support this magazine after glimpsing the cavalier attitude behind the scenes, but I continue to believe in Sheree Renée Thomas, at any rate. So far she hasn’t let me down.

2023 read #90: Every Poem a Potion, Every Song a Spell by Stephanie Parent.

Every Poem a Potion, Every Song a Spell by Stephanie Parent
99 pages
Published 2022
Read September 5
Rating: 4 out of 5

I hit a bit of a reading skid there. I was trying to do more with my kid before summer ended, and then some awful things happened at one of my favorite periodicals (which I’ll touch on in a later review). So I haven’t had the time or the heart to read much at all these last two weeks.

This is a lovely collection of poems that explores both the darkness and the magic of fairy tales. In “shades of darkness and blood,” Parent explores the cunning and secrecy required to survive as a woman in patriarchal society: the looming violence from wolves and men, the narrative of inferiority and expectation of submission, the steady suffocation of her own desires. Even the most dutiful and demure girl might lust for a taste of blood.

Eroticism and bloodshed pulse through many of the poems, wild and strange cruelties charged with birdsong. Cages and the branches of the wildwood are mirrors of each other; both can promise a form of escape. Love is a curse that binds its children to toil, to brambles, to emptiness. Parents make a wish in hopes for a child; the child is left to bear the curse of its consequence.

Some particular favorites:
“Into the Forest”
“Red Hood in the Woods”
“Clawed Creatures”
“Little Cages”
“Poissonnier”
“Part Two: Little Houses”
“Little Bones”
“The House on Chicken Legs”
“Thorns and Wings”
“Skin and Salt”
“Blessed Curse”
“Epilogue: Disenchanted”