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Save Me a Seat on the Couch: Spoiler Culture, Inclusion, and Disability

The Last Jedi was the last movie I saw in theaters.

Not the most recent. The last. I thrilled to the familiar cadences of Star Wars, to the joy of the new characters bringing it alive again…and then I barely made it out of the theater upright. I went back to my family’s vacation rental and threw up again and again.

The popularity of unsteady camera work has made even the most sedate of movies a risk my balance disorder won’t let me take any more. Even a conversation between characters in a hallway might pitch and lurch in ways that my broken inner ears can’t keep up with. When a director chooses handheld camera work, my balance disorder is kicked into high gear, and I literally don’t know which way is up. I become disoriented, unsteady, trying to focus on anything while the camera zooms earnestly into one character’s face, then another. The swoops and spins of a space battle are right out. In my own well-lit living room, I can look away, reorient myself on the comforting perpendiculars of a doorframe or a bookshelf, then glance back to see if it’s safe to watch again. In a dark movie theater, there’s nowhere for my eyes to settle to find out where up and down are. Two hours of that leave me sick and reeling for days. Not worth it—not any more.

Not even for Star Wars?

Not even—I discover as Episode 9 approaches—for Star Wars.

Nor am I the only one. The Rise of Skywalker has come with warnings that the strobe effects in the movie may trigger epileptic symptoms, and I know that there are people who suffer from migraines who are blocked from enjoying their fandoms by that kind of filmmaking choice as well. Knowing about the problem is a good thing. Being shut out, not so much.

But the internet is what it is; enthusiasm and fan culture are what they are, and I have surrounded myself—very deliberately and lovingly—with nerds. I’m guaranteed that I will know what happens in The Rise of Skywalker months before it comes out in a format I can watch. Not just the broad brushstrokes of a formal review—I’m immersed in fan culture. By the time you read this, I will know this movie’s equivalent of porgs, vulptices, and all the other little details that make a movie fun—but that will be long before I get to have that fun myself.

And… it turns out I’m all right with swimming in spoilers.

In the leadup to The Rise of Skywalker, I kept trying to give myself room to feel sad, angry, anything else negative. And I didn’t. Not being able to see it in theaters wasn’t like an open wound or even a papercut. It was more like a missing tooth, where you keep poking your tongue in the place where it used to be. It felt weird… but not painful. I kept telling myself it was okay not to play the cheerful smiling cripple. But when I went to sit with my actual feelings, they were… fine?

It’s not because I’m not interested in the story. I am. I think it’s not even that I’ve internalized that knowing a plot and experiencing storytelling are two different things—although wow, are they ever. (Try listening to a six-year-old tell you about their favorite movie sometime. It can be delightful, or it can be tedious beyond words—but it is most certainly not the same as watching the movie. Not even a little. Even though they know—and will tell you, with the slightest encouragement—all the best lines and most charming details and, to some approximation, the jokes. Now think of that magnified by an entire internet: that’s what it can be like when you haven’t seen the movie that’s the center of the discourse. You’ve heard the one-liners again and again, often with people getting them wrong or laughing in the middle, but it’s definitely not the same.)

When I gave myself space to sit with my feelings about not getting to see The Rise of Skywalker in theaters, what came out was this: yes, this is a new facet of my disability. Nobody really wants those, and I’m no exception. If you could give me a get-out-of-vertigo-free card, a day pass to go to the movies without side effects, I would absolutely do it. But in general I think this, the capstone of the Star Wars sequence, is actually the ideal movie for me to be a fan who waits.

When I was little, most of my Star Wars experience was not watching. Most of it was discussing and reenacting with other children in the imaginative play that can be the center of fandom for the littlest fans. Star Wars was mediated through other people: my cousin Garrett, my friend Jimmy, sometimes even other children whose names I didn’t know. What do you imagine Han Solo would do here? If I say my Princess Leia does this and you say your Chewbacca does that in response, do we keep running around yelling and playing? Do we argue about it? Tiny child fandoms can be incredibly interactive. Strong personalities—yes, like mine—will hold a lot of sway. But if you want someone else to play that the merry-go-round is the Millennium Falcon with you, you have to listen to them at least a little.

These days I’m a writer, which means that I get to spend a lot of time telling other people what to think. I get ARCs and NetGalley downloads of books. Sometimes I even see manuscripts before their editors see them. It’s very easy to get used to the idea that my opinions are best formed in a vacuum—that I am supposed to be the influencer, not the influenced. But both sides of that equation can be fun. Usually I get to be first in line, but there’s something wonderful about opening a new book knowing that it’s a friend’s favorite.

Even without the vertigo banning me from theaters, I was never motivated enough to be the midnight release person—so I always knew that other people had seen it before me. In between bouts of illness after The Last Jedi, I texted my friend Arkady Martine, “I was squeezing your hand across the miles when Holdo came on the screen,” because of a conversation we’d had about the Vice-Admiral and depictions of femme women in space opera. “I see what you mean,” I wrote to a family member who had already told me she’d fallen in love with Rose Tico.

So I’m leaning into those moments. I can’t avoid my friends and family’s enthusiasm—I wouldn’t want to—so I’m embracing it as part of the roots of my Star Wars fandom. Let’s do this together. If I can’t be there to be the one who sees it first, help me see it best.

Make sure I don’t miss a wonderful thing. I’m not going to be the lone figure out on the plane, facing down the new challenge by myself—so let me go into this knowing that I’m already part of a huge conversation, knowing that I can come out and talk to all of you, that when I do get to join the conversation you’re not going to be saying, “Ugh, I’m tired of that,” but, “Yay, we saved you a seat!”

Save us all a seat. Make sure there’s always more to talk about.

If you’re in the same position as I am—if you can’t go to theatrical releases of movies for medical reasons—and you don’t feel the same way, please know that your feelings are valid too. Angry, sad, frustrated, isolated—even bemused—I’m not trying to say that I’ve unlocked the secret one true way to feel about all of this. But I’m hoping that for me, this time, being late to the party still feels like being at the party—with plenty of verses of the Ewok song yet to sing together.

 

Badass Moms in the Zombie Apocalypse

My labor pangs are mild at first. They’re intense, sure, but it’s mostly warmth and pressure like my abdomen is hugging itself. I’ve got time. Hours maybe, before I have to flee the enclave and get myself to the birthing hideout.

In the meantime, I’m in our makeshift infirmary, trying to get water past old Eileen’s tight-pressed lips because we ran out of IV and NG intubation supplies a long time ago. She reluctantly takes one sip, two, and that’s all she can handle before she grunts, whips her grayed head to the side, spraying water all over the chalkboard.

She whispers, “No more, Brit. It hurts.”

“You have to drink—”

“Let me go.”

I pull the mug back and stare down at my friend. Eileen’s hair spreads thin and gray across the faded sheets of her cot. Except for the tumor bulge in her belly, she’s so tiny now, her muscles wasted away, her wrinkly skin so loose it looks like a whole different person used to live inside it.

“A, b, c, d, e, f, g,” she sings softly, like she always does when the pain is bad. She’s staring up at a row of paper letters draped over the chalkboard. It’s been more than a decade since the flesh-eaters came, but the letters still shine bright with primary colors, maybe because that wall never got direct sunlight. It’s why we chose this particular classroom for our infirmary. We all needed a bit of color.

There’s nothing I can give Eileen for the pain. The only supplies we have left—expired ibuprofen, Min’s bathtub gin—make her stomach hurt worse.

I open my mouth to tell Eileen it’s fine, that I won’t force her to drink, but Marisol bursts in. She’s sucking air, her black skin sheened with sweat. She must have sprinted all the way from the watchtower.

“The baby’s coming?” Marisol gasps out.

“Yeah, how did you—? Just mild contractions so far. There’s plenty of time—”

She’s shaking her head. “They’ve scented you. We’re going.”

“My water hasn’t even broken!”

“Flesh-eaters are massing at the gate.”

“Shit.”

The undead are like sharks, drawn to blood, but they’re drawn to birth even more, and they seem to have favorites. I guess I’m a favorite.

Which means we must run before the flesh-eaters trample the gate. My go-bag has been ready for weeks, for exactly this moment, but I’m frozen in place because Eileen can no longer drink water.

“Eileen…” She might not be here when I get back. If I get back.

Her bony, paper-skin hand grasps mine in a show of strength she hasn’t displayed in weeks. “Honey, it’s okay to let me go,” she says. “Because I win. I win at everything.” At my puzzled look she adds, “I get to die an old woman. Who does that these days? A badass motherfucker, that’s who.”

“You’ve got five minutes!” someone calls from the hallway.

“Brit,” Marisol urges.

“Tell you what,” Eileen says. “I’ll hang on for you. I’ll drink every day until you get back. You hear me, girl? I want to see that baby.”

I lean down and press my lips to her forehead. Then Marisol grabs my arm and yanks me away, through the door, down the hallway lined with old lockers toward the room we share.

Our go-bags lean against the door. Mari grabs them both, since I don’t bend over so good these days, and we hitch them over our shoulders. They contain water, food, needle and thread, flashlights and candles, ammunition, rope, a sealing container for the afterbirth, and all the rags we could scavenge during the last eight months.

Marisol grabs her shotgun. We both carry knives at our hips already; no one goes anywhere without her knife.

Another contraction takes my breath away.

“You okay, baby?” Mari says.

I’m leaning against the doorframe, and I can’t speak, but I manage a nod. The contraction lingers, getting tight, tight, tighter, and when it releases sweet air rushes into my lungs.

“Brit?”

“It’s fine,” I manage. “Like period cramps, just more intense.”

“Eileen says you’re supposed to breathe through that.”

“I forgot.” I’m staring at our bed. It’s just a mattress on the floor, but it’s covered in an old patchwork quilt, neatly made. Mari always insists on having a made bed. Beside the mattress sits a fruit crate, which Marisol painted with vines and flowers. A yellow blanket is folded inside the crate, a gift from Eileen, before she got so sick.

Marisol notes my gaze and says, “We’re coming back.” She takes my face in her hands, forces me to look at her, plants a kiss on my lips. “We are coming back,” she says again.

“We are coming back,” I echo, and I make myself waddle after her out the door, but even if we return the world will be different, and it’s like I’m turning my back to everything—warmth, love, safety, a whole era of self. How do you say goodbye to yourself? You don’t, I suppose. You pretend it isn’t happening.

We hurry past the sanctum—formerly the boys’ locker room—where members of the enclave go to menstruate, and take the concrete steps down to the old boiler room and our hidden exit. In the basement, a gauntlet of women awaits us.

“Go with God,” says Rebekah, her hand grasping my shoulder as if to lay down a blessing. Even after everything that’s happened, Rebekah has faith.

“Eyes up, knives ready,” says Min.

“Eyes up, knives ready,” Stacy echoes.

“Selfish bitch,” someone whispers. Liz’s voice. Our leader thinks that by choosing to get pregnant, I risked two of the enclave’s most valuable members.

She’s right. I’m selfish.

They usher us into the tunnel. The gate before us squeals open, and we pass through. The sentry says, “Eyes up, knives ready,” before she swings it closed at our backs and slams the padlock home.

The tunnel grows dark, and Marisol flicks on her flashlight. Our path is half an inch deep in rain run-off, turned to shiny black tar by Mari’s light, and we splash along, not speaking but listening instead. Eyes up, we always say, but the truth is our ears do just as much labor.

We pass another gate, another sentry. “A murder of flesh-eaters passed by an hour ago,” she says, this time in a whisper because we’re almost outside. “Move fast, or they’ll trace your scent back here.”

The tunnel brightens. We reach a curtain of trumpet creeper vines, carefully cultivated to camouflage this exit. We push it aside and find ourselves in ratty, new growth forest with branches as sharp and stark as bones. Lazy winter light from a low sun makes me squint. Our breaths frost the air.

After pausing to listen, Marisol whispers, “This way.”

I know where to go, but Mari likes to lead and I like to let her. Our footsteps seem too loud, crunching over fallen autumn leaves, half frozen from the night’s cold snap. They smell of rot, but it’s the good kind of rot, loamy and alive.

We pass an old farmhouse, the porch caved in, the walls half devoured by kudzu and poison ivy still in autumn colors. Down the rise is a brackish pond limned with ice. Something long and bloated floats near the edge, partly camouflaged with arrowhead leaves. Marisol spots it the same moment I do. We freeze.

It’s either dead or undead, a decomposing body or a flesh-eater in a state of dormancy until sound or scent alerts it to a nearby meal.

“It’s dead,” Marisol says at last.

“You’re sure?”

“Brain stem’s been severed.”

Mari’s always had better eyesight than me. My glasses got busted three years ago, and we haven’t been able to scavenge a decent replacement. “Good. That’s good.”

We continue on, but I steal a glance backward at the bloating, floating body. That’s how Eileen’s daughter died. Eileen says she probably dove in, thinking the water would mask her scent. When Eileen found her, she had to drive her own dagger into her daughter’s brain.

I put my hand to my giant belly. Is it horrible to bring a person into the world, knowing you might have to send them right back out of it before they’ve hardly lived? Maybe that’s what Liz meant when she called me selfish.

We reach the train tracks. They’re on a graveled rise, and my swollen ankles appreciate the firmer ground, but I hate being out in the open. At least we’ll be able to see them coming.

We round a bend, and I glimpse a line of rusty shipping containers through a break in the trees. “Almost there,” Mari whispers.

But I grab her hand as another contraction takes me. “Holy shit,” I say. My water doesn’t burst and rush out of me in a flood like all the stories I’ve heard; instead it leaks out, dribbles down my legs.

“Sshh, honey, I know it’s hard,” she says, soft and low. “But you cannot yell or grunt or moan or anything. You hear me? Just breathe. Here, I’ll do it with you.” She inhales through her nose, counting, “One, two, three, four. Now out for one, two…”

I breathe with Marisol. Breathe and breathe even though my insides have turned to fire. When the contraction releases, she says, “See? Not so bad.” But she’s glancing everywhere but at me. Eyes up.

“Mari, it’s getting pretty bad.”

“I know how tough my baby is. Remember when you came out to your Baptist preacher dad while holding the hand of the most beautiful Black woman in the world?”

“Yes.”

“This is not harder than that.”

“No.”

“Remember when you fucked that trader silly, faking the big O night after night until you were good and sure he’d given us a baby?”

“Yeah.”

“This is not harder than that.”

“Not even close.”

“You got this.”

“I think my water broke.”

Her breath hitches. “Let’s keep moving.”

We angle toward the shipping containers. We’ve been whispering, sure, walking soft like rabbits with a hawk overhead, but if my birthing scent is strong enough to bring flesh-eaters to our gate early, it’s only a matter of time before they find us here.

The tracks open onto a huge, overgrown train yard, scattered with sleeping locomotives and tankers and shipping containers. A few lie on their sides, and others are riddled with rust holes, but many seem intact. Marisol leads us through, weaving around containers until we reach one near the center, untouched by forest overhang, sheltered from wind by the containers around it. It’s a faded green color, with the words “Smith-Patel” in huge lettering on the side. We reach the end, and Marisol raises her hand to the latch. A caution sign screams down at us, still in bright yellow.

“I oiled these hinges to get the door open, but they still squeal,” she warns. “Be ready to move fast.”

I nod. She yanks the latch, the door shrieks open, and I practically leap into the container’s black belly. Mari jumps in beside me, heaves the door closed and drops a two-by-four to bar us in. I spare a thought to the enterprising survivor of long ago, who welded brackets to the inside of this container so it could be barred from the inside. Women from our enclave have been using this birthing hideout for years, though fewer than half ever return.

The darkness is nearly total. My eyes adjust, enough to note a tiny bit of light coming from a rust hole in ceiling. That tiny hole is essential. Smith-Patel was an international shipping company, and many of these containers are still air- and watertight.

Brightness sears my vision. Mari uses her flashlight to rummage through her pack, retrieve a scented votive candle and some matches. She lights the candle, flicks off the flashlight. The air begins to smell of lavender.

We have light. Air. Shelter from wind and rain and flesh-eaters. This will be our home for the next several days.

Something bangs against the wall; I feel its echo all the way down to my toes.

“We barely got here in time,” I say.

“We knew they’d find us.”

We are silent a long moment. Another bang, then a slick whisper of a sound as something slides along the wall. I hardly dare to breathe.

“The container will hold,” Mari says.

“I know.”

“They’ll mass while you push that baby out, and for a day or two after. But we’ll keep quiet, and the birthing scent will fade, and they’ll eventually give up.”

“I know.”

“We’ll go back to the enclave with a brand new baby for everyone to love on.”

“I know.”

“They’ll be so glad we did this.”

“Except Liz.”

“Huh?”

“She called me a selfish bitch. As we were leaving.”

Mari chuckles. “Easy for her to say. She already has a daughter almost full-grown.”

The door rattles. Flesh-eaters don’t manipulate physical objects well, but it seems to me that some memory of their lives before must remain because they’re always fussing at doors and windows, massing at gates, worrying doorknobs and latches.

“The container will hold,” Mari repeats. “But it’s a good idea for us to be quiet a while. Maybe get some rest?”

My lower back is killing me. “Yeah, okay.”

We already prepped the place with piss buckets, water jugs, and all the blankets we could find, so it’s just a matter of stretching out and pillowing my head on my pack. It’s not so bad, I tell myself. I have food, water, shelter, and Marisol. Everything I need.

The flesh-eaters continue to knock and pound and side-swipe the walls. Their peculiar shuffling gait crunches through the gravel outside. It’s hard to tell through cold, corrugated steel, but my best guess is we’ve attracted at least seven of them, with more on the way. A whole murder.

The container will hold.

At Mari’s and my continued silence, they settle a bit. More contractions take hold of my body, and they are terrible but Mari is right; my life has been full of way harder things. I manage to doze off between them.

Hours pass. Mari’s lavender candle winks out, and she replaces it with another. We’re not sure whether it helps to mask the birthing scent, but we both love lavender. The rusty air hole goes dark with night. The flesh-eaters slow with the night’s cold. There are twelve at least now, drawn by movement and the smell of new life.

My contractions get fiercer as night deepens, coming minutes apart. Mari gnaws on a bit of jerky, offers me some, but I shake my head. She stretches out behind me on the blanket so she can press her palm against my lower back, as if to push away the pressure of labor. It helps. Between contractions, she kisses the back of my neck, tells me how great I’m doing, asks if I need food or water, and I can’t imagine how anyone gets through something like this without a sweet, beautiful, perfect Marisol at her side.

I’m no longer forgetting to breathe. My panting comes naturally, demandingly, primevally. Eileen said that would be a sign my cervix was dilating. It’s making me want to push. Wait, Eileen said. Resist pushing as long as you can, and you’ll need fewer stitches after.

“It’s coming, Mari,” I whisper. “Soon.” So many things could go wrong. We’ve discussed all of them. Like billions of child-bearers who came before us, we’re counting on a little luck.

She kisses my cheek, gets up and grabs the flashlight.

Something crashes against the container wall.

We ignore it. Marisol aims the flashlight at my legs. “Spread ‘em. I’m going to take a look.”

I oblige, and she sticks her head between my bare legs. “Oh,” she says. “Oh.”

“Oh, what?” I prop myself up on my elbows.

Another crash, followed by that unmistakable hiss from undead lungs. A flesh-eater is right at my head; we are separated by mere millimeters of steel.

“Our baby,” Marisol says. “It has hair.”

Oh. “I think I need that mouthguard now.”

Mari grabs it from her pack, a wobbly plastic thing we scavenged from a sporting goods store. I shove it into my mouth just in time.

Pain rips down my spine, into my hips and thighs. It’s the most intense pressure I’ve ever felt, like I’m going to explode with diarrhea or vomit or both or maybe just burst like a huge bloody balloon.

I pant through my nose. Pant, pant, pant, but instead of relaxing the contraction gets tight, tight, tighter and when I can’t possibly take any more, it gets worse. Tears leak from my eyes. My breath wheezes as I try to suck more air past the guard clenched in my teeth.

The pressure fades, and I almost sob with relief. But I don’t even catch my breath before the next contraction possesses me and I’m blind with pain, but not deaf because I hear the door of our container rattling like a castanet.

Suddenly the mouthguard is gone, maybe I spit it out, I don’t know but air rushes into my lungs just as something in my abdomen ruptures, and I yell, “FUCK!”

The contraction releases. I sink into the blankets and my eyes start to drift closed but horror is blossoming on Mari’s flashlit face, because something did rupture and now I’m broken… No, it’s because I just yelled fuck at the top of my lungs without even thinking about it.

Banging comes from all sides now, random and startling and echoing. It’s so loud it’s likely to draw every flesh eater within twenty miles.

“Shit,” I whisper.

“Shit,” she agrees, hefting her shotgun, checking the chamber. The two-by-four is moving, shivering in its brackets. They shouldn’t be able to get in. They shouldn’t be able to manipulate the door at all.

Or maybe they could. All it would take is an unlucky accident of physics.

“Oh, god, here comes another,” I say, clutching handfuls of blanket.

Our container rocks on its foundation as pure, white-hot pain stabs deep in my gut. The thing inside me wants out, and more than anything in the world, I want to push it out. “Mari?”

Marisol looks at the shivering bar, back at me, to the bar again. Defend or support? I see the exact moment she decides.

She sets down the gun, crouches beside me, grabs my slick hand, and says, “Baby, you can say fuck as loud as you want.”

“FUCK!” I yell.

“FUCK!” she yells back. “FUCK THE FLESH-EATERS!”

The floor rocks violently.

“FUCK THEM IN THE BRAINSTEM,” I scream.

“FUCK LIZ.”

“FUCK THAT FUCKING STUPID-ASS TRADER.”

“FUCK YOUR DAD.”

The airless hissing of hungry flesh-eaters is all around us.

“FUCK THE WHOLE FUCKING WORLD—OH, GOD IT’S COMING.”

Marisol shoves the flashlight into her mouth and practically leaps between my thighs. She’s just in time; something roughly the size of a melon slips out of me, and I hope Mari is catching it.

The pressure in my back is instantly gone, and the contraction evaporates to nothing. It’s too dark to see anything, though I hear the susurrus of wiping rags and a squelch of wetness. “Is it okay? Is it alive?”

Wailing pierces the night, echoes around us, magnifies until it fills my soul. I am buoyant, I am life, I am weeping, and I hardly notice when a final, stabbing contraction pushes out the afterbirth because Mari has placed a warm, wet, wriggling bundle against my chest, saying, “Sweetheart, we tentatively have a son.”

The container rocks, lifting several inches from its mooring, crashes back to the ground. Banging reverberates all around us but Mari and me and our new son ignore it all, spending a few precious moments making a tight little cocoon of wonder. She waits for the pulsing in the umbilical cord to stop completely, then she ties it with some thread and hacks it off.

As she gets to work dealing with the afterbirth—scooping it into the container, mopping the floor with rags—I guide my boy to my nipple. He roots around a bit, and it takes a few tries, but he finally figures it out and latches on like a champ. His crying quiets. I can hardly see anything, but I can brush his soft cheek, his soft hair, trace his tiny ear.

We haven’t discussed a name yet. In the new world, no one names a baby until it has survived a few days.

“Brit,” Mari whispers, against a backdrop of constant banging and hissing. I discern the outline of a knife as she hands it to me, handle first. “Eyes up, knives ready.”

“You think they’ll get in?” I take the knife.

“They are very focused on the door for some reason.”

As if in agreement, the bar rattles viciously.

“Get that afterbirth ready,” I say.

“I’ve got it right here.”

My right hand is my best knifing hand, so I shift the baby into my left arm. He fusses a bit, but latches back on quick. It’ll be a while before I drop any real milk, but he seems content to suckle anyway. A small bit of luck.

The wooden bar cracks, and it’s like a thunderclap in my head. Mari raises her shotgun.

Mari checked the brackets thoroughly when we prepped this place. The undead would have to grasp the handles from the outside and pull in order to get in. They are too clumsy, too mindless to work through the logistics of that.

Then again, what they lack in mindlessness, they make up for in relentlessness.

Carefully, Mari reaches with one hand, runs her fingers along the wooden bar. She gasps.

“What?” I whisper.

“It’s wet. A bit rotted. Rain must’ve gotten in a while back.”

“Shit.” The opening wasn’t as well sealed as we thought.

“Get the rope out of my pack.”

The hissing intensifies. Our container wobbles. I force myself to my knees, babe in one hand, knife in the other. I transfer the knife to my teeth and rummage through Mari’s things until my fingers find the nylon rope.

I’m too late. The door clangs like a cymbal. The bar splinters, and suddenly our door is swinging wide to the icy night.

They rush in, all yellow teeth and gaping eyeholes, spaghetti limbs and melting candlewax skin. Mari fires; the gunshot explodes my eardrums, magnified by container walls. The baby screams.

Mari launches at one with her knife, pushes it back just enough that she can expel the shell and fire again. They tumble backward. Mari grabs the plastic tub filled with afterbirth, tosses it out the door. It plops into the gravel. The flesh-eaters roar, swarm over it like ants on a hill.

Mari jumps out, grabs the door, jumps back in while pulling it behind her.

A flesh-eater’s arm shoves inside, keeping the door from closing, and I attack with my knife, slash, slash, slashing until it finally withdraws. The door bangs shut.

“The rope!” Mari yells, her voice faint and tinny in the wake of the gun blast.

I drop the knife, toss the rope at her, grab the inner bracket and hold the door closed while Mari loops around it. The door rattles, threatens to pull out of my grasp, but most of the undead must be busy with the afterbirth because it’s nothing I can’t handle.

Mari weaves and loops the rope around inner and outer brackets, effectively tying the door closed. Still holding the frayed end, she slides to the floor, letting her head loll against the wall. I know my Mari; she’ll hold that rope tight forever.

The baby screams and screams.

I let Mari catch her breath for a minute, cooing at the baby while offering him my breast again. When he quiets, I say, “They’ll eat the afterbirth, and then they’ll leave.”

She shakes her head. It’s dark inside again, which is why I didn’t notice right away that she’s crying. “I saw more coming. So many. We could be buried under a mountain of them.”

“Oh.” I clutch the baby tight to my chest. “Well. Maybe we’ll get lucky.”

We don’t get lucky.

For the next few days, the door rattles and shakes, but the rope holds. Mari and I don’t dare talk too much, lest we send them into another frenzy. Instead, I spend hours staring at a tiny circle of pure light on the container wall, cast by the rust hole. I nurse my baby, listen to flesh eaters hiss and bump the walls, and watch the light spot creep down with the rising sun until it finally winks out.

On the fourth day, we run out of food. It’s just as well, since our slop buckets are almost full. We put a blanket over them to quell the reek, and it helps a little. But the flesh-eaters refuse to leave.

On the fifth day, the sun breaks unseasonably warm, and our container becomes a sauna, hot and thick with blood and sweat and piss. The flesh-eaters continue to mass. All day long comes a slick, wet, rhythmic sound as one licks the wall.

On the sixth day, clouds must fill the sky because the light spot does not appear. I stand below the rust hole for hours, because it feels good to stand, and because I’m hoping it will rain. It doesn’t. We run out of water, along with clean changing rags for the baby.

On the seventh day, we are out of options.

“Dehydration is not the worst way to go,” Mari says.

“Getting eaten alive is the worst way to go,” I agree.

“So… we just wait to die?” Her gaze drops to the baby in my arms. He is such a good sweet boy, already flexing his fingers and toes and trying to look around, so content to be held by one of us. He has no idea the life that awaits him outside this container, that’s he’s just gone from one womb to another.

I kiss his tiny forehead. He deserves a chance. “Maybe we die trying to live,” I say. We knew it might come to this. “I’m the one still reeking of birth. I’ll make a run for it, draw them away. With luck, they’ll follow. When the way’s clear, you take our son and sneak back to the enclave.”

“Oh, hell no. They’ll be on you in seconds. They’ll swarm you.”

“Then you’d better run fast.”

She stares at me. “Brit.”

I hand her the baby. “You’re faster. You’re his best chance. You know it. This is the only way.”

Her chin quivers, but her voice is steady as a rock when she says, “If they don’t chase you, we all die.”

I grab my knife, and quick before I can think about it, I swick the blade across the back of my hand. A line of heat pours blood, and I smear it everywhere: my face, my hands, my neck, my breasts. “Now they’ll chase me for sure.”

“Oh, god, Brit.”

She moves as if to embrace me, but I put up a hand to stop her. “You’ll get my blood all over yourself.”

She blinks. Tears pour down her cheeks. “I can’t even hug you good-bye,” she says.

“I love you, Marisol. Keep our son alive if you can.”

I grab the shotgun, because I’ll need something to clear a path, make space for Mari and our baby to flee. Mari works the knots of the rope, unwinds it from the brackets.

I push the door open.

The sun is blinding but I don’t have time to adjust, to do anything except get a shot off as I’m leaping from the container. A mass of undead topple backward, but others reach with gaping mouths and bony fingers for my arms, my neck, my hair. I reload, shoot again, reload, shoot, all the while pushing forward.

Flesh-eaters roar with hunger. Something snags my hair, yanks my head sideways. I swing my shotgun around and fire blindly.

Reload, shoot, push forward.

My foot tangles in something—the train tracks—and I go sprawling, the gun flying out of my hand and skidding across the ground. This is it. The moment I die. I hope I made enough space for Mari.

I crawl forward toward the gun, but my eyes are closed. Any moment now, teeth will rip into my flesh. I force myself to imagine Eileen’s smiling face. My baby’s tiny, perfect nose. Waking up on cool autumn mornings with Marisol at my side.

Death does not come.

Someone screams—not a scream of rot and hunger but rather life and fury. Gunshots thunder around me. Bullets zing past my ears. Footsteps patter by. Someone yanks me up by the armpit.

“Let’s go, Brit.”

It’s Liz, one shotgun in hand, the other stashed under her arm. With her are Rebekah, Min, and half a dozen others. They’ve formed a perimeter around me. I jump to my feet, Liz tosses me the gun she retrieved from the ground. Nearly half the undead trickle away, drawn to something else.

Together we ooze out of the train yard like an amoeba of shotguns, shooting anything that dares approach. By the time we reach the treeline, no flesh-eaters remain in visual distance who are capable of coming after us. Mari is there holding our baby, guarded by Liz’s own teenaged daughter Emma. “We set some menstrual lures, but they won’t last long,” Liz says. “We need to hurry.”

Mari squeezes my hand once, quickly, and we follow after Liz as she rushes us toward the enclave. “Why did you come for us?” I say to her jogging back. This was a costly rescue: the lures, the precious ammunition, the risk to lives.

“You were gone too long,” Liz says gruffly.

“But you said I was selfish.”

She stops in her tracks. Whirls on me. “I stand by that assessment,” she says. “But what kind of world are we making if a woman can’t go after what she wants?”

“We all volunteered,” Min says.

“Our bodies, our choice,” Emma says.

“We really wanted a baby,” Rebekah says. “I mean, I don’t ever want a baby, but I’m glad for you to have yours.”

When we arrive at the enclave, I immediately wash a week’s worth of blood and stench from my skin. Safety first.

The second thing I do is gather Marisol and our baby and take them to the infirmary to see Eileen.

She’s hard to look at. Her skin is so sallow, her eyes so hollow, her teeth gigantic in her face. I half expect her to roar with hunger and charge after me.

But when she sees us, she smiles like a little girl on Christmas morning. “Oh my god, he’s so beautiful.” Marisol places him in Eileen’s arms. He’s swaddled in clean rags now, and his little cheek muscles work as if he might have something to say. “He has your nose, Mari,” Eileen says, and then she laughs at her own joke.

“I would die for him,” Mari says. “Brit almost did.”

“And Liz would die for any woman in this enclave,” Eileen points out.

“Did we make a terrible mistake?” I don’t mean to say it aloud; the words just sneak out of me.

Eileen says: “I have no regrets.”

“Really? Your own baby girl, killed by flesh eaters…”

She closes her eyes. Someone did her hair, making a neat gray braid that drapes over one shoulder. Someone painted her nails, too, in bright pink. Beside her, propped against the chalkboard, is a colored pencil drawing of a tidy little farmhouse with a pretty porch overlooking a gleaming pond. She says, “I miss her every day. But the important thing is not that she died. It’s that she lived.”

An hour later, she’s singing, “Now I know my a-b-c’s” when she slips into a coma. The next morning, she softly dies.

We name our son Eileen.

“That’s a girl’s name,” Rebekah says.

Marisol gets in her face. “Says who?”

I put a gentle hand on Mari’s shoulder. “It’s a new world, Rebekah.” I remind her. “And if Eileen ever asks, tell him he’s named for the toughest bitch who ever lived.”

(Editors’ Note: “Badass Moms in the Zombie Apocalypse” is read by Erika Ensign on the Uncanny Magazine Podcast, Episode 32A.)

 

Writing With My Keys Between My Fingers

(Content note: Descriptions of online harassment, threats and misogyny.) 

Like you, like almost all writers, I live on the internet. I work there, too. My Twitter DMs have gotten me gigs and solicitation for anthologies and hot tips and networking. They’ve also brought me suggestions that I should kill myself because of my opinion of Tom Clancy.

The internet is a safer place for some people than it is for others. It’s just like the real world, because it is the real world.

There is a famous classroom exercise where men are asked: what steps did you take today to avoid being sexually assaulted? Typically there is no response given, because this is not a thing that most men routinely consider. When the question is put to the women in the room, the response is detailed and practical: we travel in groups, we stay aware of our surroundings, and we flat-out avoid the places and situations where we know we will be too vulnerable to enjoy whatever it was we set out to do. We do what we want, but we carry our keys poked out between our fingers, like claws.

There is a parallel conversation that women writers have with one another. Before a story or a book—but particularly before non-fiction like cultural criticism, memoir, essay, or review is published—we ask one another: what steps have you taken to anticipate the harassment that is almost sure to follow? Every time I have had this conversation, the protective measures described remind me of those keys threaded through our fingers and those streets we will not walk at night. Every woman I know battens down her proverbial hatches on the eve of publication.

The steps taken follow the pattern of questions one gets after one has been victimized. Well, did you protect yourself? Did you make yourself an easy target? We do everything right.

  1. We set up two-factor authentication on our accounts.
  2. We turn off our notifications.
  3. We set up an automatic email responder.
  4. We put a Captcha on our website comments, we turn off Instagram comments, we promise each other we will not read the comments.

It does not matter. If the mob wants you bad enough, the mob will reach you. Carrying your keys in your fist is not enough.

There is a conversation I wish men had among themselves about how they respond to women who write online. They could share their strategies to avoid sending cruel and hateful messages:

  1. Hey, bro! Instead of harassing that woman, did you try counting to ten?
  2. How about distracting yourself with another activity, such as knitting?
  3. I know you’re mad that she expressed an opinion you disagree with! But pretend that byline said Ned Nobody instead of Sarah Somebody. Now you don’t want to threaten to rape him at all, do you?

But I don’t think they share those thoughts with one another, because this isn’t getting any easier. Rape culture is running the world1, and the internet persists as our dark mirror. Reporting assault or attempted assault in the real world brings no result at all most of the time, only suggestions that you take better precautions. Two years ago, a stranger on a train put his penis in my bare hand. The cops told me (I am not kidding) to stop wearing skirts. This year, I reported a Twitter account that said he would rape me, if I wasn’t too fat to prevent it. Twitter assured me this did not violate their codes of conduct.

Online injustice erodes our access to public space the same way fear of assault keeps us from walking alone at night. I am beginning to hear more and more of us admit that it just isn’t worth it anymore. I am fortunate enough to know editors to whom I can pitch essays on any topic I desire, and in most cases I get a chance to publish. I am a prolific essayist, and I publish often.

However, there are subjects I think twice about engaging. Even with good professional rates, a lot of exposure, and a proven link to people buying my books, there are some subjects that just aren’t worth it. I’ve written about the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Star Wars2, Rick and Morty3, DC Comics, and Harry Potter4 in the last few years. The response to my work is varied: some praise, some criticism. I don’t mind that. Nobody makes a detailed plan to save themselves from the trauma of simple disagreement. What I do mind is that the aftermath of each of these things has included slurs, threats, and targeted harassment.

I never publish the threats made against me, because they don’t deserve notoriety or notice. At my editor’s prompting, I will give you some examples so that you understand.

Writing about Marvel earned me a long, detailed, violent rape fantasy that took place on my daily public transit commute written out in all caps and sent to me through my website.

Writing about Star Wars got a guy on Twitter to describe the sound and smell of fat rendering off my body as I burned alive.

Writing about Rick and Morty got me called every possible variation of “stupid fat ugly cunt” possible in English, through multiple points of contact.

Writing about DC Comics brought me a delightful barrage of absolutely rote fake geek girl5 accusations so boring and predictable I could cry.

Writing about Harry Potter has, over the years, netted me some invasive speculations about my sexuality and couple of  dick pics; truly the full gamut of human experience.

This is not even to mention the responses I’ve gotten when I’ve written about sex, feminism6, being queer7, or being fat8. Those responses are unspeakable, even here.

These are real-world threats that I have to deal with in real life. They affect my future and my sense of safety. Most of all, they affect my decision-making. I have serious misgivings about writing on any of those subjects again.

I’m not alone in this. I’ve had private conversations with close friends and professional colleagues who have varying levels of PTSD after having published work on vaccination9, disability, geek culture, toxic masculinity, and even seemingly inoffensive subjects like fountain pens. Every woman writer I know has had to weed an inbox full of dick pics, requests for feet pics, or creepy pictures taken of her when she wasn’t looking. Every woman writer I know has gotten at least one death threat or rape threat for writing about something as harmless as Game of Thrones. I’ve had conversations with women who work with major games-focused publications who have had to forward some of their emails to the FBI because of the level of specific violence threatened in them.

These are not things that we can ignore. We grow accustomed to this level of vitriol and vulnerability. We laugh about it in private (“Add it to the rape threat pile! Dick pics are in the lead today! Get it together, Team Death!”) but most of us don’t air it in public because we’d like people to focus on our work, not our weariness. We can’t simply dump our emails and ignore our inboxes; this is where we get work.

This is exhausting. This is the point at which I start to make decisions about what’s worth it and when it might be better to refrain. This is as sharp as a ring of keys between my fingers; I want to protect myself, but not to cave to the pressure intended to drive me toward shutting up and retiring from public life. Every woman I know is doing the same impossible word problem: how many times can I have this fight before it sucks all the joy out of this thing that I love?

How many times am I going to turn down an opportunity before editors stop asking?

If I keep quiet, do the people trying to silence me win?

If I don’t write this this, who will?

If a man writes it and smugly enjoys the ensuing silence and praise, did I lose?

How much have I given up?

How much is too much?

Is there anywhere in the world where I can walk alone at night, freely talking about how much I love Kirby or Tolkien or Portal or being alive?

Good advice abounds for how to handle this kind of hostile work environment, much of it phrased expertly by Zoe Quinn, the unburnt witch herself10. What’s missing from the ongoing conversation is the kind of instruction that focuses on the aggressors in this situation. I see precious few people teaching empathy for online behavior. Most platforms invest themselves in engagement, but don’t care at all what form it takes.

Twitter sweet-talks the victimized11 into returning to the platform after they’ve been forced to quit, but it hardly ever bans the Nazis or the rape-and-death-threat enthusiasts. Verticals that I’ve written for will delete comments, but not ban users. “Ethics in game journalism” has become a grim-grinning watchword for the ostensibly moral fixations of an amoral brigade of brigands. We don’t teach men not to harass people online any more than we teach them not to rape. In both cases, we treat the transgression as natural and inevitable, and we sell rape whistles and block buttons to the victims. If we defend ourselves or fight back, harassers assume the posture of victimhood and use their power to get us censured, banned, or fired. If we don’t defend ourselves, we passively take damage. If we quit, our attackers win by default.

There is nothing so exhausting as a no-win situation.

Exhausted or not, women are always sharing this advice with each other; passing tips, recommending strategies, speaking from our own experience. The last time I was in a group of people (writers, artists, streamers, game journalists) sharing this information, I realized with an eerie feeling that I had been here before. The survivors share their story. The planners talk strategy. The people who could actually change Twitter and Reddit and Facebook and almost every online platform so that the outcome of this fight is to silence harassers and not creators assure us that they’re looking hard at this problem, and they’ll have a solution soon. Then they do nothing.

The result is that these things don’t change. They haven’t changed in the decade that I’ve spent publishing my work online. The women I know still write with their keys threaded between their fingers. Every woman who works online has been rendered sharp and brittle by this process, and every one of us has survived an onslaught of terror and abuse. This is doubly true for queer women, trans women, women of color, and non-binary people who write. I’ve focused here on myself and the women writers I know, not to be binarist or reductive, but to represent the experience I know best.

Here’s what else I know best: I’m done.

I am done turning down opportunities. I am done keeping quiet. I have written with my keys in my hand for the absolute last time.  If there is no way to win this fight, if I must endure the conditions of threats and harassment for the act of being a woman writing online, then I might as well write exactly what I want and get paid for enduring what follows.

I wonder what the world would look like if every other woman decided to do the same.

I wonder what it would look like if we didn’t have to.

 

[1] “Eve Ensler on Donald Trump, rape culture and the “unreckoned history” of America.” Salon. July 11, 2019. https://www.salon.com/2019/07/11/eve-ensler-on-donald-trump-rape-culture-and-the-unreckoned-history-of-america/.

[2] “Leia’s Legacy”. SYFY WIRE. May 4, 2019. https://www.syfy.com/syfywire/leias-legacy.

[3] “Why Rick and Morty’s Summer Is Better Companion For Rick”. SYFY WIRE. October 18, 2017. https://www.syfy.com/syfywire/why-rick-and-mortys-summer-is-a-better-companion-for-rick

[4]  “Meaningless Off-Screen Queering Has Got To Stop”. SYFY WIRE. June 5, 2018. https://www.syfy.com/syfywire/meaningless-off-screen-queering-has-got-to-stop

[5] “ ‘Fake Geek Girls’ Paranoia Is About Male Insecurity, Not Female Duplicity”. The Atlantic. January 22, 2013. https://www.theatlantic.com/sexes/archive/2013/01/fake-geek-girls-paranoia-is-about-male-insecurity-not-female-duplicity/267402/

[6] “Meg Elison Imagines a World with No Need for Men”. Lithub. May 3, 2018.  https://lithub.com/meg-elison-imagines-a-world-with-no-need-for-men/

[7] “How I Learned the Craft of Going on Dates with Girls”. Catapult. November 15, 2018. https://catapult.co/stories/how-i-learned-the-craft-of-going-on-dates-with-girls-meg-elison

[8] “My Friends Would Rather Have Their Guts Cut Open Than Be Like Me”. The Establishment. April 15, 2018. https://theestablishment.co/my-friends-would-rather-have-their-guts-cut-open-than-be-like-me/index.html

[9] “Rubella gave me a disability. This is my message to anti-vaxxers”. CNN. February 19, 2019. https://www.cnn.com/2019/02/19/opinions/measles-outbreak-anti-vaccine-movement-disability-sjunneson-henry/index.html

[10] “Crash Override: How Gamergate (Nearly) Destroyed My Life, and How We Can Win the Fight Against Online Hate”.  Public Affairs. September 5, 2017. https://www.amazon.com/Crash-Override-Gamergate-Destroyed-Against/dp/1610398084

[11] “Leslie Jones returns to Twitter”. CNN. July 22, 2016. https://www.cnn.com/2016/07/21/entertainment/leslie-jones-twitter-return/index.html

 

Elegy for the Self as Villeneuve’s Belle

I wish I didn’t hunger for this so badly

that I would have one so unripe, my plea

for it out of season. We should have both waited.

But we simply couldn’t be sated

by patience. Wanting pretty things is hunger, too,

and having is feasting, denied by few.

A rose alone was all my heart arose to ask.

I wish I offered any other task.

 

She offers me a love, constructs her heavy feasts,

our hearts’ loads both doubly or more increased,

we share a dim-hoped home for all our harried dreams.

I listen stilly, counsel naked screams

while nurturing a hope of love so high and fae

in this home that it anchors me to stay.

I count her gargoyle-scars, try salving each one’s source

in the prayer that it smooths romance’s course

 

after my anxious picking out of its season.

I patch the wounds with pages, with reason;

I knew what I was getting into when I came.

I thought that time would be breeze to the flame.

But upon arrival, what would greet me before

but pageantry and handsomeness galore!

To find the filling of any whim I’d foster

without a call of what it had cost, her

 

eagerness to share a table, be unfearsome,

unspool some deeper starmap or theorem

to the core of her tragic heats, her imprinting

on other bodies’ loves and fears sinking

through their depths, transmitting from campus roofs, cyan

images of seraphs’ full wingspan,

or any of the other pinprick-dreams at four

in the morning that she’d meekly endure.

 

I saw her wrestle with tea plates, scream the channels

of ink angels, call me out of panels

for fear of what would make of me if I stayed too

long. Wanting pretty things is hunger. You

must imagine I looked to be in this mess all

my own—my rose-begging made this my home.

And you’d not be mistaken. I dreamt of beauty

open and consuming me as duty,

 

casket-lips to sleep within forever enrapt.

Well, this is what clasped shut—the petals snapped

upon me wriggling. All I have now are dreams

of the beauty-thing coming to me, beams

of awe and clawlessness that trigger guilts in me.

What about the host here that I can see?

How greedy am I? To want a calm without the roar,

to wish to not walk a glass-cragged floor?

 

Isn’t love patience? Am I just the kind of thing

that impatiently keeps petal-plucking,

that makes the rose about me and gnashes at thorns?

That loves the feast, and bathes the host in scorns?

Just like a man, a child, a bitter babe like me.

Wanting pretty things is hunger. Carefree

and willing to do anything to earn this rose.

I guess at least I held to what I chose.

 

When she opens roars in sleep, I tend to each cry.

I wash the plates, I wipe the glasses dry.

I beg for home, but soft, when she erases their

numbers from the phone and calls it trust; share

reluctance to even venture past the garden

gates, to not watch her narrow heart harden.

But I need to see home, to share the joy and pang

of this one rose’s crimson and its fang.

 

They beg me stay a month, and weakly I say yes.

The weight of love must take more rest, I guess.

They tell me this attachment escapes their belief.

But here I am, at dinner. Their relief

can warm a time-cooled mug. They beg me stay four weeks

more. That won’t hurt her, no? The night air speaks

on her behalf—a threat that my distance steals her

breath, that if I meant it, I would defer

 

to her horses, or her blade, come castleward swift,

or admit my bitter heart has made a shift.

I cling to the dream, of wolf-lady lying still.

I wonder of the other princess-dream’s will.

 

Would that girl ever cry that love means sharing thorns?

Would that girl look as pushful under horns?

The lady of the castle fumes for me to die

and prove I’d dash my own calm at her cry.

I refused. What kind of belle did I think I was?

O, I must have broken all the soft laws

that make a prince—why turn your back on such a dear?

Once claws and lashes come, you cry out fear?

I stay a while of weeks at home without a plea.

 

I long for love still, this time silently.

I choose the humble warmth of books, hearth, the younger

dream-rose. Wanting pretty things is hunger.

 

Interview: Eugenia Triantafyllou

Eugenia Triantafyllou is a Greek author and artist with a flair for dark things. She currently lives in North Sweden with a boy and a dog. She is a graduate of Clarion West Writers Workshop. Her short fiction has appeared in Apex, Strange Horizons, Fireside and other venues. “My Country is a Ghost” is Triantafyllou’s first appearance in Uncanny, a beautiful ghost story that examines themes of immigration and family, food and faith.

Uncanny Magazine: I love the way this story uses ghosts to show the pressure that immigrants face to assimilate, and also the sense of loss that comes with that. Was that idea the starting point for the story, or did you have a different inspiration?

Eugenia Triantafyllou: I wanted to write about the moment when a person enters a country that needs them for certain reasons (i.e. their labor) but by no means would accept the wholeness of them. The complexity of the person’s culture and identity or even their memories are considered unnecessary and so they have to be left behind.

Immaterial and intangible as culture and memory are, they can’t be stopped by physical borders.  There are invisible borders meant to filter out those identities that do not fit the norm. I found that ghosts as a metaphor for all those other identities perfectly suited what I wanted to illustrate.

Uncanny Magazine: The story examines not only the experience of first-generation immigrants, but also later-generation immigrants, which adds lovely depth to the story. The challenges that Niovi and Remi face are different, though there is also some overlap. What drew you to these particular characters? Was one of them easier to write than the other?

Eugenia Triantafyllou: Niovi was definitely the easier one to write because the character has a lot in common with me and shares many of my own experiences. Remi’s character and Remi’s ghost came much later to me after the thoughtful feedback I got from the Clarion West students and from that week’s instructor Amal El-Mohtar.

Remi is a nice contrast to Niovi because he is not the exact opposite of her. He is, as you said, different and the same. His differences reflect Niovi’s anxieties about her present and her future in the country. It is because of his  similarities that they come together and Niovi finds her place in the world again.

As a result the story doubled in size after CW—which I assume will happen to the rest of my workshop stories as well—and the treatment of the themes became more nuanced and deep.

Uncanny Magazine: Food often evokes memories, and I love the way that descriptions of food were threaded through this story. Do you like to cook? What is your favorite food from childhood?

Eugenia Triantafyllou: My mother worked as a cook. She was the cook at the summer camp I went to as a child and I have to admit I did receive special treatment during the meals. Her love of cooking has unavoidably been passed on to me. Cooking keeps me laser-focused and I am even able to ponder story ideas while doing it.

As a child, I was in love with spaghetti napolitana, french fries, and bread. Starch was basically my best friend. I was not a big fan of meat or fish, despite my mother’s desperate efforts, and  didn’t taste okra unlike my protagonist (sorry!) until much later. Now, I am the least picky eater I know. I love variety and if I could have a buffet every day and eat a bite of everything it would be just perfect.

Uncanny Magazine: If you could have a ghost, would you want one?

Eugenia Triantafyllou: I think I already have one. If a ghost represents past moments that can be pieced together to recreate an iteration of a loved one that for some reason can’t be here with me, then I definitely carry more than one ghost. In fact, I don’t know what I would do without ghosts. I would probably be a much lonelier person.

You can imagine them as a cohort of friends, past and present, that can give you advice or inspire you with their own lives. Of course, it is just me projecting things back to myself. But this is what people do most of the time when interacting with people; we see them how we want to see them and take what we need from their company. So to me there isn’t much difference.

Uncanny Magazine: “My Country is a Ghost” is a beautiful story of family, immigration, food, and faith. Are any or all of these common themes across your stories? What other ideas or themes are you drawn to?

Eugenia Triantafyllou: As I was answering this question, I realized that the novella I am working on incorporates all these themes but in a very different setting!

Family is a very strong theme in my stories, particularly mother-daughter relationships. Probably because I feel more at home in that space and I revert to what feels natural when I am writing a new story. I try to push back at this urge because I want to experiment and try different sets of characters.  Now I am trying my hand at sister relationships (I don’t have one) and friends (that I am fortunate enough to have).

Folklore is something I am also very much drawn to. Growing up in Greece and reading/hearing so many folktales can do that to you. I am particularly fond of the dark ones because I feel there is an authenticity in them that you can’t get from a happily ever after kind of story. It helps that things like ghosts, bones, hags, and grotesque descriptions appeal to me. They are an armory or elements I like to play with and use in my stories.

Uncanny Magazine: What are you working on next?

Eugenia Triantafyllou: I am focusing on my final edits for my science fiction novella that deals with immigration to other planets and has a mother-daughter relationship, alien-species poachers, and death tattoos. Fun!

I am also trying to revise all of my Clarion West stories and send them out to the world (like this one)!

Thank you for the lovely questions!

Uncanny Magazine: Thank you for the lovely responses!

 

Thank You, Patreon Supporters!

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Aaron Roberts, Adam Leff, Adam Israel, Adrian Lee, Brad Bulger, Brandi Blackburn, Brandon Buehring, Brian McNatt, Cait Greer, carol r ADAMS, Christi Clogston, Clarissa C. S. Ryan, Daniel Ryan, David Dagg-Murry, David Demers, David Fiander, Deborah Levinson, Declan Meenagh, Devin and Stephanie Ganger, Didi Chanoch, Donna L. Spielman, Elena Gaillard, Elizabeth Koprucki, Emily Capettini, Emma Osborne, Felice Piserchia, Gareth Morgan, George Hetrick, heather payne, Ian Radford, Jen melchert, Jenn Northington, Jennifer Barnes, Jennifer Talley, John Chu, John M Gamble, Katharine Mills, Katherine Mead-Brewer, Katherine Wagner, Kaylan McCanna, Ken Austin, Kirby Li, Kristopher Jones, Ling-Yi Kung, Lorelei Kelly, M. D., Maria Morabe, Matt Boothman, Max Gartman, Melissa Stahr, michael smith, Michael Lee, Morgana Kay, Paul Weimer, Phil Margolies, R. Mark Jones, Raphaelle Race, Ravian Ruijs, Rebecca, Ronell Whitaker, Sam Gawith, Sarah Liberman, Sarah Storm, Sara Hartman, Savannah Madley, Todd Honeycutt, Tom Marks

Space Unicorn Ranger Corps ENSIGNS
Albert Bowes, Alice Gauntley, Amanda Cook, Andres Guevara, Andrew Hickey, Anthony Rubin, Ben Hammerslag, Beth McMillan, Carlos Hernandez, Carol Lovell, Caroline Pinder, Charlie Lindahl, Chessa Grasso Hickox, Cindy Murrell, Craig, Danica Schloss, Daniel Thackeray, Darren “ShadowCub” Hanson, David O Mahony, Ellen Zemlin, Emily Kvalheim, Emily A Finke, Emily Hogan, Emma Whitney, Erik DeBill, Eris Young, Gene Breshears, Gina Chen, Glorimar Medina, Gordon Dymowski, Harvey King, Jacqueline Rogoff, James Steinberg, Jeffrey Chapman, Joan Spicci Saberhagen, John Derrick, John Cetrone, John Klima, Jon Moss, Jonathon Howard, Jose Pablo Iriarte, Julia Struthers-Jobin, Kate Lechler, Katia Fowler, Kayleigh Bohemier, Kel.shire, Laura, Laura Kinnaman, Lauren Strenger, Lauren Vega, Leanne Daniele, Leslie Ordal, Linda Reynolds-Burkins, Lucy McCahon, Mairin Holmes, Maria Haskins, Melissa Brinks, Melissa Martensen, Michael Dettmer, Michael Jeffries, Michael Dodson, Ms Sarah Jansen, Nadja Deininger, Nick Mazzuca, Ondrej Urban, Paul Weymouth, Paulo Vinicius F. dos Santos, Rachel Coleman, Rebecca Evans, Renae Ensign, Risa Wolf, Sadie Slater, Samantha Manaktola, Sarah Beardsley, Sarah Elkins, Selim Ulug, Sidsel Norgaard Pedersen, Stephen Crawford, Tamara Rutledge, Tiffany Marcheterre, Tim Campbell, Tina Skupin, Vicente JM, Victor Eijkhout, Ysabet MacFarlane

Space Unicorn Ranger Corps RECRUITS
Ai Lake, Aleksi Stenberg, Amanda J. McGee, Andrew and Kate Barton, Anna Evans, Annaliese Lemmon, Brooks Moses, CathiBeaStevenson, Cathy Hindersinn, Damien Neil, David Versace, Dread Singles, Elizabeth King, Erin Bright, fadeaccompli, Gillian Daniels, james qualters, Jason McGraw, Jay Lofstead, Jeff Xilon, Josh Smift, Kayti Burt, Ken Schneyer, Larry Kinney, Leetmeister, Liz Argall, Maria Schrater, Max Andrew Dubinsky, Melissa Shumake, Miranda Rydell, Neil Ottenstein, Not_the_brain, Penny Richards, Philip Woodley, Phoebe Gleeson, Robin Hill, Ryan Pennington, S P, slategrey, Tasha Turner

Interview: Elizabeth Bear

Elizabeth Bear was born on the same day as Frodo and Bilbo Baggins, but in a different year. She has been the recipient of Hugo, Sturgeon, Locus, and Campbell Awards, among others. Her most recent novels are Ancestral Night and The Red-Stained Wings. “A Time to Reap” is Bear’s fifth appearance in Uncanny, a beautifully crafted time-travel mystery set in rural New England.

Uncanny Magazine: I loved the setting of the story, and you do a wonderful job evoking the feel of the New England countryside. I didn’t realize until I looked it up afterwards that Mashpee is a real town—why did you opt to use a real place, and what made you choose Mashpee specifically?

Elizabeth Bear: Thank you! I grew up in New England in the 1970s, so writing this story was a real excursion into nostalgia for me. It was important to me to capture the flavor of the time and place, but I also wanted to avoid that sense of rose-colored glasses.

I picked Mashpee in part because I have always liked the name, and because I needed a small coastal town for the plot to work—and because I had an image in my head of the farmhouse that’s the main setting for the story, and so I had to find the right setting for the house—which is something of a character in the story itself.

Uncanny Magazine: Both mysteries and time-travel stories have a lot of elements to keep track of—suspects, timelines, where and when characters are at any given point in the story, etc. Did you find it difficult to keep track of all the elements in this story? What were the challenges and benefits of writing a murder mystery that is also a time-travel story?

Elizabeth Bear: Oh yes. This is one of the most technically challenging stories I’ve ever written (curiously, another story published this year, “Erase, Erase, Erase” in last month’s F&SF, is another) and it took me several years to write it. A big part of that was figuring out the end, and how the time travel worked, and what the outcome was for Kat.

Originally, I had thought of writing it with segments of the playscript interposed with the first-person narrative, but after experimenting with that tactic I realized that it was probably overly precious for the intimate story of a friendship between two strong, traumatized girls in mortal peril that I wanted to tell.

Uncanny Magazine: Speaking of mysteries and time travel… do you have a favorite mystery novel? A favorite time-travel story?

Elizabeth Bear: That’s a very hard question! I have a lot of favorites in both genres. Off the top of my head, for time-travel narratives, Connie Willis’ Doomsday Book blew my socks off when I read it. I still think it’s her best long work. Octavia Butler’s Kindred is also amazing, and I have never gotten over Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse-Five.

As for mystery novels… they tend to come in series, don’t they? I have a real appreciation for Val McDermid, Rex Stout, Dashiell Hammett, Donna Andrews, Walter Mosley, Dorothy L. Sayers, John D. MacDonald, Barbara Neely… and yeah, that’s kind of a gamut. But there you go!

Uncanny Magazine: One focus in the story is the way the narrator studies Sissy looking for details that can be used to create a more realistic portrayal of her character. As an author, what kinds of details do you find the most useful for creating characters, and is there a lot of overlap between useful details for authors and useful details for actors?

Elizabeth Bear: I’m not an actor, so I don’t actually know the answer to that last question! But as a writer, what I look for is the telling detail, which I think is a term coined by John Gardner. Those specific things that show who a character is without being expected or just part of the stereotype of that category of person. What makes this frazzled mother different from every other frazzled mother? What makes them an individual?

Uncanny Magazine: “A Time to Reap” features a Broadway musical based on a mutliplayer immersive game. I am always intrigued by stories/narratives translated into a vastly different medium—if you could take one of your own works and have it turned into a musical/movie/video game/etc… what work would it be, and what medium would you pick?

Elizabeth Bear: I’d love to see some of my more world-buildy works translated into a sandbox game, actually. I think it would be fun to run around the world of the Eternal Sky as a mystically powerful humanoid tiger, for example, or visit the White Space world and bum around the galaxy with a gigantic praying mantis peace officer.

Uncanny Magazine: What’s next for you?

Elizabeth Bear: Disney World! Alas, no. I’ve got a science fiction novel called Machine, in the White Space universe, coming out next October (2020), so it’s copyedits and so forth on that—and I have a novel to write to finish out the Lotus Kingdoms trilogy that is due in April, so I’m on that pretty intensively until then!

Uncanny Magazine: Thank you for sharing your thoughts with us!

The Page and the Panel: Writing Between Prose and Comics

Much, possibly too much, has already been said about the craft of writing fiction, most of it by authors who possess a lot more by way of genius than I do. Yet as more and more prose authors take up writing monthly comic book series—superhero comics, creator-owned comics, licensed books of all kinds—and more and more readers fill their shelves with both graphic literature and prose, I’ve started to notice a shift in the most commonly-asked questions I get at panels and readings. Where I used to hear variations of “Where do you get your ideas?” quite frequently, I now often hear “How is writing a comic book different from writing a novel?” This is an excellent question in and of itself, but it also brings up a host of other questions. We’ve all heard the maxim “show, don’t tell,” but how does one apply that to writing for comics? How do all the “rules” you’re taught about writing fiction change when you’re telling a story panel by panel rather than paragraph by paragraph?

I cannot claim to know all the answers, but as someone who has for many years written both monthly comics and prose novels, I thought I would share a bit about what I have learned (and a few things I failed to learn quickly enough) moving back and forth between the two media.

Writing for comics is like building an iceberg: 90% of the words you put down on the page will never be seen by the reader. The vast majority of your world-building occurs below the surface. Your panel descriptions are, to mix metaphors, a love letter to your creative collaborators; the artist, colorist, and letterer who create the book’s visual imagery. In the heyday of the writer-as-auteur era of comics, when names like Alan Moore and Grant Morrison dominated the dust jackets, panel descriptions could get incredibly detailed and specific: some of Moore’s go on for multiple paragraphs, and writers like Warren Ellis would often specify the size and orientation of each panel on each page. Today, this is less common, and it is generally understood that the artist, rather than the writer, is better able to determine how the visual flow of panels on a page should unfold. Unless a scene calls for a very specific design element, I usually limit myself to highly technical descriptors like “big” or “small, inset” to describe the relative sizes of panels on a page, and even then, only when a larger or smaller panel is necessary for dramatic impact; when it is not, I don’t specify panel size or orientation at all. I don’t want to pull the artist out of the story with an Ikea-like list of instructions. After all, at this early stage of creation, it is not the reader I need to immerse in the world I am trying to build: it is the artist.

I try to focus, therefore, on descriptions of characters and events that are both evocative and visually specific. In a prose piece, I might say “She froze where she was, alert and rigid, as something ungainly lumbered past her in the fog.” (I don’t know that I would actually make a single sentence carry that much melodrama all by itself, but it works for our purposes.) Describing that same moment as a panel in a comics script, I might instead say “She stops suddenly in the fog, her eyes wide as she catches sight of something off-panel.”

The differences are subtle but important. Prose can capture motion and invisible, inward sensations without much trouble, but in a comic every sensation must be communicated visually, each action broken down into a series of still images. We cannot see someone’s heart skip a beat, or their throat close up, so as descriptors, these are not terribly useful in a comic book script. Instead, a writer must find outward, visual ways to describe those same feelings. Maybe the character’s jaw drops; maybe they press one hand to their chest. Maybe there is a beat between two actions: a repeated panel without dialogue to show a character hesitate or startle, freezing in place before they react to something. A comic book script operates from a kind of extreme third-person POV: every emotion, even the most subtle, must be visible. This doesn’t mean every emotion must be visible on the face—some of the most brilliantly executed scenes in comics occur with a POV character’s back to the reader, or a juxtaposition between narrative captions and facial expressions that tell you someone on the page is lying. Yet even when this is the case, the choice of what to reveal and what to conceal is made using images. You must show because you cannot tell.

It can be tempting, in such a scenario, to make the dialogue do most of the heavy lifting, but dialogue takes up valuable real estate on the page, covering up the artists’ work, so even it must be made as economical as possible. I flinch now when I see giant paragraphs crowded into speech balloons in some of my early stuff, and today I have a rule: if a chunk of dialogue is longer than two typed lines, it needs to be broken up into several balloons, or even better, edited down until it does fit into two typed lines.

For some graphic novelists, this skill comes naturally: Raina Telgemeier, mega-bestselling writer-artist of graphic novels for children and young adults, is sublime at it, packing profound emotional weight into what seem like simple, offhand lines of dialogue. Her panels are never crowded: the art breathes, the dialogue breathes, the story moves along in a way that seems effortless. Similarly, Kim Dong Hwa’s superb coming-of-age trilogy, The Color of Earth series, uses the gradual accumulation of objects in a room or the evolution of flowers into fruit—background images you could miss if you weren’t paying attention—to communicate the passage of time. No location captions or dialogue necessary. Masters of graphic or sequential storytelling don’t just work within the natural constraints of the medium; they make the natural constraints of the medium work for them.

I’m making it sound as though writing for comics is all grim self-restraint and self-abnegation, but it really isn’t. At some point, after I’d been writing comics for several years, I realized the medium had in some ways freed me from the subtler constraints of prose. Dialogue in comics can use far more vernacular—malapropisms, localisms, phonetic spellings, stutters, “uhhs” and “huhs” and “likes”—than most prose can safely get away with. Like if I’m writing a comic script, and I, you knoooow, want to write a sentence of dialogue like this? I can do that without seeming mannered or try-hard. The natural staccato with which people talk—most of us don’t speak in neat, grammatically correct paragraphs—is much easier to communicate when broken down into dialogue balloons than it is on a page of prose. I’d gotten so used to writing dialogue exactly as I hear it that when I tried to get away with what I thought was very light use of vernacular grammar in my recent novel, The Bird King, I got a dry series of notes from my editor, for whom the dialogue came off as twee and forced. She was right, of course, yet I couldn’t help thinking, “If this was a comic book, it would’ve been fine.”

In some sense, comic books are almost less a test of your writing skills than they are a test of your ability to distill ideas into their simplest and most easily communicable form. When I write prose, I feel a certain freedom to wander—to pick up a story thread without knowing exactly where it will lead; to discover in situ some new facet of a character that dramatically alters the course of the narrative. There is room for digression. Writing The Bird King, I wasn’t entirely sure how the second act would unfold, and I added several more quiet, character-driven scenes than I anticipated needing, which gave the relationships between the three main characters room to grow and breathe. It worked. By the end, I knew exactly which one I would, regrettably, need to kill off.

In a monthly comic, however, the hard page limit—typically 20 or 22 pages—means that you must have a firm grasp on how much story needs to go into each issue, and also understand where that issue fits within the larger story arc. This doesn’t mean there is no room for improvisation—some of my favorite moments in Ms. Marvel were the result of last minute, lightbulb-moment alterations to an outline—but that improvisation must be retrofit to work with whatever story has already been solicited. And, crucially, you must know why you are writing that particular story, because once an issue has been released, there is no calling it back—no way to edit the beginning after you arrive at the end, as you can with a novel.

Ultimately, to use the oft-quoted line from Marshall McLuhan’s Understanding Media, the medium is the message. Writing comics and writing prose require different skill sets because they deliver different kinds of stories. We perceive time differently when we read a book line by line versus image by image. In a comic book, you have to be careful to put the denouement of a cliffhanger on a page turn, because if it occurs on a facing page, the suspense is ruined before you’ve even had the chance to set it up. This is because our minds can often process more than one image at a time, but most people cannot read more than one sentence at a time. Prose is a kind of deep present, keeping us in the moment with language we must decode and interpret. Comics, on the other hand, offer constant glimpses into the future as our brains take in a series of images at once. When I am asked, “If you could only work in one medium again, which would it be?” I cannot answer. It’s like choosing between speech and memory. I’m glad we have both, and though moving between the two can be creatively challenging, it’s never been anything but an honor to have had the opportunity.

The Uncanny Valley

Hugo the Uncanny Cat has become extra cuddly, so it’s clearly autumn. Finally, the air is crisp, pumpkin spice laces everything, and skeletons and Christmas lights battle for boxstore shelf supremacy. This is our favorite time of year. Except for our leaf-mold allergies. Those are fucking terrible.

In other November traditions, here’s the first issue of the new Uncanny year. Thanks to the generosity of the Space Unicorn Ranger Corps, we’re entering the sixth year of Uncanny Magazine. We are so excited to share more phenomenal stories, poems, essays, interviews, and podcasts with all of you. This year will be fantastic!

The world is still terrifying, but the terrible regime in America is developing cracks in its foundation, and a year from now the voters will have the chance to set things right again. (Please be sure to register to vote/check your voter registration status/actually vote.)

We know that you will be out there, Space Unicorns, fighting the good fight against tyranny and corruption with your excellence.

And here comes the bittersweet part of our editorial. As all of you have known since April, after five years, Managing and Nonfiction Editor Michi Trota is moving on from her Uncanny editorial duties. Last issue was her final issue as Managing Editor, and this is her last as Nonfiction Editor. We’ve had many staff changes through the years, but this is the first time that part of our original core team is moving on.

We can’t overstate how important Michi has been to Uncanny. Michi started with us on day one as Managing Editor. She developed a ton of our processes, made everything look slick and professional, always had a strong voice in the nonfiction, and has been the Space Unicorn Ranger Corps’ biggest cheerleader. We really can’t say enough great things about Michi and what she did for making Uncanny what it is today. She’s a dear friend who stepped up for every challenge. We know that Michi is going to do more fabulous things in the future. Please make sure to read Michi’s goodbye editorial.

Along with the bittersweet news, though, we have some fabulous news. This is the first issue for new Managing Editor Chimedum Ohaegbu! Chimie was the Uncanny Magazine Assistant Editor, and started with us as an intern in February 2018. She’s done a tremendous job, and we expect more stupendous things from her. She has been working very closely with Michi for quite some time, so we know this will be a seamless transition. Chimie is a rising superstar writer and editor, and it’s such a joy to work with her. We’re very excited about this!

And that’s not all! This is the first issue for new Assistant Editor Angel Cruz! You might know Angel from her Uncanny Magazine essay. She’s a wonderful writer, reviewer, and editor who has contributed to numerous excellent markets, and we are very excited to have her join the Uncanny team! (Note: new Nonfiction Editor Elsa Sjunneson-Henry starts next issue. More about her then!)

Speaking of the tremendous thing Michi Trota is doing (in this case with Matt Peters), the Pilot Episode of Uncanny Magazine‘s Uncanny TV is live on the Internet! It’s brought to you by the generosity of the Uncanny Magazine Year 5 Kickstarter Backers! Featuring geeky talk from phenomenal Chicago-based nerds working to make the world more awesome.

Here are the credits!

Hosts & Showrunners: Matt Peters & Michi Trota
Guests: Keisha HowardDaniel Jun KimDawn Xiana Moon
Audio/Video Crew: Aaron Amendola & Chris Chapin
Tech Support: Morgan Csejtey
Producer: Warren Frey

Thank you to all of those folks, and thanks to Cards Against Humanity, Erika Ensign, Jesse Lex, Dolores Peters, Steven Schapansky, Lynne M. Thomas, Michael Damian Thomas, and the Space Unicorn Ranger Corps!

Thank you to all of the AMAZING people above who made this happen!

Tremendous news, Space Unicorns!

The 2019 Aurora Awards winners have been announced, and Disabled People Destroy Science Fiction, (Elsa Sjunneson-Henry and Dominik Parisien, Editors-in-Chief), won the Aurora Award for Best Related Work!!! Congratulations to Dominik and Elsa and to everyone involved with this special issue!

“Osiris” by Leah Bobet (Uncanny Magazine #25) was also a finalist for Best Poem/Song, and “Constructing the Future” by Derek Newman-Stille (Uncanny Magazine #24) was a finalist for Best Fan Writing and Publications. Congratulations once again to Leah and Derek, and to all of the phenomenal Aurora Award finalists and winners!

But that’s not all!

Uncanny Magazine won a 2019 British Fantasy Award for Best Magazine / Periodical! We are so honored! It was a fantastic group of finalists. Congratulations to all of the spectacular British Fantasy Award winners and finalists! Thank you again to the world’s greatest staff, all of the contributors, the British Fantasy Society, the Space Unicorn Ranger Corps, and to Dr. Una McCormack (our award acceptor at the ceremony). WE ARE EXTREMELY CHUFFED, SPACE UNICORNS!!!

As we write this, the World Fantasy Awards have yet to happen, but you will know the winners since this editorial will be published a couple of days after the ceremony! Lynne M. Thomas and Michael Damian Thomas were finalists for the Special Award, Non-Professional World Fantasy Award for Uncanny Magazine, and  “Like a River Loves the Sky” by Emma Törzs was a finalist for the Best Short Story World Fantasy Award! Congratulations to all of the winners. It is truly an honor to be a finalist with such amazing people.

Michael was at the World Fantasy Convention in Los Angeles representing Uncanny, with the Uncanny Penguin, so hopefully you spoke with him! He had a wonderful time!

Fabulous news, Space Unicorns! The forthcoming The Best of Uncanny (edited by Lynne M. Thomas and Michael Damian Thomas) from Subterranean Press received a coveted starred review from Kirkus!

“…there are no weak links in this transcendent anthology. A deliciously diverse sampler of speculative-fiction bonbons, created by some of the most talented literary confectioners on the planet.”

Read the entire review here!

The Best of Uncanny also received a coveted STARRED REVIEW in the American Library Association’s November 2019 issue of Booklist magazine!

“This anthology contains a gluttonous surfeit of narrative riches. The works in this collection are inventive, gorgeous, occasionally difficult, and immensely rewarding. Truly, the best of Uncanny.”

These are in addition to the starred review from Publishers Weekly!

You can pre-order this GIGANTIC BOOK from Subterranean Press or from most places that sell books!

And now the contents of Uncanny Magazine Issue 31! The spectacular cover is La Palma by John Picacio. This is one of the many stunning pieces John created for his ongoing Loteria Grande card deck project. Our new fiction includes Elizabeth Bear’s stunning time travel novella “A Time to Reap,” D.A. Xiaolin Spires’s fabulous story of parents and food machines “Nutrition Facts,” Vina Jie-Min Prasad’s weird and wonderful noir novelette “Black Flowers Blossom,” Laura Anne Gilman’s mysterious yarn of yearning and discovery “Peridot and Rain,” and Jenn Reese’s charming coming-of-age story “A Mindreader’s Guide to Surviving Your First Year at the All-Girls Superhero Academy.” (Note: as Elizabeth Bear’s novella is quite long, there is no reprint in this issue.)

Our essays this month include G. Willow Wilson looking at the differences between prose and comic book writing, Alexandra Erin discussing genre distinctions and who gets to make them, Brandon O’Brien pondering toxic masculinity in media, Jeannette Ng exploring what gets explained and not explained in narratives, and Keidra Chaney musing on what it’s like to be a fan who is more casual about what they enjoy. Our gorgeous poems include Sonya Taaffe’s “Without Prayer or the Place in the Forest,” Hal Y. Zhang’s “fear cat,” Annie Neugebauer’s “The Wooden Box,” and Sylvia Santiago’s “Manananggal.” Finally, Caroline M. Yoachim interviews Elizabeth Bear and Jenn Reese about their stories.

The Uncanny Magazine Podcast episode 31A features D.A. Xiaolin Spires’s “Nutrition Facts,” as read by Joy Piedmont, Sonya Taaffe’s “Without Prayer or the Place in the Forest,” as read by Erika Ensign, and Lynne M. Thomas interviewing D.A. Xiaolin Spires. The Uncanny Magazine Podcast episode 31B features Vina Jie-Min Prasad’s “Black Flowers Blossom,” as read by Joy Piedmont, Annie Neugebauer’s “The Wooden Box,” as read by Erika Ensign, and Lynne M. Thomas interviewing Vina Jie-Min Prasad.

We have one last important thing. This issue is dedicated to the memory of our dear friend, Amy Hines. Amy was one of the kindest and most generous humans who we’ve ever met, who spent her life helping others. We will always cherish the yearly get-togethers the Thomas family had with Amy, her husband Jim, and their children. Loved by all, Amy will be dearly missed by everyone who knew her.

Stay kind, Space Unicorns.

Without Prayer or the Place in the Forest

for Selkie

In the magic realist novel, we find the firebird
in the attic of your grandmother’s diary
where the last poet she went to school with left it
burning like a ner tomid
before she was caught in the wind of rolling stock and ash
all these stories come to,
their tracks stitching history’s scars.
Its wings a pageant of pomegranates,
its tail the tears of a golden chain,
it rosins for us a story
no one else was left alive to tell
and whether between rafters of pages we are still listening
or whether in the last chapter we write ourselves out
you know the ending,
everyone does.
Look. In the garret neither of us can pay rent on
your kid is kicking their heels in spring sunlight,
the books are stacked like showgirls
and I can see those gold feathers
shivering inside your shirt.
Your great-aunt told her story until she ran out of it.
What you feed a firebird on
had better have heat.
While your kid crunches those red seeds like hard candy,
we will rustle a nest up
from string and excelsior,
behind all this dry ink
is still white and black fire,
when the curtains came down
the bricks stood against the blue sky.
One of us has a cocktail book of matches
and with all this rubbish from the last owner,
we can surely find something to burn.

(Editors’ Note: “Without a Prayer or the Place in the Forest” is read by Erika Ensign on the Uncanny Magazine Podcast, Episode 31A.)

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