If I can say anything about reading in March, it's that my Favorites List is probably incomplete. Between illness, family emergencies, travel, and rebuilding my computer from scratch, I have forgotten an obscene amount of data this month. It's been easier to forget a good story because I read so many this March. While everyone else was (somewhat justifiably) freaking out over Donald Trump steamrolling the Republicans, I kept finding wonders from around the world. Here are a few of them.
Fiction
"Your Orisons May Be Recorded" by Laurie Penny at
Tor.com
-A story that treats angels as switchboard operators for
prayers. Our narrator is an experienced, ancient being who's been demoted a few
times given their extreme fondness for human men. They keep screwing human men
- and falling in love, but there are centuries of sexual indiscretions too.
Once they married a country pastor. The scenes are quick and spry, the tone
ceaselessly funny, resigned to their place in the cosmos, but also wry. It's
the most fun I've had with a "fallen angel" story since The Screwtape
Letters.
"The Curse of Giants" by Jose Pablo Iriarte at
Daily Science Fiction
-The story about a giant growing up. Already you're envious
of Iriarte's inspired premise, but it can be read literally or allegorically,
about the abusive forces you encounter as you grow into your own strength and
bravery. For something so short, the ending has a hell of a punch. And it hits
back, too.
"Opening Move" by Xin Rong Chua at Flash Fiction
Online
-A striking slice of life piece of a struggling chess
player, who's managed to escape the Girls category and instead plays in the
Open. But that puts her up against the top-rated player in the entire league. It's
a flash packed with milieu.
"The Corn Grows Back Every Year" by Riley
Vainionpaa at Luna Station Quarterly
-The oddly sweet story about friends who are so excited to
discover one of them can recover from any injury. You lost a hand in a thresher
accident? That's awesome, can you do it again? It's not grotesque - hardly
gross Body Horror - rather, tinged with a sweetness as they pursue the mystery
of how this power came to her.
"The Shadow Collector" by Shveta Thakrar at
Uncanny Magazine
-This is a case study in the shadows sentences can cast.
Thakrar will tell you about how Rajesh steals shadows, but in doing so tells
you what they're shadows of, and thus colors in the world we don't see. "Shadows
of nectar–loving hummingbirds, shadows of laughing fathers, shadows of hawks
who preyed on squirrels" tells us so much about the setting without even
putting it into motion yet. It's sumptuous prose.
"Welcome to the Medical Clinic at the Interplanetary Relay Station | Hours Since the Last Patient Death: 0" by Caroline Yoachim
at Lightspeed
-Yoachim once again slam-dunks a premise. This is the
story of you getting bitten - but it's also Choose Your Own Adventure. You
could go to the sick bay and heal up from your curious injury, or go directly
to Z for the bad ending. It gets more absurd the more straightly you read, and
because it's so short, you'll obviously read through the entries in linear
fashion, building up weirdo twists. It's something right after my own heart.
"If all stories were written like science fiction stories" by Mark Rosenfelder, archived at greaterthanorequalto.net
-Hardly a March publication, as the story is older than my career, and I only found it because this site archived it. It's the story of somebody taking a flight to San Francisco, but told with all the clunky exposition and contrived dialogue of a classic SciFi story. It's a superb parody of the way too many genre stories junk naturalism in favor of exoticizing and over-explaining everything. I've seen some people say it's just a mockery of Asimov, but I see things from this story in modern SF/F stories every week
"Syrian refugees in Canada got housed in same hotel as VancouFur furry convention and the children loved it" by Loulla-Mae
Eleftheriou-Smith at The Independent
-If you've followed the Syrian refugee crisis you've likely
seen the extreme cases of cultural integration already. Refugees volunteering
at churches and soup kitchens to help native homeless people in their host
countries, or committing horrible crimes, or being stalked by native people. We
don't get many stories of fringe integration, like this one, where Canadian
Furries hung out with Syrian kids in a hotel. Just like most kids anywhere,
they didn't know about the Furry lifestyle and found them adorable and fun, and
the parents let them play. It's not just a weird or sweet story out of the
crisis. It's an intersection of margins.
"Successful $100,000 Kickstarter Dev Calls it Quits Due to Drama" by Mike Fahey at Kotaku
-We seldom consider how Kickstarter allows people who've
never put something out in public before and lack the emotional experience and
maturity to handle feedback to suddenly get tons of feedback. Professional
artists go through careers of scrutiny (at the gentlest), and it toughens them.
But the people behind Bear Simulator
were new, and even confessed to not being skilled enough for what people wanted
out of their game. It's an utter shame that they abandoned something they got
so much money upfront to make, but the article is also an interesting view into
how people who aren't ready to be public figures fall short.
"A Crash Course in the History of Black Science Fiction" by Nisi Shawl at Fantastic Stories of Imagination
-I had no idea W.E.B. DuBois wrote a post-apocalyptic story and am tracking it down right now. Shawl does a concise job showing that black people have contributed interesting work to the body of Science Fiction since the 1800s. It didn't start with Delany and Butler - though they are naturally also on the list.
"Why are so many smart people such idiots about philosophy?" by Olivia Goldhill at Quartz
-An examination of why many of science's biggest advocates
are clueless or dismissive about philosophy and intentionality, following Bill
Nye's painfully naive criticisms of philosophy of making people argue in
circles.
"The problem with a technology revolution designed primarily for men" by Suzanne Plunkett at Quartz
-Another one of those topics I'd never considered before. Voice-commanded technology like Siri and Google Now recognize "I'm having a heart attack" and respond appropriately, but tell the phone you've been raped you'll probably hear, "I don't know what that means." That's the introduction to an investigation into how smart technology routinely fails to help women consumers.
"South Korean MPs 'set world filibuster record'" at the BBC
-MPs seeking to block a fascistic "anti-terrorism" bill in South Korea filibustered for 192 straight hours. They lectured on the evils of the bill, rambled off the top of their heads, and even read passages from George Orwell's 1984. Ironically they used the seminal text on double-speak in order to weaponize speech in favor of liberty.
"#DinoDinaSeries"
by Jorge Saenz at Instagram
-Technically not an article, but there have been
several articles swiping his photographs for clicks in the last month, and I
wanted to credit Saenz himself. A traveling photojournalist for the Associated
Press, Saenz brings plastic dinosaur toys wherever he travels, then poses
exquisite photos of their journeys. They overlook ruins, modern harbors, and
city skylines. They're all wonderful. This is a hobby I want to pick up.
You seem to have read some amazing things in yet another action packed and fairly fraught month. I have been tempted by quite a number of these. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteAnd I love the dinosaur photojournalism thought.
Saenz is just brilliant with those. I love them to pieces.
DeleteWhen you start quoting a fiction book, your argument is in trouble.
ReplyDeleteAre you talking about the Korean filibuster?
Delete"Your orisons may be recorded" sounds hilarious! My library's digital collection does not have it yet, but I'll need to keep an eye out for it. Thanks for the tip!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing this list! I'll definitely check some out.
ReplyDeletehttps://ficklemillennial.wordpress.com/