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Showing posts with label Apex magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Apex magazine. Show all posts

Thursday, April 14, 2022

"Barefoot and Midnight" by Sheree Renée Thomas

First appeared in Apex Magazine. Recommended by Locus, Tangent Online. Reprinted by Paula Guran.

Mourning those who died in arson-burned The Freedmen’s School in Gayoso’s Flats, Dusa Dayan builds a "ragged mud doll":

"Wrapped in tree roots, its garment was tattered. Whatever color or pattern it once held faded long ago. A dark, rust-colored stain covered the space where its heart once was. It had no head. Only a red ribbon where it should be. It had no limbs. No mouth or plump cheeks and belly to kiss and pinch."

The doll has more to it than it first seems.

The story takes on another dimension in its final lines.

Read online at Apex.

Thursday, July 15, 2021

"Stolen Sky" by Storm Humbert

Appeared in Writers of the Future 36, edited by David Farland.

A yelvani witnesses the sunsets of other planets on the mezzanine on Earth-Vega. Whichever alien is performing that night seems to get a sky designed to mimick its homeworld. The yelvani goes to interview each alien giving a performance.

Comment with some spoilery bits:
The story draws some of its resonance off what may be Margaret St. Clair's most famous story "Brightness Falls from the Air" (also discussed here). Both mine similar territory.

It might be useful to compare to see where the classic succeeds. In that one, we have a protagonist who has something to learn. Here, the protagonist has something to learn, but not about herself. As the above description suggests, she doesn't have goals. Since it isn't her planet, that they don't capture her sky isn't the real problem. One could say that it is a symbol of the real problem. 

The real problem is that her home world has been taken over. Maybe she's okay with this. Maybe she's cool with living with alien species. She seems attracted to the human aliens, too. But the real problem is not having an identity in herself or in her people. Perhaps she enjoys a mix or prefers the human culture, but she'd still have her own identity. What drew her to this planet? What drew her to interview the aliens? What drew to being attracted to humans? She sounds like an ex-pat--as such, she'd feel like an outsider to all cultures yet be fascinated by them all. We just need to see more of her and her passion, whatever that may be. 

Incidentally, sunsets will be affected by a number of factors: gravity (which dictates how much and how thick the atmosphere is there), air composition (which dictates how light gets bent and absorbed) and objects floating in the air (like clouds which may be lit and/or bend light as well. That humans are unable to correctly simulate sunsets means that they are not a super-advanced civilization. Given the above elements, it would require a major planetary overhaul that couldn't happen overnight--certainly not without disturbing the inhabitants, so the sky likely a simulation--a local light show--so the sky becomes less of an actual problem.

The story has imaginative strength, resonance, and, given the set-up, a good punch in the end. Storm Humbert's work has appeared in Apex and Interzone (see website for links).

Sunday, June 2, 2019

Review: The History of Soul 2065 by Barbara Krasnoff

The History of Soul 2065 
by Barbara Krasnoff 
Mythic Delirium Books 
Literary Fiction , Sci Fi & Fantasy
One of the coolest aspects of this book are where the stories first appeared, some of which are professional (but not the major venues), others semi-professional and yet one of them was in the running for a Nebula:
Space and Time, Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet, Weird Tales, Mythic Delirium, Apex Magazine, Electric Velocipede, Clockwork Phoenix
Yet here they are: stories collected between two book covers--a place that commands respect.

One key of the collection is the simplicity of the tales, which is probably good considering their non-traditional structure. They aren't really character stories where someone learns something (although maybe) or where someone should have learned something but didn't or plot stories where a character solves a problem. If any, it's the lattermost, but it pulls deus ex machinas, or solves someone else's problems. You'd think the stories would trip and land flat on their faces. But they don't. Strangely they can be satisfying like sipping hot mocha on a hot day.

Let's take, for an example, the Nebula finalist that Jane Yolen reprinted, "Sabbath Wine." It's the story Malka Hirsch's Dad's struggle to get wine for her bat mitzvah (even though it's for boys, even though the dad is secular, even though something which is the great secret at the end). It's all a MacGuffin, and we don't even start in our protagonist's POV or get his name until the third scene. The story itself is something of a mosaic. The opening scene is something of prologue although it's useful to the story. And I can't tell more without ruining it.

In fact most of these stories don't develop in a normal fashion making them difficult to summarize. Most people are probably scratching their heads why the story made it as far it did.

"The Cancer God" is a pretty good not-exactly-deal-with-the-devil story where Abe is dying of cancer and doesn't want to be. "The Ladder-Back Chair," the second of two stories that Yolen especially liked, is sure to resonate with those who have lost someone near and dear. Joan lost her spouse, Morris, who had been dying by degrees. Interestingly, both of the stories Yolen liked have surprise endings that hinge upon them.

Other stories of note include "The Sad Old Lady"--a tale of young girl who is terrified when she sees herself as she will be when she gets old. "In the Gingerbread House" relates how a cheap pasteboard jewel becomes an instrument to tell stories and save lives. "Time and the Parakeet" is a fantasy time-travel tale where random chance allows someone to make a simple choice that improves one's life for the better. A boy has "An Awfully Big Adventure" when visited by a witch figure--however he's been given numbers that will help. "Rosemary Is for Remembrance" is actually a rare story which does the opposite of the other: It takes something that seems sweet (a trip to the beauty parlor) and renders it horrifying. In "Stoop Ladies" a woman seems to be at the end of her rope until she visits the ladies who gossip on their stoop. "Escape Route" almost worked for me--lovely setup but Krasnoff didn't carry out the ending with her usual magic.

Those are the major stories (about half) that stood out for me. Do they hang together? There's a little bit of a frame story. Two young women meet in the woods and vow to meet again. Chance prevents their reuniting although their descendants do at the end.

The book's description makes a claim of being a mosaic novel, which is said to be a novel of stories that share the same setting or characters. I'm leaning on the term "novel" to build toward some plot, character, or thematic resonance--perhaps all three. One might claim many Dickenson novels as mosaic novels since they are stories that eventually tie together as some of the threads come to have great importance by the novel's end.

I'll throw in a few other terms as well. There's the "fix-up," which is a group of stories that usually follow characters through time but don't often build toward something greater than the individual stories themselves--pleasing as the individual stories may be. This includes a number of Van Vogt fix-up "novels" and some of the Moorcock fix-up novels like Elric. Any episodic adventure like Swift's Gulliver's Travels would fit. Then there are thematic or motif collections like Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles since, although some seem to build toward something, that eventually fades.

Stross's Accelerando is an interesting case. If you consider the developing artificial intelligence as a character, then it's a mosaic novel. If not, then it's part thematic collection, part fix-up.

Where does Krasnoff's The History of Soul 2065 fit along this continuum? If you can tell by the summaries, it's probably closer to thematic/motif collection. Like Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles, plot or character threads do connect the stories, but not across the board. Even the stories, that directly connect via characters appearing in one to die in another, don't rely heavily on what was built up in a previous story. They do hang together in the sense of characters who want to peer beyond the grave or peer into the past, often focusing on the Holocaust. This probably coheres the narratives more strongly than anything else.

What one calls this book may be less important than knowing the overall effect, and for the most part, most Krasnoff stories leave the reader with a little hope and a sweet tenderness, no matter how dismal one's circumstances may be. And that may be all you need to know.

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

"The Chaos Magician's Mega Chemistry Set" by Nnedi Okorafor

First appeared in Space and Time magazine
Reprinted in Apex magazine

Ulu's father bought her a chemistry set, so she could be like her father.  He buys the set from an odd man who has a dog with six legs.  She wants to clean the rivers, but her experiment creates the smell of farts.  Mushrooms sprout from the floor.  Yams walk around.  Dogs shrink.  Ants talk and explode.  Ulu has to stop the craziness, but the houseplants, like octopi, attack.

A delightful YA tale of comic zaniness.

Monday, April 22, 2013

"Plebiscite AV3X" by Jason Fischer

Apex magazine & The Book of Apex: Volume 1

A dystopian future where the plebes, or common people, vote what government actions should be taken.  The future is one where you can buy sex, weapons, medicine, and criminal activity.  They judge criminals and vote people "off the island," so to speak.  They also are required to report suspicious neighbor activity, whether there is any or not.