The Haunted Library of Gene Wolfe
A new ghost story by Gene Wolfe.
"The function of science fiction is not always to predict the future but sometimes to prevent it." — Frank Herbert
A new ghost story by Gene Wolfe.
Joan GordonMar 3, 2016
On Stephen King's most recent work, "The Bazaar of Bad Dreams: Stories."
Patrick McAleerFeb 24, 2016
Author Ingrid Rojas Contreras writes on her experience of concussion and the science fiction–esque mental phenomena it caused.
Ingrid Rojas ContrerasFeb 24, 2016
Each piece in "A Collapse of Horses" stands alone as a tale that combines "literary" and "horror" elements in novel ways that blur genre distinctions.
Julia ElliottFeb 23, 2016
This renewed sense of what horror fiction can do will resonate deeply for readers who find themselves overwhelmed by the increasingly prominent and disturbing images of the real world.
Helen MarshallFeb 18, 2016
Cixin Liu's "The Dark Forest" takes up the Fermi Paradox as one of its central narrative and thematic problems.
Gerry CanavanFeb 12, 2016
The debut issue of "Salvage" engages with the hopeful and pessimistic realities of this ruined and dead world.
Zak BronsonFeb 12, 2016
"The Feminine Future" draws attention to turn-of-the-century female sci-fi writers, who have been overlooked and under-recognized for their role.
Robert KilpatrickJan 9, 2016
Parkinson and his fellow authors take on a bold challenge: not one field, but three.
Jason TondroJan 3, 2016
"Mondo Nano" revisits, in a new frame, the classic questions of technological media studies initially considered by scholars like Benjamin.
James S. TobiasDec 30, 2015
Science, or science fiction? Is it a distinction worth making?
Joshua Adam AndersonDec 24, 2015
"Gifts for the One Who Comes After" moves freely between Mansfield Park and Bradburyland, finding that hidden area where the two overlap.
Brian AtteberyDec 22, 2015