A dazzling collection of sci-fi flash fiction where glitching realities and fractured futures reveal the human heart behind the code.
Thirty futures. One thousand words or less. Zero safety protocols.
The Sky Didn't Load Today and Other Glitches is Rich Larson’s lightning strike collection of flash fiction. From biolab bunkers to alien fungi forests, from deep space comedy to seaside horror, each of the 30 stories is a precision-crafted portal to tomorrow.
Minds are downloadable. Bodies are rentable. Reality is unreliable.
A collection of micro fiction with many standalone stories and some with recurring plot points, ideas and characters. Rich's talent in building worlds you can easily dive into with interesting ideas at play is always satisfying.
The drawings at the beginning of every story are also a fun teaser of what's to come.
A big thank you to the publisher for an ARC of this collection! Blurb below:
THE SKY DIDN'T LOAD TODAY is a multiverse of stories, taking readers through time and space, spanning across cosmic body horror, post apocalyptic, new weird, cyberpunk, space opera, and depicting believable far future worlds with prose that often blends quirky and absurd humour with melancholy, exploring love, fear, survival, loneliness as well as extinction and evolution, along with the rise and fall of post-humans and pre-sapiens.
These stories are flash fiction, which in an earlier time we used to call 'short-shorts', stories of a few hundred words, perhaps a thousand. Short, punchy, usually structured around a single event and often with a twist ending.
Rich Larson is especially good at this. His fertile imagination allows him to create endless science fictional scenarios that are clever, funny, and strange. Sometimes flash goes for effect and doesn't have a real resolution. These stories have a beginning, middle and end, even the ones running only half a page. Well done.
Rich Larson is one of the best short story writers around, and while we wait for Changelog to drop next month, these flash fictions will do. Sometimes stories this short can come over a little glib, but Larson is very good at giving weight to his little vignettes, giving verisimilitude to his futures. Great stuff.
If you love science fiction, and if you love flash fiction, this collection is for you. Larson fits mind-bending ideas, interesting characters, and dark and compelling twists into each and every story.