Cover art by Annie Spratt, illustrating the story "Woolly" by Carrie Vaughn.
Other stories
"The Hunt for Lemuria 7" by Allen M. Steele "Quantum Ghosts (Part II)" by Nancy Kress "The Passage" by John Richard Trtek “The Fight Goes On” by Harry Turtledove ”The Tin Man’s Ghost” by Ray Nayler ”Trial” by Harry” by Michael Libling ”In the Forest of Mechanical Trees” by Steve Rasnic Tem ”The Humming of Tamed Dragons” by A.M. Dellamonica
Rick Wilber's novel ALIEN DAY (Tor Books 2021) is the sequel to ALIEN MORNING (Tor 2016), which was a finalist for the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Science Novel of the Year. ALIEN DAY offers a wry near-future look at life on Earth and the alien home planet of S'hudon. On Earth, the ambitious TV celebrity and action hero Chloe Cary finds herself involved with Earth's jovial but deadly alien overlord Twoclicks and his son, The Perfection. On S'hudon, Chloe's boyfriend, Peter Holman, tries to rescue his sister Kait from the clutches of Twoclicks' evil brother Whistle; but finds out that it isn't Kait who needs to be rescued. The novel, says best-selling author Julie Czerneda, offers an "original, engaging, wonderfully complex alien world populated by unforgettable characters."
Wilber also recently co-authored (with Alan Smale), the alternate-history collection, THE WANDERING WARRIORS (WordFire Press, 2020). The book features "The Wandering Warriors" novella that first appeared as the cover story in the May/June 2018 edition of Asimov's Science Fiction magazine, and also has two additional stories, one from each author. Both authors have won the Sidewise Award for their alternate-history stories.
Also out in 2020 was the short-story collection, RAMBUNCTIOUS: NINE TALES OF DETERMINATION (Word Fire Press, 2020), which holds nine of Rick's favorite stories from more than fifty published over the past thirty years.
Rick recently edited the ebook anthology, MAKING HISTORY: CLASSIC ALTERNATE HISTORY STORIES (New Word City, 2019). The book reprints classic stories by writers Karen Joy Fowler, Gregory Benford, Kathleen Goonan, Harry Turtledove, Lisa Goldstein, Walter Jon Williams, Maureen McHugh, Nisi Shawl, Michael Bishop, Alan Smale, Rich Larson, Sheila Finch, Ben Loory, Nicholas DiChario, Michael Swanwick and Eileen Gunn, and editor Rick Wilber.
His collection, THE MOE BERG EPISODES (New Word City, 2018) reprints four alternate-history stories that first appeared in Asimov's Science Fiction magazine.
The author of some sixty published short stories, his most recent short fiction includes the novella, "Billie the Kid," forthcoming in Asimov's Science Fiction magazine, "Tin Man," co-authored with Brad Aiken, in the May/June 2021 Asimov's, the novelette "The Hind," co-authored with best-selling author Kevin J. Anderson, in the November/December 2020 issue of Asimov's, the short story, "False Bay," in the forthcoming anthology, MOVIES, MONSTERS & MAYHEM (WordFire Press, 2020), the novelette, "Ithaca," co-authored with Brad Aiken, in the May/June 2020 Asimov's), the story, "Donny Boy," in the Alternate Peace anthology (ZNB, edited by Steven Silver and Joshua Palmatier) and the novella, "The Secret City," in the September/October 2018 Asimov's, among others.
Rick's short story, "Today is Today," from the July 2018 issue of Stonecoast Review, has been reprinted in The Best Science Fiction & Fantasy 2019 (ed, Rich Horton) and in Lightspeed Magazine. His novella, "The Secret City," was runner-up for the Sidewise Award for Best Alternate History -- Short Form of 2018 and his story, "Something Real," won the Sidewise Award for Best Alternate History--Short Form in 2013.
He is the editor of the baseball fantasy anthology, "Field of Fantasies" from Nightshade/Skyhorse (2014), which reprints about two dozen baseball/fantasy stories by outstanding mainstream and genre writers from Stephen King to Karen Joy Fowler and and many more. He also edited 2011's "Future Media" (Tachyon) 2011, brings together classic works of fiction and non-fiction about the future of the mass media.
Rick's 2009 novel, "Rum Point," is a baseball/murder mystery/thriller from McFarland Books and his 2007 memoir, “My Father’s Game: Life, Death, Baseball” from McFarland Books, was called by best-selling author Peter Straub “a stunning book,” and one that “abounds with faith, heartbreak, love,
There were some very good stories and a few disappointments.
The Hunt for Lemuria 7 by Allen M. Steele A continuation of a previous novella about the mysterious disappearance of rich tourists investigating strange phenomena on the moon. The Mountains of the Moon yield some answers, but raise many more questions that perhaps await a future story. Allen Steele is a Deadhead who likes to sprinkle his stories with references to Grateful Dead songs, history and culture. This novella contains: - a lyric from Scarlet Begonias - a callout to their former sound engineer - the title of a NOLA song they frequently played - a cover tune usually only played on Halloween I’ll leave it up to you to find them
The Passage by John Richard Trtek Passenger, don't you hear me? Destination seen unclearly. —Lesh/Holt The whole world is burning, but our alien saviors are fixing things. In return, they want our best and brightest to make the passage to their world. The first leg is most unusual boat trip with an equally unusual human crew.
The Fight Goes On by Harry Turtledove Competitive time travel, ‘Schrodinger’s Archduke,’ and why it is so hard to book a hotel room in Sarajevo on June 27th, 1914.
The Tin Man’s Ghost by Ray Nayler The US won WWII using technology from a crashed alien ship, but Robert Oppenheimer is nonetheless haunted by the same demons. A tale told through the eyes of a cyborg.
Trial by Harry by Michael Libling An FDA Phase III clinical trial horror story: “Drip, tablet, or suppository…”
Woolly by Carrie Vaughn Rescuing and protecting gen-gineered pint-sized wooly mammoths that are abandoned becomes an exercise in creativity for a dedicated woman and her friends.
Contents: The Writes of Spring [Asimov's Editorials] essay by Rick Wilber a guest editorial about SF where baseball plays a role from the author, who wrote several of those. I still don't know rules of the game and haven't watched a game in my life, so a total miss. 1* The Other Schlieman [Reflections] essay by Robert Silverberg, the famous Heinrich Schliemann, who discovered (actually not) Troy, had a grandson, Paul Schliemann, who announced in 1912 that his granddad left him clues on how to locate Atlantis... an interesting fact, but nothing special. 3* Moonshots [On the Net] essay by James Patrick Kelly A Moonbase, an unlikely happening in our world where finances are cut, as the base of future exploration. Really sad to find out that by 2030 ISS will be drowned in the ocean and China will have the only working space station. 3.5* Baggus Plasticus poem by Ciarán Parkes an enviromental piece, with the main point "I’ll swim\\some day in every\\creature. I’ll be\\in every mouthful\\of food. I’m empty\\of life completely." 3* Crime and Punishment in Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange [Thought Experiments] essay by Kelly Lagor it starts with the novel A Clockwork Orange, reasons for writing it (growing crime rates and the fact that "his way of exploring the trauma left by the 1944 robbery, rape, and assault of his pregnant wife, Lynne, who was attacked by U.S. servicemen (likely deserters) on her way home from work during the London Blitz". Then shift to Kubrick, who after Odyssey 2001 shot this movie, but the US version of the novel lacked the last chapter! 3.5* Introducing My Friends to My Dad poem by Chiwenite Onyekwelu I haven't understood this one. 1* The Hunt for Lemuria 7 [Lemuria 7] novella by Allen Steele there was a previous novella by the same author, where Moon tourists who found aliens (?) there. This onw made as a collection of news, forum posts, interviews, etc., after that situation on Earth. 3.5* In the Forest of Mechanical Trees short story by Steve Rasnic Tem 'a-day-in-life' type of story, old people do what they can to ameliorate the consequences of global warming. Temperatures are over 119 degrees F. They save a family of runaways, whose car broke... 3* The Fight Goes On novelette by Harry Turtledove a light piece, as travellers from the futures gather in Sarajevo in the summer of 1914, some to prevent the assassination, others to keep it real. A small detail, the character says he knows all local languages, but writes the address as 'Franje Josipa Ulica', where Ulica means Street, while in Slavic languages, Ulica goes before the name, not after. 3.25* The Tin Man's Ghost [Disintegration Loops] novelette by Ray Nayler finally, the part (not all) of this ongoing alt-history got its name, Disintegration Loops! In this installment (can be read as a standalone), Sylvia Altstatt, a woman who can use an alien artifact to 'speak with the dead'. The year is 1960, the USA is a semi-dictatorship and Sylvia meets Oppenheimer, who informs her that while the US deconstructed alien stuff, opponents got an A-bomb, and she is to read memories of an unusual dead. Great as always. 4* The Humming of Tamed Dragons short story by A. M. Dellamonica a weird tale about developers of AI, which should befriend kids/teens to protect them from all dangers, from accidents to kidnappers. With the latest danger, the inventors test in at an airport. The concept is interesting but the realization is not for my taste. 2* Quantum Ghosts (Part 2 of 2) serial by Nancy Kress this part is more action-packed than the last, for a solar flare is coming and people should be saved, even if those people are looters, rapers and murderers. I liked the first part more. 3* Trial by Harry novelette by Michael Libling two POVs change one another in this story: one is from outside, an experimental drug treatment for old people 'locked-in' in their minds, unable to communicate; the other from inside one of the persons who are in this condition. As he became more able to communicate with the outside world, we can guess we had made a mistake allowing it to happen. 3* Woolly short fiction by Carrie Vaughn a near future, after a popular movie, where a resurrected mammoth saves a girl, everyone decided they have to have mini-mammoth as their pet. However, they aren't easy pets, so a protagonist runs a farm shelter for mini-mammoths thrown away. And Department of Agriculture says these gene modifications should be terminated. 4* Stellarium poem by Stuart Greenhouse on reversed lens view... 2* The Passage novella by John Richard Trtek a weird leisure ship with only one passenger aboard. It is on the route to Suez, where the passenger will move outside Earth. This is part of a benevolent program of help made by alien Lezhenad, who also helped humans to ameliorate the consequences of environmental imbalances. This time, the passenger is Sanjay, a mathematician with a new idea. He is monitored by the captain and a personal evaluator. For me the story lacked something, I was scanning through at the end... 2.5* Micro Circuit poem by Sai Liuko, a talk with an AI that turns into a stream of (un)consciousness. 2* On Books (Asimov's, May-June 2025) [On Books] essay by Kelly Jennings most interesting among ones not yet read was maybe Exadelic Train poem by David Rogers a homage to Simak. 3* Next Issue (Asimov's, May-June 2025) essay by uncredited looking forward for Suzanne Palmer's novella
This is a good, solid issue full of entertaining and thought-provoking fiction. The poetry, reviews, and essays help round things out.
The Hunt for Lemuria 7 • novella by Allen M. Steele This sequel to “Lemuria 7 Is Missing” (May/June 2023) reads like the middle third of a longer work, although Steele does a good job of recapping the previous story without being too expository. After an exploratory mission to the Moon mysteriously disappears, plans for a rescue mission get underway. When an amnesiac astronaut from the missing crew suddenly appears on Earth, things get weird. Are aliens involved, or is it something else? Some answers are provided by the end, but I suspect we won’t find out the whole story until another installment is published.
In the Forest of Mechanical Trees • short story by Steve Rasnic Tem A lot of exposition with a dollop of story to show how climate change might adversely affect residents of Arizona. The mechanical trees are designed to take carbon dioxide out of the air and sequester it for other purposes, such as the manufacture of synthetic fuels.
The Fight Goes On • novelette by Harry Turtledove A time traveler goes to 1914 to prevent the assassination of Franz Ferdinand—along with hundreds (thousands?) of other time travelers, some of whom also want to prevent the assassination and some of whom want to make sure the assassination goes according to history. It’s an interesting thought experiment, but nothing substansive.
The Tin Man’s Ghost • novelette by Ray Nayler In an alternate history, the U.S. government uses captured alien technology to devise death rays and other weapons—atomic bombs were never developed. When the Soviets get close to making atomic weapons, the U.S. feels the need to catch up. A reluctant government agent uses her power of telepathy to investigate just how far along the Soviets are. Will the arms race bring death and destruction to the world? This is a well written look at an atomic age that never was but could have been imagined by science fiction writers of the 1950s.
The Humming of Tamed Dragons • short story by A.M. Dellamonica This story is about an AI trained to predict and prevent kidnappings, the developer trying to coax it through a high stakes test run at Vancouver International Airport. The developer literally runs into some interference in the form of an unusual passenger on her way through the terminal. Slight, but entertaining.
Quantum Ghosts: Part II • novella by Nancy Kress The second half of a rare, serialized novel is mostly concerned with the preparations and aftermath of a solar storm’s disruption of power and information grids, focusing on a town in New York. It’s a tense story where actual information is distrusted due to AI incompetence and a general lack of faith in science and journalism by the public of this near-future society. Some of the subplots from the first half seemed to be brushed aside, but it might be that there will be a sequel to delve deeper into some of those ideas.
Trial By Harry • novelette by Michael Libling A man with dementia is put in a blind trial for a promising new drug to reverse aging effects. As the drug takes effect, we slowly see that the man is not a nice person, to say the least. The contrast between him and his children who don’t know his dark side moves toward a terrifying conclusion.
Woolly • short story by Carrie Vaughn In the near future, miniature woolly mammoths are genetically created. A black market arises for people to buy them as pets, but they turn out to be hard to care for and most are abandoned. A wildlife refuge takes in some of the discarded mammoths, but the federal government eventually decides that all mammoths are to be terminated. The refuge’s owner finds expected and unexpected allies to try to save the animals who exist by no fault of their own.
The Passage • novella by John Richard Trtek On an Earth devastated by climate change, aliens have arrived and are helping humans to restore things. The aliens have an exchange program of sorts where humans are invited to travel to the alien’s home world. To get to the launching point, candidates are ferried by ship from Mumbai to Suez. On board the ship things aren’t necessarily what they seem, however, and the captain and his assistant are secretly evaluating the candidate for unknown reasons. The story is well written, with good character development and creative extrapolation. I’m just not sure what the ultimate point is.
Another solid effort top to bottom, the stories and the commentaries, enjoyed them all. Not as much a fan of the poetry, and I enjoy poetry, but it’s basically filler. Solid sci-fi spanning the gamut of the genre. Still need a sci-fi story written in verse like Jason Reynolds “Long Way Down,” that would be marvelous.
The Hunt for Lemuria 7 by Allen M. Steele – 5 years after Lemuria 7 went missing (and two years after Steele published Lemuria 7 is missing in the May/June 2023 issue), the hunt begins. The sequel tale has a cast of very similar characters (super rich Merlin instead of super rich Edison; first person observer Bear Audrey’s supposed-to-be witty commentary in place Ebony Nicasio’s equally failed comedic relief) embarking on a very similar mission and is told in the same modern-epistolary style with transcripts, biographies, radio shows, etc. In both the first story and this one, weaknesses appear in certain sections. Again here, the twitter-esque section is head slap worthy and even continues with some of the same participants as the previous story. And again, with the Hunt, Steele doles out mysterious blips of unexplainable data, all of which are enticing and page-turn-worthy, and then finishes the story without concluding. It just goes to show: unsolved mysteries in both real-life and fiction are easy sells.
But look, Steele time and time again tells entertaining, usually pretty fast paced, very readable, and ultimately unchallenging sf stories that are fun to read. The Lemuria novellas check all those boxes. That said, where his Coyote stories and even his Sanctuary stories sometimes offer up a little more meat, these two Lemuria stories are empty calories. 3.5 stars.
(Bonus Review) Lemuria 7 is Missing by Allen M. Steele – Allen Steele always entertains; but he also doesn’t push boundaries or do anything all that new. Lemuria 7 is a mostly well told near-future sf story in which a mission to the moon pulls a sort of Bermuda Triangle style missing act. Steele tells the story via news articles, biographies, testimonials, transcripts etc. It’s a method used to create a greater sense of realism and its mostly effective with a few exceptions: Ebony Nicasio’s first person sections are somewhat irritating, she comes off as petty and annoying but because this isn’t her story, is never given time to really illuminate why; the result is a lot of “get to the point” type feelings while reading her section. The twitter-esque sections also reek of trying to hard and frankly, stupid. To be fair though, I’ve never seen any writer pull that off. The inanity, hate, self-absorption, and straight-out toxic narcissism found on those platforms is impossible to replicate. But they did kinda pull me from the story.
Other than those two perspectives, the story worked fairly well. In fact, I’d argue that this is the easiest kind of story to get right. You slowly dole out tidbits of mysterious info and then end without any real conclusion. The ‘set in reality’ veneer justifies the lack of resolution and the author doesn’t really need to work out the details of the ending (where most stories would otherwise fail). The result is an entertaining if somewhat puffed-up piece that tries nothing new but fits the seriel adventure trappings it obviously wears on its sleeve well. 3.75 stars.
Quantum Ghosts (Part 2) by Nancy Kress – An absolutely terrible conclusion that doubles down on the unlikeable characters, doubles down on pat resolutions, doubles down on bad writing, and completely dumps the – would you even call it ‘subplot’? – subplot of the titular ghosts. Here’s an example of the clunk you can expect for the duration: “Sunday night Kenda, stretched out in the stinking dumpster beside Hailey’s chair, barely slept.” Or this beauty: “Kenda couldn’t find her, until she did.” All in all, a terrible short novel. 1.75 stars.
The Passage by John Richard Trtek – Excellently written and paced novella with some exciting ideas and richly human characters. This is my fist time to read Trtek and look forward to more. 4 stars.
Novelettes:
The Fight Goes On by Harry Turtledove – A wonderfully humorously told story using a plot element I’ve surprisingly never come across (though I don’t read a lot of time travel stories), that of history being over-crowded with tourists/etc. from the future! In this case, our protagonist and narrator is so witty and fun to be with that the story itself almost doesn’t matter. The historical details or sumptuous without being burdensome, the story is the perfect length, and despite it inconclusive ending, was very enjoyable. 4 stars.
The Tin Man’s Ghost by Ray Nayler – A great ‘loop’ story right up there with Rocket for Demetrious and Disintegration Loops. This story very quickly gives you just enough about all the characters and exotic setting to get the story rolling along. It doesn’t depend on earlier loop stories to understand, but readers of those will benefit. This is a great addition to a great series. Would love to see a Loop novel. 4 stars.
Trial By Harry by Michael Libling – This darker than expected tale that ultimately doesn’t have much to do with its SF premise (miracle drug cures dementia/aging/etc.) nor does it seem to know what it wants to deliver. It’s both structurally all over the place (intentionally) and thematically all over the place (presumably unintentionally). Its readability keeps it afloat and makes it seem like a much better story than it really is. On the surface, it reads like a three-star story. But once you start digging, it really comes apart at the seams. 2 stars.
Short Stories:
In the Forest of Mechanical Trees by Steve Rasnic Tem – This brief trip to the desert read almost more like a sketch for a future longer work. In a very short time, Tem introduces several interesting characters and miraculously gives them depth. Ditto the setting, a future dino park struggling against climate change. Despite the eerie and unsettling inevitability of the climate warning here, I enjoyed this brief encounter and wouldn’t mind seeing a longer work taking place here. 3.75 stars.
The Humming of Tamed Dragons by A. M. Dellamonica – I found this to be unreadable. Clunky writing. An unnecessarily complicated in media res opening and unlikeable characters. This one needed a thorough rewrite. Quit with only a few pages left. 0 stars.
Woolly by Carrie Vaughn – Cute, fast paced, and fun, but pretty light fare. 3 stars. Poetry:
Baggus Plasticus by Ciaran Parkes – As you can probably tell from the title, this is both glib and depressing. Didn’t work for me at all. 1.75 stars
Introducing My Friends to My Dad by Chiwenite Onyekwelu – Touching poem with some great images. Onyekwelu really captures that tenderness here amidst a somewhat dark scenario. 3.75 stars.
Departments:
Guest Editorial: The Writes of Spring by Rick Wilber - Rick Wilber writes a lot of baseball stories. And here, he writes a lot about writing baseball stories. 3 stars.
Reflections: The Other Schliemann by Robert Silverberg – Excellent dive into archeology, history, and fantasy. How does he do it. I’d read this novel Robert!! – 5 stars.
On the Net: Moonshots by James Patrick Kelly – I’m sure there’s some fascinating info amidst these links, but the article is lacking. 2 stars.
Thought Experiment: Crime and Punishment in Stanley Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange by Kelly Lagor – Once again, Kelly Lagor provides an excellent mini history of a classic film. Kubrick is naturally one of my favorite filmmakers, and this article informs a great deal about the source material by Anthony Burgess, much of which I didn’t know. Great reading. 5 stars.
I've been reading this magazine since it first came out back in the spring of 1977 (Yes, at the same time the first STAR WARS movie came out.)
This is the strongest issue in years. We start with the conclusion of the 2-part Nancy Kress story, "Quantum Ghosts". The other stories maintain a high level that flowed well and contained intriguing concepts that challenged me.
My favorite might have been "Wooly", by Carrie Vaughn. What do you do when the government wants your miniature cloned woolly mammoth back??
I had the pleasure of picking up a free copy from Worldcon and I was not disappointed. There is something really special about a trade paper fiction magazine like this, and the stories were great. There's a reason Asimov's is highly regarded! I particularly enjoyed Harry Turtledove's time travel story, The Fight Goes On, which was a wonderful piece of classic science fiction, as well as John Richard Trtek's piece, The Passage, which had very memorable dialogue and characterization.
The lunar excursion ship Lemuria 7 disappeared five years ago with all six on board. No wreckage. No bodies. This documentary style tale tells of “The Hunt For Lemuria 7”, as Allen M. Steele reveals that truth may be weirder than all the ‘conspiracy theories’ thrown about. When a survivor mysteriously finds herself back on Earth we suspect that we are not alone. Steve Rasnic Tem gives us some cautionary clifi “In The Forest Of Mechanical Trees”, where elderly people are trying to mitigate global warming amid the wasteland that the desert southwest has become, and Harry Turtledove takes us back to Sarajevo in 1914, where the crowds are mostly time-travellers, futilely trying to change history in “The Fight Goes On”. When a UFO crashed in the United States in 1938, the Americans halted their other weapons development and reverse-engineered the alien tech to get, among other things, death rays, which won them the war. They also developed a type of teleportation delivery system for small bombs, used for surgical strikes. But the Soviets continued atomic research and have now detonated a nuclear weapon. Old hands have been recalled and warbots have been repurposed to deal with this existential threat in “The Tin Man’s Ghost” by Ray Nayler. Nancy Kress concludes her novella “Quantum Ghosts” with an impending Carrington Event (massive coronal mass ejection) threatening to destroy not only the Upload Centre but any electronic infrastructure. All while Senator Dayson’s daughter is trapped in the UC. Exciting stuff! Michael Libling gives us the sinister tale of a trial drug for memory degradation like Alzheimer’s and a husband and wife who are in the trial. But sometimes these things are run without due regard to the quality of the applicants, and in this case, whether some patients deserve to be saved. “Trial By Harry” is the standout story in this issue. Mathematical genius Sanjay has been chosen by the alien Lezhenad to make the journey to their home world, there to continue his ground-breaking work on the origins of the ur-Universe, which even the Lezherad do not understand. “The Passage” to their enclave is by ship and provides the opportunity for a woman on board, Asra, to get to know him. But her reasons are not entirely without ulterior motives, as Sanjay’s work may be important to Earth. John Richard Trtek’s tale is fascinating. All good stories here. Recommended issue.