The Reverberations of Desire in “Gods of Want” – Chicago Review of Books

The Reverberations of Desire in “Gods of Want” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Middle children often don’t get their due and that’s frequently the case for short fiction as well, wedged between poetry, flash and full-length novels. Yet in the hands of those with a talent for shaping entire worlds in brief pages, they are as powerful as the most economical poem and the weightiest novel. In … Read more

Crafting Patience and Permanence in “God’s Children are Little Broken Things” – Chicago Review of Books

Crafting Patience and Permanence in “God’s Children are Little Broken Things” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Published in the Winter 2022 issue of Michigan Quarterly Review, Joe Sacksteder’s craft essay, “Against Quirky Writing,” captures many of the editorial frustrations I find when regularly reading through submissions. The trend toward defamiliarizing and unconventional prose is not so bad on its own, but when unusual language and complex punctuation are all that … Read more

The Powers of Kinesthetic Communication in “Punch Me Up to the Gods” – Chicago Review of Books

The Powers of Kinesthetic Communication in “Punch Me Up to the Gods” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] At ten years old, Brian Broome tried to take lessons from his friend Corey on how to be “cooler”:  “…Black boys had to show through our behavior that we were undeniably, incontrovertibly the most male. The toughest. We sat on either end of his bed and I got lost in his pretty brown eyes … Read more

We Come as Gods | Tor.com

We Come as Gods | Tor.com

[ad_1] In honor of Black Speculative Fiction Month, eight SFF authors share stories that honor forebearers and memories of the past, fight the legacies that underpin the brutalities of the present, and demand a future that’s freer than today. The stories publish on Tor.com all throughout the morning of October 19. They are collected here. … Read more