“We all have dreams, and these dreams keep us positive
about the future because if we really want to achieve the dreams that we
have and the hopes that we have, that means we have to get fighting for
the future. So that’s one of my biggest motivations to keep fighting.”
—Vanessa Nakate
—Vanessa Nakate
Issue 2021.57
Short stories
- ‘Wives at the End of the World’, Avra Margariti (illustrated by Joyce Chng)
- ‘The City, My Love’, Alexandra Seidel (illustrated by Carmen Moran)
- ‘A Subtle Fire Beneath the Skin’, Hayley Stone (illustrated by Cécile Matthey)
- ‘Autonomous Dispatch’, Anna Ziegelhof (illustrated by Fluffgar)
- ‘Faulty Genes’, Hannah Soyer (illustrated by Eric Asaris)
Poetry
- ‘The Flier and the Sheltered Maid’, Ana Gardner (illustrated by Miguel Santos)
- ‘Alien Armada’, Mary Soon Lee (illustrated by Laura-Anca Adascalitei)
- ‘In Dependence’, Oluwatomiwa Ajeigbe (illustrated by Jason Baltazar)
- ‘Apotheosis’, Nicole J. LeBoeuf (illustrated by Toeken)
6 comments:
I thought "The City, My Love" by Alexandra Seidel was very beautiful.
Over at Quick Sip Reviews, Charles Payseur reads and comments on a wealth of short fiction this month, including very sensitive short reviews of all the pieces in this issue of TFF. Good words for everyone!
Maria Haskins's April short fiction roundup has good things to say about Avra Margariti’s “Wives at he End of the World” (and a good number of other short stories from the small press, if you're looking for recommendations…).
I'm biased, of course, but I think Anna Ziegelhof's "Autonomous Dispatch" is very good. I'd be interested in more on those characters.
In a round up of Short fiction recs from March and April, Vanessa Fogg has good things to say about both Wives at the End of the World (“such a gorgeous, gorgeous piece”) and A Subtle Fire Beneath the Skin (“a wonderful story about the magic of words”). As always, lots of other recommendations from the small press and very sensitive readings in this post.
Alex Brown’s round-up of Must-Read Speculative Short Fiction for May 2021 over at Tor.com is glowing in praise for Avra Margariti’s “Wives at the End of the World”, which they call a “bittersweet little romp,” and sum up just perfectly in a few lines.
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