New story out today in Haven Spec! Monster of the Month Club returns to my old monstrous stomping grounds for a new tale inspired by, yes, my childhood obsession with the little cheeses or teas or jams or…anything of the month really. But this time monsters! So many monsters! Find out about them in this fairly short story!
Tag: publishing
Eschatological
New poem today! The Plural of Apocalypse is out at Strange Horizons.
I wrote this poem to my friend Ari when he was on the bus to work last summer. It was the 2022 I was having. Now it’s the 2023 I’m having too. So at least there’s a poem for it!
Ugh, humans.
I’m sorry to tell you that my new story in Nature Futures features humans. UGH, HUMANS. WHO CAN EVEN WITH THEM. But don’t worry, there are other species in it too. Read Tourist Season!
These five–three questions
I was interviewed as part of the lead-up to the launch of Reckoning’s Our Beautiful Reward issue (bodily autonomy themed issue), and you can read what I had to say over here!
Exile
New story in Sunday Morning Transport this morning, Exiled to Gravity! It’s got truth and lies, family relationships, disability, space stations…it’s full of a number of things, is what I’m saying here.
(If you don’t have a subscription, it will be a teaser. If you get my newsletter, there was a link for a short-term subscription, though….)
Exceptional
The poem I wrote for Reckoning’s Our Beautiful Reward (environmental justice theme issue) is now live: Exception.
More worms, more wisdom
A reprint of my story “A Worm to the Wise” is out in this lovely volume.
I still love soil science and wish there was more SF about it, but also the rest of the stories are worth your time if you didn’t read them in the original online project–or if you did and would really like a stable version of them.
Finalist
So hey, uh, it looks like I’m a finalist for the inaugural round of Emeka Walter Dinjos Awards: https://file770.com/inaugural-finalists-for-emeka-walter…/ It’s so nice to have one’s work thought of, I have to say, especially as I can rattle off dozens of wonderful disabled writers. I’m so privileged to work in the field I do, with the colleagues I have.
The work in question is So Your Grandmother Is a Starship Now: A Quick Guide for the Bewildered: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-00503-3
Outpost reading
Hey Twin Cities area pals! Two weeks from today–that is, January 15–at 2:00 p.m. I will be reading at Outpost’s event in Lakeville! Details and tickets here.
I’ve attended Outpost before as an audience member and really enjoyed it, so I’m thrilled to be on the other side of things this time around. There will also be a poet and five quite varied musicians, so I think of it sort of as an elevated variety show. See you there if your location and risk budget permit!
2022: what I’ve been up to
Yes, it’s time for my year-in-review post! It’s been a year full of discoveries and adventures, sometimes even in the good way. (We try to make it in the good way.) We’ve gotten to the point where poems are not an exception, they’re just a thing I write now and going forward, and that’s weird, but again, we try to make it weird in the good way. I notice a shift toward more science fiction and less fantasy, but that may be balanced out by the fantasy novella I’m revising at the moment. We’ll see. Or it may not, that may just be where my head is right now. That’s okay too.
I’m sorry to see Daily Science Fiction shutting its doors, as they have been a fun and interesting magazine for several years now. I love flash as a length that allows me to experiment and play with form, so less of it–even just one magazine less–is sad for me. On the other hand, I’m happy with the story I wrote that closed out my time with them. I have hopes of continuing to enjoy work with the other editors I worked with this year, and I have seven things already in the works for 2023 and beyond–a lovely feeling of continuity and possibility. Also I accidentally started a new story yesterday. Ope.
Short stories:
The Plasticity of Youth, Clarkesworld, February
An Age-Based Guide to Children’s Chores, Daily SF, March
Family Network, Nature Futures, May
The Splinters of Our Bond, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, May
Michigan Seems Like a Dream to Me Now, Daily SF, September
Out of the Red Lands, Analog, September
Bonus Footage, Asimov’s, September
Merry Christmas from the Bremmers, Nature Futures, December
Poems:
Revelations of the Artificial Dryads, Not One of Us, January
Identity, Uncanny, September
Dante on the Metro, Mobius, November
Essays:
From Panic to Process: What Taking Criticism Actually Looks Like, Uncanny, May