Review: Feb. 2008 Fantasy and Science Fiction

Fantasy and Science Fiction has produced an incredibly strong Feb. 2008 issue which features an array of high quality stories such as "Retrospect" by Ann Miller and "If Angels Fight" by Richard Bowes (whose "There's a Hole in the City" won the 2006 Million Writers Award). My favorite story in the issue is "Balancing Account" by James L. Cambias. This old-fashioned-yet-new-feeling hard science fiction story focuses on an intelligent rocket booster named Orphan Annie in the Saturn planetary system. If you think it's difficult for writers to create a human being with whom readers can relate, try doing the same with a machine. Cambias not only pulls this off, his fast-paced tale will have you rooting against Annie's human overlords. Highly recommended.

Another good read is "Memoirs of the Witch Queen" by Ron Goulart, in which a ghost-writer works with a real witch on her memoirs. You can tell Goulart had a blast writing this story and it left me wondering how many of the ghost-writer's foils--a greedy ex-wife, idiotic editor, assorted debt-collectors--are real. Considering that Goulart is rumored to have ghost-written William Shatner's TekWar series, I also wonder if the overbearing and overweight witch isn't based on a certain actor. I should add, though, that while I enjoyed this story, it isn't equal to Goulart's best and feels forced at times. I much preferred his recent "Conversations with My Knees" from the Jan./Feb. 2008 Analog.

Overview of new SF/F magazines

A number of new SF/F magazines have graced my mailbox this holiday season. Among the items of note are:

  • An excellent Feb. 2008 issue of Asimov's Science Fiction. As previously noted, the issue contains the wonderful conclusion to Allen M. Steele's Galaxy Blues serial. The issue also contains a number of other top-notch stories, including "The Ray Gun: A Love Story" by James Alan Gardner (a highly recommended story in which a teenage boy finds his life's purpose and love through an alien ray gun); "From Babel's Fall'n Glory We Fled" by Michael Swanwich (a very good story featuring amazing world creation by Swanwich, although it was harder to relate to this story's characters than in many of Swanwich's tales); and the short but sweet "Sex and Violence" by Nancy Kress (in which the grand meaning of our existence turns out to be sex, something our genes have always known).
  • The Dec. 2007 issue of The New York Review of Science Fiction features explorations of C.L. Moore, R.A. Lafferty, A.E. van Vogt, and a very good interview with Nalo Hopkinson by Michael Lohr. The NYRSF remains my favorite nonfiction SF/F magazine, proving itself again and again with insightful articles and essays you will find nowhere else.
  • The Jan./Feb. 2008 Analog Science Fiction and Fact features many excellent stories, including "Marsbound," the first part of a new serial by Joe Haldeman. If the next two parts keep pace with Haldeman's opening, this could end up being his best novel in years. Other very good stories in the double issue include "Conversations with My Knees" by Ron Goulart, in which a knee replacement surgery leads to all sorts of unexpected yet humorous events, and "The Man in the Mirror" by Geoffrey  A. Landis, about an astronaut's near death experience with a nearly frictionless alien mirror.

State of SF/F short stories

James Wallace Harris offers a Science Fiction Short Stories State of the Union in which he praises the many ways to read SF/F short stories through distribution methods which once would have been seen as mere science fiction. He signals out for praise Escape Pod for offering free podcast readings of short stories and Fictionwise for offering e-book versions of top SF/F magazines like Analog and Asimov's (and I should add that one of my favorite SF/F magazines, Interzone, is now available on Fictionwise).

Harris adds that SF/F short stories are what "really defines the science fiction genre in my mind. I don’t have time to keep up with SF novels, and to be honest, they seldom offer the punch as they did when I was a teenager. The short story is different, it still has sense of wonder value and presents far out visions from writers who are working with the rule that the sky is no limit."

The best online literary magazines and journals

Scott Boyan at Thinksimian has completed a wonderful meta-analysis of storySouth's Million Writers Award to determine the best online literary journals and magazines. Basically, Scott crunched the numbers from the first four years of the award to see which online magazines placed the most stories in the notable and top ten listings. You can access Scott's complete analysis as a Google spreadsheet, but here are his top ranking online journals and magazines:

  1. Pindeldyboz
  2. Eclectica Magazine
  3. Narrative Magazine
  4. Agni
  5. Identity Theory
  6. Word Riot
  7. FRiGG
  8. Fiction Warehouse (Note: See my recent post about this journal)
  9. Strange Horizons
  10. Barcelona Review
  11. Clarkesworld Magazine
  12. Fail Better
  13. Stickman Review
  14. Mississippi Review
  15. HOBART
  16. 42opus
  17. Summerset Review
  18. Small Spiral Notebook (Note: no longer publishing)
  19. Blithe House Quarterly
  20. ChiZine
  21. Thieves Jargon
  22. Storyglossia
  23. Barrelhouse
  24. King's English
  25. Gowanus
  26. Drunken Boat
  27. Intergalactic Medicine Show
  28. Literary Mama
  29. Write This
  30. Danforth Review

Thanks to Scott for doing this analysis. And as a reminder, the 2008 Million Writers Award will start accepting nominations in about a month.

When online magazines go bad

I keep track of a wide variety of online publications because I both enjoy reading short fiction and need to know what magazines are publishing for my work with the Million Writers Award. One magazine I enjoyed several years ago--and which also published two of my own stories--was Fiction Warehouse. Like many online publications, Fiction Warehouse petered out and eventually stopped publishing new issues. Now, though, it appears Fiction Warehouse has done more than just cease publication--their site has gone bad.

Google's search engine has a relatively new function which notifies searchers if a site may try to install malicious software on your computer. According to Google's search results for Fiction Warehouse, this is what their website now does. And if you feel lucky enough to still click on that link, you are routed to a final message screaming in bold font: "Warning--visiting this web site may harm your computer!"

I commend Google for this new feature (assuming they are accurate in their assessment of these sites). But this also made me wonder what other online magazines and publications were now "bad" per Google's warning. I'm pleased that my magazine storySouth receives an all clear, as did all the major online magazines I frequent every month. But if anyone else notices other online magazines which have gone bad, please let me know.

Asimov's readers' award selections

I have now made my selections for the 2007 Asimov's Readers' Award. They are:

  • Best Novella: "Recovering Apollo 8" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch (February 2007). Because Rusch's novella was far and away the best of the year, I declined to select a runner-up.
  • Best Novelete: "Breeze from the Stars" by Mary Rosenblum (March 2007). Runner-up: "News from the Front" by Harry Turtledove (June 2007). I was tempted to name "Nightfall" by Isaac Asimov as a third runner-up, but decided to pass because the story has received plenty of honors in the last six decades.
  • Best Short Story: "Tideline" by Elizabeth Bear (June 2007). Runner-up: "A Small Room in Koboldtown" by Michael Swanwick (April/May 2007). Third Runner-up: "Dead Horse Point" by Daryl Gregory (Aug. 2007).
  • Best Cover Artist: Tor Lundvall.

Getting your Fix with short fiction reviews

TTA Press, the publisher of Interzone, Black Static, and Crimewave, has debuted an online short fiction review site called The Fix. Originally published for nearly a decade as a print magazine, the Fix is now a purely online venture. So far, the reviews I've read are excellent, while the simple yet classy web design makes finding and reading the reviews an enjoyable experience.

For what it's worth, the Fix's Ziv Wities also takes a less than charitable view of my short story "Freelanga" in the recent anthology I Am This Meat. As Ziv says, its "A solid story, mostly aimed at building up the final scene; this reader found Freelanga pleasant but unremarkable." Ah well. Guess I can't be dishing out my own reviews in this blog if I can't take the heat of what other people think about my stories.

Review: Realms of Fantasy Dec. 2007 and Feb. 2008

Because I've been behind on my offerings to the review gods, today I present a double sacrifice: the two most recent issues of Realms of Fantasy.

Overall, the Dec. 2007 issue is a fun and extremely satisfying issue. To start things off, Virginia Borges presents a fascinating look at the Little Mermaid fables and stories. The Disney animated film was the first movie Borges ever saw and heavily influenced her then five-year-old sensibilities. As she recounts, "I made myself a mermaid's tail from a sheet of butcher paper spangled with sequins and glitter" and wondered why "my mother always insisted on reading (the original story) aloud to me." This is a compelling mix of personal and mythical exploration and is highly recommended. The essay is published online here.

There are also a number of excellent stories in the issue, including a new Lord Yamada tale by Richard Parks. While "Hot Water" continues Park's light-hearted yet haunted journey through ancient Japan, the story isn't quite up to his "A Touch of Hell" from the April 2007 RoF. But since the characters of Lord Yamada and Kenji the priest are so compelling, this new story remains a very good read. Another good story in the issue is "The Fireman's Fairy" by Sandra McDonald, about a fire department using assistance from mythical creatures. Naturally, this leads to a pairing between an overly macho fireman and a flaming fairy called Tinkerbob. While this may seem like a buddy-movie cliche in the making, McDonald pulls off the story through good writing, pacing, and characterization. Only at the end does the tale bog a bit down when the author tries too hard to beat a moral of tolerance into her readers' heads. Still, it's a good read. The issue also features an enjoyable fantasy story along more traditional lines in "The White Isle" by Von Carr (the pen name of Siobhan Carroll, although I'm not sure why one uses a pen name while also giving your real name).

While the December issue is a good, fun read, the February 2008 issue of RoF steps things up a notch by publishing a great story in "Hobnoblin Blues" by Elizabeth Bear (see my previous review of the story here.) While Bear's story is a hard act to follow, the issue still features strong fiction from M.K. Hobson (with the adorable "The People's Republic of the Edelweiss Village Putt-Putt Gold Course") and Margaret Ronald (with the priest/wolf story "And Spare Not the Flock"). In fact, of all the fiction in the issue, the only story which didn't agree with me was "The King of the Djinn" by Benjamin Rosenbaum. While this story of a Middle Eastern father's friendship with a supernatural being starts off well, it is so short that only the father's character has the depth of a real person. As a result, his friendship and ultimate betrayal by the supernatural being doesn't ring as true as it might if the story had fleshed out the relationship more.

These two issues are the best RoF has produced in the past year (and I say that while noting RoF had a number of strong issues during 2007). My only major complaint is that the Feb. 2008 issue returns to the RoF pattern of putting movie promo photos on the cover (in this case, for The Golden Compass). I really liked the original art by Julie Fain in the Dec. 2007 and wish RoF would do this more often. But that said, with all the worry lately about failing SF/F magazines, if the choice comes down to either having a massive ad on the front cover or having no RoF at all, I'll go with the ad any day.

Review of Apex Digest Issue 11

Apex Digest has long staked a claim as one of the best SF/F semiprozines and issue 11, which arrived in my mailbox yesterday, continues this trend. The issue features a great science fiction/horror story by Gary A. Braunbeck called "Blackboard Sky," in which Braunbeck channels Arthur C. Clark's Childhood End into the type of horror Clarke couldn't imagine on his most pessimistic of days. Steven Savile follows up the story with a fascinating interview with Braunbeck where they discuss Braunbeck's rather dour worldview (note: Braunbeck avoids calling his worldview pessimistic, instead saying its "more a pragmatic one that been run through a pessimistic filter and then presented to you by a cautious optimist.") The interview also discusses Braunbeck's views on writing and his life, including a horrific event no father should ever endure. This is hands down the best author interview I've read all year and, combined with Braunbeck's story, makes the issue a must read.

Another great story is "Ray Gun" by Daniel G. Keohane, in which an old man with Alzheimer's encounters a hostile alien. As the killing starts, the character tries to understand if this is really happening or simply a disease-related hallucination. While this set-up could have been a disaster in the hands of a bad writer, Keohane's steady prose presents the main character and situation through painfully-understated images and emotions, which gently lead the reader toward a tragic but understandable conclusion.

The issue also features a very good cover story, "The Moldy Dead," by first-time writer Sara King. The story is a well-written exploration of alien intelligence and genocide which is a fun and fascinating read. In fact, the heroic aspects of the story reminded me (in the best of ways) of something straight out of science fiction's Golden Age.

A final tip of the hat must be given to the short "What to Expect When You're Expectorating" by Jennifer Pelland. This hilarious spoof of drug commercials features a pharmaceutical cure for minor demonic possession. Of course, you should "Stop taking Xybutol if you experience dizziness, shortness of breath, heart palpitations, sleepiness, projectile vomiting, an urge to vote Libertarian, voices telling you to cover up the local Indian burial mound with a Wal-Mart, or if you cough up something which then attempts to sell you a time share in Florida." All in all, Pelland's story is a fitting drug to close out a great issue of Apex.

New SF/F magazines

The Oct. 2007 issue of Orson Scott Card's Intergalactic Medicine Show is now available. As I previously mentioned, the issue includes the wonderful "In The Beginning, Nothing Lasts" by Mike Strahan. Other top notch work includes "The Towering Monarch of His Mighty Race" by Cat Rambo and "The Price of Love" by Alan Schoolcraft, which is a fascinating and compelling beginning to a two part story. I look forward to the conclusion in the next issue. There is also a new Ender story by Orson Scott Card. In addition, the issue features excellent artwork, such as the compelling visual by Scott Altmann for Brad Beaulieu's story "How Peacefully the Desert Sleeps" (which is also a good read). IGMS counts as a qualifying, professional-level market by SFWA standards, so it's gratifying to see the magazine giving so many slots to new and less-well-known writers.

The other day I mentioned the January 2008 Asimov's, which includes a number of good stories. One fascinating story I missed was "Unlikely" by Will McIntosh, which is a love story where the greater good of humanity depends on two unlikely people getting together. This is a fun, light-hearted read with an ending guaranteed to leave a smile on your face.

Review of Interzone 212 and "A Handful of Pearls" by Beth Bernobich

I'm trying to catch up on my reading and just finished Interzone issue 212 (Sept./Oct. 2007). For the last year I've subscribed to this British science fiction and fantasy magazine and to say I eagerly await each new issue is an understatement. Part of the excitement is Interzone's amazing design--while stories rise or fall on their own merits, the beautiful art and layout make reading Interzone a more moving experience than one gets from many of the pulp-style digest magazines. Another reason I love Interzone is the editors take risks with the stories they accept, risks other SF/F magazines sometime seem loath to embrace.

For example, take issue 212. There are many excellent stories inside, including  "The Algorithm" by Tim Akers and "Feelings of the Flesh" by Douglas Elliot Cohen. I enjoyed these two stories immensely and highly recommend them to all readers. However, the story which stuck with me the longest, the story which twisted my gut into painful knots, is also the one I didn't particularly enjoy: "A Handful of Pearls" by Beth Bernobich.

I'm not saying this isn't a top-notch story. Beth is an amazing writer and the story grabs the reader's attention from the start, pulling us through a fascinating exploration narrative involving scientists trying to understand both themselves and an isolated part of their alien world. No, the reason I didn't enjoy the story is because the main character slowly reveals himself to be exactly as other people see him: a despicable, cowardly man. When the story's ultimate moment arrives--let's just say it involves a horrific act on a mute child--I placed the magazine on the table and told myself I was through with this story. However, to the author's credit the story was so well written, and the main character so fascinating in his self-denial and lack of self-understanding, that I returned to the magazine and finished reading the story.

I don't recommend "A Handful of Pearls" to most readers. But anyone wanting to understand how people do truly evil acts while imagining themselves to be the mistreated heroes of their own self-narratives, then this story is a must read. I'm certain that long after the fun stories I've read this year fade from memory, "A Handful of Pearls" will remain.

Fantasy Magazine relaunches online

Fantasy Magazine, one of the most impressive debut print magazines of recent years, has relaunched as an equally impressive online magazine. The magazine's website features a new story every week, along with interviews, commentaries, and fascinating interactive features like "blog for a beer," where writers are encouraged to go to the site each Friday and write whatever comes to mind. The most entertaining writer gets $10 to buy beer (for minors, root beer). I should add that the clean, sharp design of the website is a definite plus.

How to save the SF/F magazines

There's been far too much said in far too many blogs about Paolo Bacigalupi's three-part series on saving science fiction and fantasy magazines from ever-declining circulations. However, if you've missed this somehow, check out his overview, his "Marketing in Meatspace," and the final part Online Marketing. Everything he says is sensible and gets little argument from me, and I say that as someone who subscribes to way too many SF/F magazines but easily understands why most people don't. Among the people who've commented on Paolo's ideas are Matt Cheney and Lou Anders.

New SF/F magazines received

Now that I've worked the kinks out of my new site, I'll be noting the arrival of new science fiction and fantasy magazines in the mail, along with providing quick reviews of what I see as their highlights.

The January 2008 Asimov's is an excellent issue and contains the print version of Mike Resnick's "Alastair Baffle's Emporium of Wonders," which I was fortunate to hear him read at the recent Context 20 convention. As I said in an earlier review of the story, this story is Resnick at his best and I expect to see it on a number of award ballots. In addition, the third part of the "Galaxy Blues" by Allen M. Steele is the best installment yet and I look forward to the ending next month. "The Beautiful and the Damned by F. Scott Fitzgerald" by Tanith Lee is also a very good story, although at the beginning I wished more explanation of what was going on had been provided. But in this case trust the story and the author and you will be rewarded.

In the last month I've also received copies of the December 2007 Realms of Fantasy, the Sept./Oct. '07 Interzone (always a bit slow because of the international mailing), the Autumn 2007 Paradox, and the Summer 2007 Tales of the Unanticipated. I haven't had time to read all these magazines yet, but I'm happy to see that RoF has original art on its cover--their frequent use of movie promo pics as covers in the last year has not been attractive. I'm also looking forward to reading TOTU. For the record, the editor of TOTU, Eric Heideman, is one of the last editors in the world still sending handwritten critiques of rejected submissions. If you've ever received one of these letters, you know how valuable his feedback is. I highly value TOTU because of the hard work Eric and his fellow editors put in and for their efforts to bring new authors to the attention of the larger reading public.