Mary Meriam, Lillian Faderman, Amy Lowell, “Lad...
In Lady of the Moon (Headmistress Press, 2015), the reader is graced not only with the poetry of Amy Lowell, but with sonnets in response and a scholarly essay on the poet’s life, love, and work. Amy Lowell lived and wrote in a time when she could not ...
44 min
1677
Courtney J. Hall, “Some Rise by Sin” (Five Dire...
The reverberations of Henry VIII’s tumultuous reign continued to echo long after the monarch’s death. England teetered into Protestantism, then veered back into Catholicism before settling into an uneasy peace with the ascension of Elizabeth I.
42 min
1678
Anders Carlson-Wee, “Dynamite” (Bull City Press...
Dynamite (Bull City Press, 2015) is transit distilled. Anders Carlson-Wee‘s poems employ movement as mechanism and movement as reverence in a journey that most dream of making yet few ever do. On a cross-country train trip,
14 min
1679
Jane Lindskold, “Artemis Invaded” (Tor, 2015)
At a time when science fiction is more likely to portray ecosystems collapsing rather than flourishing, Jane Lindskold‘s Artemis series is an anomaly. Its eponymous planet is not an ecological disaster but rather full of so many wonders that it was onc...
34 min
1680
Ryan Ridge, “American Homes” (University of Mic...
Ryan Ridge‘s American Homes (University of Michigan Press, 2014) is at odds with category: it doesn’t really fit neatly, or even at all, into any preconceived notion of what prose fiction should read like, or effect in the reader.
23 min
1681
Melinda Snodgrass, “Edge of Dawn” (Tor, 2015)
What do the jobs of opera singer, lawyer and science fiction writer have in common? Answer: Melinda Snodgrass. The author of the just published Edge of Dawn‘s first ambition was to sing opera. But after studying opera in Vienna,
28 min
1682
Abeer Hoque, “The Lovers and Leavers” (Fourth E...
In her first novel, The Lovers and the Leavers (Fourth Estate, 2015), Abeer Hoque undertakes a literary challenge that I suspect even the most seasoned writer would find daunting: how do you tell the stories of those people, old and young,
41 min
1683
James L. Cambias, “Corsair” (Tor Books, 2015)
For his second novel, James L. Cambias chose one of the most challenging settings for a science fiction writer: the near future. Unlike speculative fiction that leaps centuries or millennia ahead or takes place on other planets,
39 min
1684
Peter Oberg, ed., “Waiting for the Machines to ...
There’s far more to Swedish literature than Pippi Longstocking and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. That’s the message Anna Jakobsson Lund and Oskar Kallner are trying to send the English-speaking world through their contributions to Waiting for the Ma...
61 min
1685
Porochista Khakpour, “The Last Illusion” (Bloom...
Porochista Khakpour moved to an apartment with large picture windows in downtown Manhattan shortly before September 11, 2001, giving her a painfully perfect view of the terrorist attacks. “The big event of my life was of course 9/11,” Khakpour says.
31 min
1686
Mark Ehling, “River Dead of Minneapolis Scaveng...
If you’re a reader, then you know the joy of discovering books. You also know that some of those discoveries stand out. Yes, there’s the pleasure of finding a good book. And there’s even those rare occasions where you find the right book: the right boo...
53 min
1687
Ferrett Steinmetz, “Flex” (Angry Robot 2015)
Ferrett Steinmetz first built an audience as a blogger, penning provocative essays about “puns, politics and polyamory” (among other things) with titles like “Dear Daughter: I Hope You Have Awesome Sex” and “How Kids React To My Pretty Princess Nails.
34 min
1688
Meg Elison, “The Book of the Unnamed Midwife” (...
Despite the odds, Meg Elison did it. First, she finished the book she wanted to write. Second, she found a publisher–without an agent. Third, she won the Philip K. Dick Award for Distinguished Science Fiction,
23 min
1689
Ken Liu, “The Grace of Kings” (Saga Press, 2015)
Short story writing, novel writing, and translating require a variety of skills and strengths that are hardly ever found in a single person. Ken Liu is one of those rare individuals who has them all. He is perhaps best known for short stories like The ...
40 min
1690
Michael Gorra, “The Bells in Their Silence: Tra...
Despite being Germany’s most famous literary lion, in 1786 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe had to jump on a mail coach incognito to begin his travels to Italy (of course, he asked permission first from his patron the duke Karl August).
55 min
1691
David Hull (trans.), Mao Dun, “Waverings” (Chin...
David Hull‘s new translation of Mao Dun’s Waverings (Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2014)(Research Centre for Translation, Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2014) is both a beautiful literary work and a boon for scholars and teachers working in the fi...
66 min
1692
Jennifer Marie Brissett, “Elysium, or the World...
Jennifer Marie Brissett‘s first novel, Elysium, or the World After (Aqueduct Press, 2014), portrays a fractured world, one whose seemingly irreversible destruction does nothing to dampen the survivors’ collective will to live.
36 min
1693
Rod Duncan, “The Bullet-Catcher’s Daughter” (An...
While science fiction often seeks to imagine the impact of new science on the future, Rod Duncan explores an opposite: what happens when science remains frozen in the past. In The Bullet-Catcher’s Daughter‘s alternate history,
37 min
1694
Ben H. Winters, “World of Trouble” (Quirk Books...
It’s no surprise that when scientists in Ben H. Winters‘ The Last Policeman series declare that a 6.5-mile asteroid is going to destroy life as we know it on October 3, civilization starts to unravel. Governments collapse.
29 min
1695
Kameron Hurley, “The Mirror Empire” (Angry Robo...
Kameron Hurley has been honored for her mastery of numerous forms. Her first novel, God’s War, earned her the Sydney J. Bounds Award for Best Newcomer and the Kitschy Award for Best Debut Novel. Her essay “We Have Always Fought”–about the history of wo...
31 min
1696
Alex London, “Guardian” (Philomel, 2014)
This week’s podcast was an experiment. Rather than record the conversation with author Alex London over Skype, I decided to take the subway to Brooklyn and meet with him face-to-face in a coffee shop. I found it liberating to be unchained from an Inter...
35 min
1697
Lydia Netzer, “How to Tell Toledo from the Nigh...
Astronomy and astrology once went hand in hand: people studied the location and motion of celestial bodies in order to make astrological predictions. In the seventeenth century, the paths of these two disciplines forked so that today astronomy is a wel...
40 min
1698
Kathryn Cramer and Ed Finn, “Hieroglyph: Storie...
Before Apollo 11, there was Jules Verne’s novel From the Earth to the Moon. Before the Internet, there was Mark Twain’s short story From the ‘London Times’ of 1904. In other words, before the appearance of many spectacular technologies,
28 min
1699
Brian Staveley, “The Emperor’s Blades” (Tor, 2014)
What does it take to be an emperor? That question is at the heart of Brian Staveley‘s debut novel The Emperor’s Blades (Tor, 2014). In this first of a projected trilogy, Staveley focuses on three siblings. They are the children of the assassinated empe...
40 min
1700
Robert Silverberg, “Science Fiction: 101” (Roc,...
Science Fiction: 101 (Roc, 2014) isn’t just an “exploration of the craft of science fiction” as its subtitle says; it’s also about the impact the stories in this anthology had on the imagination of a young boy. That boy was Robert Silverberg,