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Lädt ... Uncanny Magazine Issue 11: July/August 2016von Lynne M. Thomas (Herausgeber), Julia Rios (Herausgeber), Michael Damian Thomas (Herausgeber), Michi Trota (Herausgeber)
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Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. A Hundred and Seventy Storms by Aliette de Bodard - a poetic and tragic story about a family, that includes a sentient ship, in the midst of storms. A little too poetic for my taste - or just too much worldbuilding crammed into too few pages. I couldn't connect emotionally with it, but it was lovely. El Cantar of Rising Suns by Sabrina Vourvoulais - a lovely piecemeal story about short lives drenched in blood and gunfire and the stories told about them, inside and out; a very modern, Latin@ urban fantasy. The Words on My Skin by Caroline M. Yoachim - a tiny little story about creating yourself, when you have the power to do it definitively: the conceit (words written on skin that become personality traits) feels like something out of soulmate fanfiction, and I love it. Snow Day by Catherynne M. Valente - the story of a woman with an allergy to bad art who grew up in isolation with only her paranoid mother, a vast library of pornography, and a turkey as companions. And the world is ending. Enthralling. An Ocean the Color of Bruises by Isabel Yap - a dreamy, oddly comforting story about a haunted beach in the Phillipines and the polyamorous group of teenagers vacationing there, young and lost and uncertain. I kind of want to move into this story, horrifying drowned people and all. Reprint - Travels With the Snow Queen by Kelly Link - one of my favorite Kelly Link stories, a fairy tale retelling about the lengths women go to for the sake of men who don't deserve them, even when they already know that, and what the journey means. Essays: We Were All Trini: Searching for Asian-American Mirrors in SF/F by Sarah Kuhn, about being able to see yourself in heroes; So You Want to Start a Podcast by Erika Ensign and Steven Schapansky, a surprisingly thorough introduction; The Death of Very Special Diversity Comics by Sigrid Ellis, about the vast improvement we've seen from the era of 80s stories about Accepting Everyone's Differences (with recs); Myth Has Momentum, or: How I Accidentally Deified a Jar of Jelly by Kelly McCullough, about the unlikely power of stories Poems: Good Neighbors by Jessica P. Wick, about hiding your strangeness; Phaya Nak Goes to the West by Bryan Thao Worra, the lament of a dragon; The Persecution of Witches by Ali Trotta, about the many ways people try to delegitimize rape. And interviews with Sarah Kuhn and Sabrina Vourvoulias. Zeige 3 von 3 keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
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It's a commentary on modern rape culture and I recommend everyone read it. Very strong, very poignant. Available online here. ( )