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Rabbit Test and Other Stories

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This subversive debut short-fiction collection comes from one of the hottest talents in speculative fiction: 2025 Compton Crook Award winner and World Fantasy and Pushcart Prize nominee Samantha Mills (The Wings Upon Her Back). The cornerstone of the collection is Mills’ pivotal Nebula, Locus, and Sturgeon award-winning story “Rabbit Test,” which interrogates the past, present, and future of abortion rights in America.

Introduction by Meg Elison

A time-traveling fisherwoman keeps landing on the right shore, but at the wrong time. A pair of witches fight over the gate between life and death. A new consciousness, intent upon seeing all the wonders of the universe, visits a floating library. A rock-and-roll legend squares off against a town full of devils. Humanity makes first contact, but falters when put in charge of selecting the world’s representatives.

These riveting stories run the gamut of the genre, transitioning from fantasy to contemporary, then into the farthest reaches of space. They take place in strange and emotional worlds, with stakes ranging from the epic to the personal, with ample room for humor and hope amidst tragedy.

256 pages, Paperback

First published April 21, 2026

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Samantha Mills

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 49 reviews
Profile Image for John Wiswell.
Author 70 books1,117 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
January 6, 2026
If you've only read "Rabbit Test," you aren't prepared for the amazing journey Mills is about to take your on. Her stories are equally trenchant and humane. And if you haven't read "Rabbit Test," what are you waiting for?

I received an ARC from Tachyon, or else I would've just bought this book myself. I'm probably going to pick up a couple of copies just to give to friends.
Profile Image for Goran Lowie.
421 reviews35 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 19, 2026
My first Samantha Mills, though THE WINGS UPON HER BACK has been laying dormant on my e-reader for some time now.

I tried to write some thoughts for each story but what I can say for the collection as a whole is that this is a strong collection, perhaps not always to my taste, but with a clear voice and evocative imagery. Maybe it gets a bit too preachy sometimes, but most of the time it works.

The first story has a strong mythopoeic feel to it, beautifully explored. It reminded me of HADES (the videogame). Would've loved a longer version of this, it has a lot of potential conceptually. 4 stars.

The second story, STRANGE WATERS, is a beautiful story of a fisherwoman out of time. It's a very evocative setting, with the main character looking for literal timestreams in the ocean to bring her to the past or the future of the island she was born on, desperately trying to get back to the time of her children. I loved the prose in this one so much. 5 stars.

ADRIANNA IN POMEGRANATE was let to my liking, honestly. Felt a bit too abstract, and though it tried to tug at my emotions, it failed because of this abstractness. 3 stars.

RABBIT TEST is the title story and won a few awards, so my expectations were rather high. We have a multi-generational story documenting the plight of women seeking abortingnin the past, the now and the future. 4 stars.

With A SHADOW IS A MEMORY OF A GHOST, she brings us another strange story. Birds, witches and a city on edge. Lost me halfway through I'll be honest. 3 stars.

THE LIMITS OF MAGIC is a story told in the second personal about exactly that. Just like RABBIT TEST, it's a story about women coming together to fight for what's right. 3.5 stars.

10 VISIONS OF THE FUTURE uses a format I've come to adore in SFF poetry and short stories, a tale told via a listicle. This one is quite imaginative and fun, though it gets maybe a bit too sentimental for my taste. 3.5 stars.

ONE PART PER BILLION is an interesting prelude to a first-contact story. 3 stars.

SPINDLES is part fairytale, part sci-fi, part first contact as well. 3 stars.

The next one, FOUR OF SEVEN, is quite the sad one. The fourth of seven girls born in a poor interstellar mining family comes to terms with being born poor, or doesn't, desperately trying to escape the shackles of poverty, and shows us the love for her family. Very sweet little slice-of-life story. 4 stars.

LAUGH LINES is incredibly short and simply an advocation for society to also adapt to people who don't fit into its molds, as opposed to the other way around. 3.5 stars.

KIKI HERNANDEZ BEATS THE DEVIL was not my thing.

The collection is closed brilliantly with ANCHORAGE, in which a space ship passes a point of interest that has to offer for them than they might think. Just like many of these stories, it's quite gentle, and is a beautiful little vignette. 4 stars.

Thanks to the publisher for an ARC in exchange for an honest review!
Profile Image for Nereis.
303 reviews7 followers
November 19, 2025
A really strong collection of short stories blending fantasy and science fiction, sometimes inside the same story. Most of them revolve around themes of family and bodily autonomy. The writing is easy to follow even if she likes to jump around time a lot in a few of the stories, I still found myself pretty grounded and never lost.

It's hard to choose a favourite one because I truly believe they were all very good. I think I have a soft spot for Strange Waters, the story about the time lost fisherwoman.
But honestly they all have their qualities : The Death of the God-King is great fantasy and made me want to read a whole book about it, I loved how the timelines were intertwined in Rabbit Test, 10 Visions of the Future has such an compelling argument, Four of Seven is such a personal and relatable story and you really feel for the main character, Laugh Lines is flash fiction and yet its impact is impeccable, Kiki Hernandez is for the ones who want a bit of fun and punk rock (definitely a different tone than the other stories), and Anchorage was fascinating and I could once more read a whole book about the world and crew (reminded me a bit of the Wayfarers series).

It's always hard for me to write a long positive review because I just enjoyed myself and loved the concepts explored here and I don't really know how to delve into that. So just know it's good, it covers different genre of SFF, and it's not that long. You should check it out.

Thank you NetGalley for providing me with an ARC of this collection.
Profile Image for Kate Connell.
463 reviews13 followers
January 29, 2026
The art of short story writing is to make the reader feel as connected to the character, place, and plot as if they were reading a novel length story. Samantha Mills exceeds expectations in this area, and I will be on the lookout for everything and anything written by her in the future.

From stories about a time-traveling fisherwoman, a love story involving Death, bodily autonomy, to a rock-and-roll legend squaring off against a town full of devils, Mills transports you to another world, or another version of our world, in which you find yourself right at home. Each story drew me in, no matter how outlandish the story might seem, it is grounded in reality and compassion for the characters. I highly recommend this to fans of science fiction, short stories, or moral dilemmas.

Thank you to NetGalley for an eARC of this book.
Profile Image for Tracey Thompson.
451 reviews76 followers
January 15, 2026
Pretty much every story in Rabbit Test and Other Stories punched me in the feels. In the first part of each story, I was getting the lay of the land, following the path so expertly laid out by Mills. I trusted this writer to lead me, as a reader. And by the end of each story, I was either in tears, or needed to “take a moment” to breathe.

Below are some of my highlights, but every story is magnificent.

Strange Waters is a gorgeous but harrowing story of a mother traveling through time to get back to her children. Equally heart-wrenching is Adriana in Pomegranate; the way Mills unveils the relationship between the main characters in this story is absolutely masterful.

I somehow missed the multi award-winning title story, Rabbit Test, when it was initially published in Uncanny magazine. As an avid reader of short stories, I’m not sure I can ever forgive myself for this. But it is a story regarding how abortion access has never been easy, and in certain parts of the US, may never be easy. In 2026, the last lines of the story still ring depressingly true:
”It is 2022 and it isn’t over.
It is 2022 and it is never over.”

A Shadow is a Memory of a Ghost (what a title!) tells the story of two sisters, one of which has inherited the family duty of “care of souls unwilling to cross over to the next side”. 10 Visions of the Future; or, Self-Care for the End of Days includes ten nightmare scenarios concerning an open hellgate off the coast of California, and the ways in which a couple cope. It contains my favorite description of an eldritch beast: “An elephant-sized spider with mouths for eyes…” Amazing.

When I finished reading Spindles, I literally yelled “STOP!” To an empty room. Eight-year-old Callisto, and her bear companion, Babo, try to navigate the world amidst an alien invasion. My heart could not take it.

Hopefully by now, you’re curious enough to pick up this collection. I cannot believe this is Mills’ debut collection; it is such an accomplished piece of work, and so full of heart.
Profile Image for Kara.
796 reviews394 followers
May 3, 2026
Ooh, this was good. There were a wide range of stories here (and they all felt very different), and yet it still made a cohesive collection with a very clear point of view. I don’t think I’ve read an author’s collection of short stories that felt so much like an anthology around a theme.

And each standalone story was also excellent. They’re well-written with fantastic comments and characters you somehow care about pretty much immediately. This was a delight to read.

Thank you to NetGalley and Tachyon Publications!
Profile Image for DarkPlotsAndLipGloss (Carlie).
115 reviews2 followers
April 21, 2026
4.5 stars

A collection of thought provoking short stories that I am currently obsessed with! Some stories were just okay, but others were absolutely mesmerizing. My favorites are "Strange Waters", "Spindles", The Death of the God-King", "Anchorage", and "A Shadow Is a Memory of a Ghost". (I would 100% read a full length novel on these!)


Thank you NetGalley and Tachyon Publications for this ARC.
Profile Image for Geonn Cannon.
Author 114 books229 followers
May 26, 2026
For some reason I thought this would be happy, fun stories? I do not know where I got that idea, it was clearly my mistake, but I'm glad I made it. The stories (while sometimes bleak) are very good, very well-written, and managed to hold my attention throughout. Most short story anthologies have a story or two that you skip, or you might move ahead early once you get where they're going, but this one was no-skips.
2,621 reviews54 followers
January 3, 2026
This is a fantastic collection of short stories from Ms. Mills, including the title story that won the Nebula, Hugo, and Locus for short stories that was a response to the overturn of Roe v Wade. There are also some amazing fantasy and sci-fi stories here as well, and was just a great collection to wrap the year with. Pick this up in the current Barnes and Noble preorder sale to help drive up sales!
Profile Image for ROLLAND Florence.
137 reviews10 followers
December 6, 2025
Strong women, revolting against their fate.
Magic and witchcraft.
SF and fantasy, sometimes woven together in the same story.
Circular time, blurred timelines.
Characters getting lost at sea to find themselves.

Samantha Mills knows how to pack a punch. The Rabbit Test and Other Stories is an enjoyable collection of very different stories. The author experiments with different genres and styles, which can be disconcerting. Careful sense of detail is infused in every story, painting rich universes and providing universal lessons.

The star of the collection, award-winning story The Rabbit Test, left me completely out of breath. I had to pause, stop reading, and do something else. Wow. The collection is worth five stars, for that story alone. It's no wonder that it won the Hugo award.

But that's not all. Samantha Mills describes advanced chips forcing pregnancy tests on teenagers, and in the next story, we explore towers with child sized cages and witchcraft. As you start each story, you have no idea what you will find. Style, time, pace, ambience - this is an exhilarating mix and match. It almost feels like Samantha Mills, following the power she grants her characters, loudly claims "I am the author, I call the shots, I make the rules". And it works.

In a totally different medium, there are parallels between this collection and the video games series The Longest Journey. Fantasy / magic and SF / high tech can totally coexist in the same works of fiction. Below the surface, it is about tools. What they can and can't do. How they transform the world, and the lives of the characters. What leverage looks like when placed in the wrong hands. Magic, tech, witchcraft - just a different toolbox. Enjoy the ride, this one is a rollercoaster.

Thank you NetGalley and Tachyon publishing for an excellent collection of stories. Thank you Samantha Mills for opening the Pandora's box so many times. I feel like most of those stories could lead to novels I would read. Beautiful work.
Profile Image for Juli Rahel.
783 reviews19 followers
May 3, 2026
I read Samantha Mills' debut novel The Wings Upon Her Back two years ago and was absolutely astounded by it; it was one of my favourite reads that year and I still think about it frequently. So when I saw a short story collection by Mills I jumped at the chance to read it. Thanks to Tachyon Publications and NetGalley for providing me with a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Alongside various stories, Rabbit Test also features a Foreword by Meg Ellison, an Afterword and Story Notes, both by Samantha Mills, at the end. I have seen the latter a few times now in short story collections, definitely ones from Tachyon as well, and I really enjoy it. Here, Mills lays out how some of the stories developed, what her initial ideas were, how a specific story challenged her, or what she hopes it achieves. While I'm a strong believer that author intention never trumps reader reception, I do find it interesting to see what an author thought, as it can expand how I perceive the story itself. Especially with an author like Samantha Mills who, in my opinion, is exceptionally good at playing with expectations and genres, it is interesting to see what her thoughts were. It is, however, not necessary to engage with the Story Notes because the stories themselves already offer plenty of food for thought and enjoyment.

Rabbit Test has thirteen stories and I loved something about each of them. I loved the opening story, 'The Death of the God-King', which is about a man who dies and returns, protecting his island and people for centuries, until someone comes looking for his immortality. It is a beautiful story about love, power, sacrifice, and tradition. 'Strange Waters', the second story, is also stunning, following a mother who is stuck in temporal currents, her boat constantly cast adrift into different centuries as she tries to get home to her children. 'Adrianna in Pomegranate' has a delightful magic system based on manuscript creation and is also a tragic story about loss, parenthood, and love. 'Rabbit Test' is the story that gives the collection its name and is deeply focused on female bodily autonomy, the right to abortion and the centuries of struggle associated with it. 'A Shadow Is a Memory of a Ghost' is delightfully creepy and imaginative as a rivalry between sisters to guard the border between life and death seeps into the next generation. 'The Limits of Magic' is also excellent about how magic is not always the solution and how most things don't come easy. Set in a desert atmosphere, it is a story about repression and rebellion. '10 Visions of the Future; or, Self-Care for the End of Days' is, as the title implies, something of a list featuring ten ways the world might end but it is also oddly uplifting and hopeful for all the various apocalypses. 'One Part Per Billion' takes place in space and features alien tech, multiple selves, and the perennial question of why there is only ever one woman. 'Spindles' broke my heart but I also loved it, as a young girl and her bear companion try to reach her mother while hunted by invaders. 'Four of Seven' is for the people who listened to Noah Kahan's 'Dashboard' an felt guilty, except it takes place in a space colony and is also somehow heartwarming. 'Laugh Lines' is brief, more like flash fiction and takes the shape of an obituary that goes somewhat sideways maybe. 'Kiki Hernandéz Beats the Devil' is a stand-out, just for the sheer inventiveness and fun I had with it! It features a hellhound, a guitar, and demons aplenty. The collection ends with 'Anchorage', which was one of my favourites, about a space crew docking onto an anchorage and the ship's robot system (?) that maybe feels a little too much.

As I said at the start, Mills' The Wings Upon Her Back is a stellar book that has stuck with me ever since I read it. In that book, Mills has the space to set up an intricate world and complicated relationships and characters, all while addressing some serious themes. I wondered whether she can accomplish the same in short stories, whether I would feel that same magic. I have to agree with Meg Ellison's very admiring Foreword because the stories in Rabbit Test are indeed magnificent. I really like what Mills does with the tropes of the various genres she dabbles in here. She blends Fantasy and Sci-Fi very well with contemporary issues and concerns, bringing in a little Historical Fiction here and there, and thereby consistently surprised me. I quite simply love the worlds and characters she creates and find myself fully invested each and every time. I would truly, whole-heartedly recommend this collection to anyone who enjoys Speculative Fiction because there will be something here for you. I can't wait to read more by Samantha Mills in the future, she's definitely an instant read for me.

Rabbit Test and Other Stories is a brilliant collection of stories that all in some way fall under the Speculative Fiction-umbrella. Samantha Mills is an excellent writer who has a real knack both for world-building and for the small details that make her worlds and characters come alive.

URL: https://universeinwords.blogspot.com/...
Profile Image for Joe Karpierz.
278 reviews5 followers
Review of advance copy received from Edelweiss+
March 28, 2026
Like many genre readers, my first encounter with a Samantha Mills work was her award-winning short story "Rabbit Test", published in 2022. It wasn't that story, however, that made me
pick up her 2024 novel THE WINGS UPON HER BACK. It was the premise and description alone that made me want to read that book, and it was an excellent one. But Mills generally flies under my radar, since most of what she's written is short fiction, and I tend to float in the direction of novels. However, when the opportunity to read her debut collection "Rabbit Test and Other Stories" presented itself, I decided it was time to jump right in.

Those readers who are familiar with Mills' work will nod their head sagely when I say that she does not limit herself to one type of story, one genre, one theme, one anything. In many cases in this collection, there is more than one element that makes up the tale. There may be a mixture of sf and fantasy, and a dollop of horror thrown in (I'll get to that shortly). There are elements of family, loss, emotional strife, and all sorts of things in these stories all at once. As a result, the reader is constantly kept on their toes, as it isn't necessarily clear what's going to happen next, and if it is, it's not clear how Mills is going to take us there.

There is a slew of terrific stories here. "Kiki Hernandez Beats the Devil" combines fantasy (and a wee bit of horror) with rock and roll to tell the tail of a rock guitar queen who can slay devils with her guitar playing. Mills references classic rock songs from my youth as weapons for Hernandez to use when she is slaying a particular devil to save a father and his child (who steals the show, in my opinion). I'm a sucker for straightforward stories that are simple and to the point, although I'm sure that Mills would say "but wait, I was really trying to say..." and maybe she was. But it's the guitars, devils, and rock and roll that stole my heart here.

Whether you think of time travel as fantasy or science fiction - my vote is for the popular marketing term of "science fantasy", although I think that having to put that kind of label on something takes the fun and wonder of it (or not; your mileage may vary) - "Strange Waters" is an enthralling story of a time travelling fisher woman (man? sometimes the correct term escapes me) who travels through the time streams on her fishing boat looking to get back to her own time to see her family. It's a very touching and emotional story.

"Anchorage" is a science fictional story about a space ship which encounters a device called an anchorage. Most members of the crew of the ship are reluctant to enter the anchorage and
discover who or what is there, but those that do discover that the entity that is there is looking only for stories, and in return it provides something that was unexpected. "Adrianna In Pomegranate" is the story of a father who uses magic to try to bring his deceased daughter back to life. This story is as old as the hills, but Mills manages to make it much more emotional and devastating than any other version of it that I have read in a long time.

The centerpiece of the collection is, of course, "Rabbit Test", the devastating tale of women seeking abortions throughout history and how society has almost always made it difficult to safely have the procedure. This story, which won more awards than I can count - and deservedly so - was timely when it was published, and the closing line is bone-chilling. It is Mills at the top of her game.

Other favorites are "A Shadow Is a Memory of a Ghost", about the conflict between two sisters with regard to the inherited family duty to care for souls unwilling to cross over to the next side. The award for the Best Short Story Title in the collection is "10 Visions of the Future; or, Self-Care for the End of Days", about a couple dealing with a Hellgate off the coast of California. There is a Lovecraftian tone to it, which shows that Mills can indeed dig into horror without it being too...horrific.

As with most collections, not all the stories here are for everyone, and that's okay. Mills exhibits a vast and dynamic range of storytelling that is impressive, which means there is something here for everyone. Which means everyone should get a copy and read it. I recommend it.
Profile Image for Kara Babcock.
2,134 reviews1,626 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 19, 2026
Short story collections are, as I always say at the start of every review of one, a hard sell for me. I love novels. Indeed, I identified a lot with what Samantha Mills says in her afterword about writing long novels in her youth and only recently getting around to learning how to short story. That’s true for me as a writer and a reader. Nevertheless, I liked The Wings Upon Her Back enough that I requested and received this eARC from NetGalley and Tachyon Publications.

This is a collection of thirteen of Mills’s previously published works, the most notable being the eponymous “Rabbit Test,” all of them various shades of speculative fiction. They typically focus closely on a single protagonist, variously first or third person, but always in a milieu quite unlike our own. Mills has dual talents for both setting and characterization; she can drop you into an unfamiliar world and orient you immediately, and at the same time, with a few words, introduce you to a new character like you’ve know them forever.

I won’t review every story individually, but here are some highlights for me.

“Rabbit Test” is the load-bearing story here, and I can see why. At first, I didn’t like it. I thought it was obvious and disjointed. So here’s the cool thing: Mills won me over. That disjointedness became a kind of stream-of-consciousness that connected women, and people with uteruses, throughout history. “Rabbit Test” reverberates across time in all directions in a really fascinating way, a testament to the power of a librarian writing a polemical story; we have always been here and we have always fought. It highlights how the coercive power of the state so cheerfully removing bodily autonomy is at odds with the faux libertarian trappings of conservative moments insisting government has no place in one’s home. Perhaps most poignantly, it makes space for the complicated emotions connected to coerced motherhood—the paradox of loving one’s child while also struggling to grieve for that other life.

Mills does something very similar with “Strange Waters,” which is my personal favourite of this collection. This story feels really simple at its core—a woman adrift at sea, adrift through time, trying to Quantum Leap her way home. I love its timey-wimey Doctor Who vibes. Say what you will about Moffat-era Who, it always measured out its tragedy with a dose of saccharine reassurance that some sacrifice or loss worked out for the best. It’s a tale that is both big and small at the same time, and that TARDIS-like quality gets me every time.

Of the various other stories, I’ll say this: none of them is a dud. Each one is suffused with Mills’s voice, yet each is also an interesting and different experience. “Kiki Hernández Beats the Devil” showcases this the best, for it’s clear Mills is playing in a genre (weird west) less familiar and a voice (“cocky” is how she describes it in her story notes) used less often. Yet in its theme, setting, and characters, it is very much Mills.

The story notes at the end are a nice touch, and I wish more authors were afforded the opportunity to do this (even the short epigraph-like notes we sometimes get are welcome!).

Overall, this is a stand-out collection, and Mills is an author I seem to appreciate more every time I read something new by her.

Originally posted on Kara.Reviews.

Creative Commons BY-NC License
Profile Image for Jessica.
94 reviews
May 12, 2026
4 stars; this is the average rating I calculated from rating the 13 short stories in this collection! I received an eARC in exchange for an honest review. Thanks Tachyon Publications and NetGalley.

I previously came across Samantha Mills' Rabbit Test on Uncanny Magazine and was quickly converted to being a fan forever. Not only was Rabbit Test relevant, hard-hitting, but Mills also brilliantly runs through multiple perspectives and time points to tell an ongoing story about the access to birth control and abortion. It previously won a Hugo (long story), and it was awarded a Nebula and a Locus for Short Story. So when I found out she was releasing a short story collection, which included Rabbit Test, how could I say no to reading this?

3-stars indicates I thought well-written, but didn't work for me personally.
4 or 4.5-stars indicates I loved it, something prevented me from a full 5-star rating.

Adrianna in Pomegranate - 3 stars (how grief can drive you to do the most reckless of things, and how it can drive people apart. also has some lovely bits about book binding/manuscript making)
The Limits of Magic - 3 stars (a dreamy, fairy-tale like story about mothers, and how a spark can lead to something bigger)
Spindles - 3 stars (a unique fairy-tale retelling within a mismash of sci-fi and fantasy)
Laugh Lines - 3 stars (interesting flash fiction about equity)

A Shadow is a Memory of a Ghost - 4 stars (breaking the cycle of abuse but not doing it the right way but maybe you end up doing it correctly after all?)
One Part Per Billion - 4 stars (don't you hate being the token female in a mostly-male space crew?)
Anchorage - 4 stars (its a whodunnit but its actually more whosinfected)

10 Visions of the Future; or Self-Care for the End of Days - 4.5 stars (Hugo-nominated!!! very reminiscent of a certain style of online storytelling and I only wish there was a little more to each "vision")
The Death of the God-King - 4.5 stars (loved this, in the author's notes Mills mentioned starting to write a love story and finishing it about the end of kings.)
Four of Seven - 4.5 stars (when you grow up in a huge family and how some things you do can distance yourself from everyone, but you try your best to mend that distance)
Rabbit Test - 5 stars (this version is slightly updated but if you read the Uncanny Magazine version it is generally the same. still, 6 stars if I was allowed)
Strange Waters - 5 stars (I cried. Interstellar but with a mom, 6 stars if I was allowed)
Kiki Hernandez Beats the Devil - 5 stars (if you enjoyed Tamsyn Muir's short story Undercover or if you like magical musical instruments or if you are even remotely intrigued by the title - READ. THIS.)

Anything Samantha Mills writes, I will read.
Profile Image for Macabre.bestie.reads.
20 reviews1 follower
April 24, 2026
I was lucky enough to receive an ARC of this collection from NetGalley and it’s officially out in the world as of April 21st! From what I’ve seen, it’s been getting a lot of love and honestly? I get it.

This is a beautifully crafted collection of short stories that blends fantasy, sci-fi, and soft horror in a way that feels both immersive and emotionally sharp. This was my first time reading Samantha Mills, and saying I’m impressed feels like an understatement. The atmosphere, the shifting narrative voices, the emotional weight carried through each story, well it’s all done beautifully. It takes serious skill to make a collection feel this cohesive while still giving each story its own identity.

That said, I found myself personally gravitating more toward the fantasy and soft horror pieces over the sci-fi, but that’s purely preference, not a critique of the writing itself.

There were a few stories I desperately wanted more from, ones that honestly could’ve stood on their own as novellas:

Strange Waters is a beautifully haunting story about a fisherwoman caught in a relentless loop through time, driven by one goal: to return to her own time and be reunited with her children. It’s not only atmospheric but deeply emotional. As a mother, it stirred something personal and emotional in me.

Adrianna in Pomegranate was just an intriguing story that I felt needed more substance, more detail and a bit of a longer story. It explores grief in a way that feels raw and familiar, especially for anyone who has experienced the loss of a child, myself included.

A Shadow is a Memory of a Ghost is complicated, layered, and quietly powerful. Two sisters shaped by an abusive father, now raising children of their own in very different ways. There’s tension, shared trauma, and this underlying sense of love that never fully disappeared. It felt unfinished in the best (and most frustrating) way because it was truly an oddly beautiful story. I really wanted to see where their children’s stories would go as well.

Kiki Hernandez Beats the Devil is absolute pure chaotic fun! This one doesn’t take itself too seriously, and that’s exactly why it works. It’s sassy, a little absurd, and completely entertaining. I would’ve loved more backstory and more adventures with her new companion Lucy and her lovable hellhound companion, Ozzy.

Overall, I absolutely recommend this collection if you love stories that are atmospheric, a little dystopian, emotionally driven, and genre-blending. There’s something here for everyone and at least a few that will stay with you long after you’ve finished.

Hope you enjoyed the review!
Profile Image for Kiera Ponting.
392 reviews10 followers
May 4, 2026
'Rabbit Test and Other Stories' is a thought-provoking short story collection from Samantha Mills. The collection includes a variety of stories set in realistic, science fiction, and fantasy settings. While each story brings something different to the table, all of them elicit thoughts on modern day, real world issues. I ended up reading through this book a lot slower than I originally intended, as I found that it was really worthwhile allowing each individual story time to settle with me before continuing on to the next. It came to no surprise that the award-winning titular story, 'Rabbit Test', was the most impactful and my favourite story overall. It was terrifyingly believable, presenting a dystopian very near-future where abortion is criminalised and all women of reproductive age have an implant that automatically notifies authorities of pregnancy. Women's issues and bodily autonomy are prevalent themes in several of the stories, as well as themes of poverty, familial relationships, and resistance.

While I have rated the individual stories below based on my enjoyment of each one, I still think that every single one of them (even those that I did not enjoy as much) brought interesting ideas and discussion points to the table. For example the shortest piece in this collection, 'Laugh Lines', went straight over my head, but it still managed to have me ruminating on the idea that its okay not to grieve someone who wronged you. As a complete collection, 'Rabbit Test and Other Stories' is well worth your time. Mills is an excellent writer, and I look forward to exploring some of her longer fiction in the future.

Thank you to Tachyon Publications and Netgalley for providing me with an eARC of this title in exchange for my honest review.

Individual Short Story Ratings:
The Death of the God-King 3.5/5
Strange Waters 4/5
Adrianna in Pomegranate 3/5
Rabbit Test 5/5
A Shadow is a Memory of a Ghost 2.5/5
The Limits of Magic 4/5
10 Visions of the Future 2/5
One Part Per Billion 3.5/5
Spindles 3/5
Four of Seven 4.5/5
Laugh Lines 1/5
Kiki Hernandez Beats the Devil 2.5/5
Anchorage 2.5/5
Profile Image for Robert Goodman.
614 reviews22 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 10, 2026
Samantha Mills’ short story Rabbit Test swept award season back in 2022/3. It won the Nebula Award in 2022, the 2022 Locus Award for best short story, the 2023 Theordore Sturgeon Award and the 2023 Hugo Award (which she subsequently disavowed due to issues with the 2023 Hugo ballot). It is now the title story of a strong collection of Mills’ short works.
Rabbit Test is a diverse collection of speculative fiction short stories. There is what might be considered science fiction – Anchorage which involves spaceships and existential threats but which Mills describes as her sweetest story, and One Part Per Billion – there are stories about magic – Adrianna in Pomegranate quickly develops a very unusual magic system – these is a time travel story – Strange Waters – and stories about gods and demons – Kiki Henández Beats the Devil is a delightful rock’n’roll riff on crossroads challenges. Rabbit Test itself is more of a future social history than anything else, charting the past and possible future for anti-abortion laws and written in the shadow of the challenge to Roe v Wade in the US Supreme Court.
While not all thematically linked, there is a strong thread in these stories of family ties. Of the relationship between parents and their children (Strange Waters, Adrianna in Pomegranate, Spindle), of the relationships between siblings (Four of Seven, A Shadow is the Memory of a Ghost), partners (10 Visions of the Future) and found families (Anchorage). Mills herself reflects on this in the notes for each story found at the end of the book.
But what really links these stories is a strong sense of place, character and setting delivered sharply and economically. In 2024, Samantha Mills first novel The Wings Upon Her Back delivered a fascinating world and a unique science-fantasy setting but also explored a number of real world issues of toxic relationships and control. In this collection readers can see both where some of these ideas developed and some even more interesting concepts.
Profile Image for Daniela.
219 reviews5 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
April 20, 2026
(Mild spoilers ahead)

This was genuinely brilliant! So incredibly clever and creative. I took a writing workshop and, as a beginner, this was the best possible book to be reading at the same time. The diversity in style and structure is what makes the collection, in my opinion, fun and interesting to analyze from a writing standpoint.

It was reassuring to see some of the same thoughts I wrote down in the author's own notes about her stories at the end.

My favorites, without a doubt, were Rabbit Test and Strange Waters.

The former, ah, what can I say! I get why it's the title of the collection. It is the best piece of not-so-fictional-fiction I've read about abortion. Left me breathless. Gave me chills, rage. It's injustice, it's control. It's a ten out of ten.

The latter has a one-of-a-kind plot I was instantly fascinated by. Encapsulates the perseverance that's inherent of mothers, accompanied by helplessness and a lot of hope. Beautiful and moving.

Others worthy of praise:
- 𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗟𝗶𝗺𝗶𝘁𝘀 𝗼𝗳 𝗠𝗮𝗴𝗶𝗰: Magical to a human extent, inspirational. First, I loved that it was the apparent secondary character the story was about, and not the high regent. Second, I loved to witness the seeds of revolution. Third, same as with Rabbit Test, the "𝘰𝘶𝘳 𝘮𝘰𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘳𝘴 𝘧𝘰𝘶𝘨𝘩𝘵 𝘧𝘰𝘳 𝘵𝘩𝘪𝘴" message is so so powerful. Last, it uses a lovely second person narrative.
- 𝟭𝟬 𝗩𝗶𝘀𝗶𝗼𝗻𝘀 𝗼𝗳 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗙𝘂𝘁𝘂𝗿𝗲: Witty and touching. Stirred a lot of emotions.
- 𝗟𝗮𝘂𝗴𝗵 𝗟𝗶𝗻𝗲𝘀: What a great concept, I did not see the reveal coming. Also, it contains another genius second person narrative.

Reading this collection made me come to the conclusion that when it comes to sci-fi settings, I'm much more of a time travel enjoyer (also liked Four of Seven a lot) than I am of spaceships (Anchorage and One Part per Billion were among my least favorite).

Thanks so much, NetGalley, for this ARC and for allowing readers to discover new authors and stories.
Profile Image for Chelsea.
25 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 5, 2026
It is difficult to decide what exactly to write about Rabbit Test that can fully describe the outstanding quality of these short stories or the emotional rollercoaster I had while reading them.

My plan has been simple: read one or maybe a couple at a time, but I couldn't resist finishing the full collection in one sitting. These are emotionally profound, so I did give it a bit of time to digest before revisiting my favorites.

Rabbit Test, the story that gives the collection its name, should be a mandatory read in our current times, in my opinion and left me feeling haunted while also validating many feelings I found difficult to fully express.

Strange Waters was one that had me bawling as it tells the story of a woman sailing through temporal streams trying to return to her family, though I still don't know if these were tears of happiness or sadness.

10 Visions of the Future; or, Self Care for the End of Days was one of my favorites (though it is frickin' hard to pick). The concept of finding a silver lining amongst Eldritch horrors is wild, yet the message is simple and motivating to anyone who feels they are losing control of their life and how it is supposed to be. This struck a personal chord with me.

I wasn't sure exactly what I was getting into with this one, but I highly suggest it to anyone and everyone. The individual universes and their characters are so rich despite the smaller word count, and I can say for sure that they do not lose their magic, whether it's the first read or a return to certain stories.

5/5 Stars hands down.

Thank you to NetGalley and the Publisher for giving me a chance to read this! It was an even bigger delight than I had even expected.
10 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 11, 2026
Samantha Mills has a distinctive voice; it's not going to be for all readers, but if you like grasping for poignant, bittersweet hope when everything feels like it's falling apart, it might land for you as well as it does for me. While not a strict theme, there is a through line of womanhood, parenthood, family, and community in the midst of speculative settings that, no matter how fantastical, often feel all-too-relatable to the plights of our modern world.

This is a pretty common short story collection experience for me, coming from a favorite author. There are five-star pieces here where everything comes together to make for some of my favorite stories of all time, and then there are others with flashes of the same emotions, the same themes and skill of the craft, that miss just a beat for me. In this collection, this usually manifests as a disconnect between the conflict and tension of a story and an abrupt ending that tries to put a hopeful/bittersweet spin on things, which ends up feeling a little muted. Still, for the standouts here, and the fact that Samantha Mills writes exactly for me much of the time, I had a great time with this collection.

Standout stories:

Rabbit Test - titular story, (un)won all the awards, equal parts infuriating and cathartic
Strange Waters - a fascinating time-travel world about a mother unmoored from her children and trying to get back to their timeline. Awesome parenthood story.
The Death of the God-King - one of two stories newly published in this collection. About who has the right to power, and the morality of taking/using that power perpetuating a cycle of power holding and power grabbing. And also generational sacrifice.

Thanks to NetGalley and Tachyon Publications for an advance copy for review!
Profile Image for Lydia.
Author 4 books296 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 16, 2026
Rabbit Test and Other Stories is a dynamite collection of mind-exploding stories. Samantha Mills writes wildly inventive tales with beautiful confidence, so that living in her imagination is a weird combination of wondering "what even is this?" and then reminding yourself: "she's got it under control." This book is for all the LitRPG people, for people who have read their Science Fiction Hall of Fame Vol. 1, 1929-1964 to shreds, for fans of the classics who are ready to now swallow smart, well-crafted capsules of female rage, with a glass of lyrical storytelling.

The women in this collection are memorable, heartbreaking, flawed, powerful, interesting. The title story is a moving history lesson in reproductive rights that painfully stretches hundreds of years into the future. And there are so many favorite characters to remember here in other stories -- women who reach for power, who have regrets, who brave everything. This is going on my shelf next to Bradbury and Asimov,

A couple of years ago, I read a book called Appendix N, a collection of stories from the end pages of D&D's Dungeon Master's Guide from 1979. They were writers and worlds who had shaped the fantasy universe into which D&D was born. Most of the stories, for me, fell flat. I can't remember one I really loved. I think about the diversity of RPGs out there now, and the way women are represented in fantasy now, and I realize that Rabbit Test and Other Stories, which includes magic and warrior kings and strange gods, is what I wish Appendix N has been. Literary fantasy is mesmerizing and addictive, and Mills is a rising star.

Profile Image for Teleseparatist.
1,308 reviews161 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 8, 2026
Received an ARC from NetGalley.

I've been sleeping on Mills, I admit. I think I meant to read both "Rabbit Test" and "Self-care for the End of Days" and never got round to either, possibly because they sounded so explicitly about the present day US that I just didn't have the inspiration. But the collection is more than just that, and when it is about that - about Roe v Wade being repealed, about lobbyist-owned-politicians being a death cult who'd absolutely call upon Cthulu for a better profit margin - it is still, in turns, tragic, funny and touching enough to stand out. Okay, my bad, I'll follow more closely from now on.

The collection is very much focused on reproductive rights, parenting and motherhood in particular. There are dead babies, and unwanted pregnancies, and wanted babies, and small children, and responsibility to the future generations, present in almost every single story. This focus is still broad enough to allow for a variety of approaches and viewpoints, but it's also specific enough that the collection feels very cohesive. Mills likes to write short stories that feel a little pointillist / meandering, and that sometimes works very well, and sometimes makes the tale lose momentum.

Rabbit Test is probably the stand-out, though I also really loved The Death of the God-King, Four of Seven and (yes, okay) Self-Care for the End of Days. Didn't really like Laugh Lines and One Part Per Billion, but they didn't subtract from overall impression - that I want to read more from Mills, and I need to keep an eye out for her next projects.
48 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 30, 2026
Samantha Mills writes with the force of a supernova in this collection. Rabbit Test is not merely a collection of competent stories; it is a stunning mix of science fiction and fantasy, exploring the most intimate, urgent, and timeless facets of the human condition: memory, power, agency, and resistance.

The titular story, Rabbit Test, is a standout must read for its powerful and important message, woven into a narrative that time-hops through the brutal history of policing women's bodies. It is an essential and masterfully executed read; the kind of story that leaves a permanent mark on a reader’s conscience.

Despite this, my personal favourite story of the collection was Strange Waters, a tale that left me wishing Mills had written an entire series set in its universe. It’s a longing I felt throughout the rest of the book and still feel now, a few days later.

Unusually for a short story collection, there was no bad story here for me. A few landed as more middling, perfectly readable but somewhat forgettable compared to the exceptional work that surrounds them. The overall hit rate, however, is remarkably high.


Overall, this is a strong recommendation for the entire collection and an absolute must read for Rabbit Test alone.

I would go so far as to say I believe it should be required reading.

A big thank you to Tachyon Publications and Netgalley for providing this book for early review, all opinions are my own. #RabbitTestandOtherStories #NetGalley
Profile Image for Kirsty-Elise Noonan.
30 reviews2 followers
May 3, 2026
I’ve given this 4 stars, though considered 3, because while I liked the ideas behind a lot of these stories, the collection as a whole didn’t fully blow me away.

There are some really strong concepts here - the stories move between fantasy, sci-fi, dystopia, magic, time travel, space, with a sprinkle of social commentary throughout, so there’s a lot of variety, and some of the ideas are super clever and original.

And the emotions they bring up range from anger to real discomfort, with a strong focus on women, motherhood, survival, grief, and the systems people are forced to navigate.

That said, I did find the collection a bit uneven. Some stories pulled me in straight away, but others felt a little too abstract or hard to connect with, and I sometimes found myself admiring the idea more than actually enjoying the experience of reading it. A few of them felt like they ended just as I was starting to get into them, while others felt like they could have been tighter, which I think is often an issue when balancing short stories.

I think this is one of those collections where the themes are very strong, but not every story worked for me personally. I’m glad I read it, especially Strange Waters, and there are definitely stories in here that will stay with me, but overall it was more of a 3 or 4-star read for me than a new favourite.

Thank you Tachyon Publications and NetGalley for the ARC.
83 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 15, 2026
I went into this book ready for weird, sharp, thought-provoking, sci-fi... and instead I don't know what I got. Thoughts maybe? Thoughts floating around. Untethered. Occasionally staring at me confused as well.

Look, I love a good abstract kind of story. But this collection felt less like I was piecing together meaning and more like I'd walked into the middle of several conversations and everyone refused to explain what we were talking about.

The first story was genuinely great. The perfect start. I thought if this was the precedent set, I am in. And then... I was not in. I was out. Immediately. Never to return. The rest felt disjointed, like fragments of ideas that forgot to become full stories. Plenty of sentences, sure. But plot? Direction? A destination? Could not locate them. I kept waiting for this all to get back to the quality of the first story but instead just got... more words.

Look. According to the other reviews, I am the obvious outlier here. Maybe I am just too basic for these stories. So if you love super experimental storytelling, this might hit. But for me, it felt like being served a beautifully plated meal and then discovering it's just garnish.

I do still appreciate the ARC though from Netgalley and Tachyon Publications for my (obviously) unbiased review.
Profile Image for The Speculative Shelf.
299 reviews651 followers
Review of advance copy received from Edelweiss+
January 21, 2026
A diverse array of stories, each engaging and lively, brimming with heart and an urgent sense of purpose. In “Strange Waters,” a fisherwoman is lost to time. The currents sweep her centuries beyond her known present day. She seeks out new “timestreams” that might return her to what she understands as the present, while her arrivals and departures create ripples across time.

“Laugh Lines” is a lean tale about a translucent rabbit-baby, adopted by a spider-mother, which examines adoption and disability advocacy. “The Limits of Magic” explores, well, the limits of magic. It’s a beautifully constructed high fantasy about a woman bearing the weight of expectation amidst the tumult of war.

Samantha Mills’s stories run the gamut of SFF genres and subgenres. Not every story worked or kept me fully hooked, but the ones that did were truly fantastic.

Favorite stories: “Strange Waters,” “Rabbit Test,” “The Limits of Magic”

My thanks to the publisher and Edelweiss for an advanced reader copy in exchange for an honest review.

Blog | Twitter | Instagram | Bluesky
39 reviews1 follower
May 13, 2026
Rabbit Test and Other Stories by Samantha Mills is a beautiful, powerful, evocative collection of short stories from fantasy to speculative fiction.

I don't usually read short stories, but I knew I had to pick up Rabbit Test because of the moment we are living in. This collection blew me away. I debated the merits of reviewing each individual story, but I think this is a collection that just needs to be experienced. I felt myself grieving, enraged, and just stunned to silence by individual stories, and as a whole. I frequently had to put this one down, step away, absorb what I read before I moved on to the next story. Samantha Mills has mastered the short story; each one of these had a strong voice, grounded in it's space, but able to create the most lived in world in such a short word count. Rabbit Test (the story) was harrowing, hopeful, and so very isolating. I am also obsessed with 10 Visions of the Future; or, Self-Care for the End of Days. We are all doing self care to get by these days it seems like.

I am a lifelong fan. This is perfect for anyone who reads science fiction, speculative fiction, or has some simmering rage about the world around us.

Thank you to NetGalley and Tachyon Publishing for the ARC of this collection of short stories.
Profile Image for Arkasha.
233 reviews87 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 26, 2026
If I’m being honest I expected more from an ARC with, at the time of writing this review, an average rating of 4.47 on Goodreads and 4.65 on Storygraph. But alas. There were interesting ideas in it, but the execution was not there yet. The writing style was really plain, and overall this book lacked a certain kick and had way too many parentheses in it. Some stories relied on being relatable or assuming familiarity with what the characters were experiencing; but there was a lack of depth so people with no commonality with the characters may find it difficult to empathize. There were many kinds of suffering and helplessness described among the stories but they didn’t feel genuine, they feel like textbook examples (before looking them up I already could guess that the author is white and probably much younger than I am; no shade but it explained a lot). The titular short story was my least favorite, even if I agree with the politics; it felt a vessel to convey a specific message and had no intention of telling and being a story.

eARC courtesy of NetGalley and Tachyon Publications.
Profile Image for Suki J.
444 reviews24 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
April 5, 2026
Thank you to Tachyon Publications for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.

4.5 stars.

A collection of sci-fi and fantasy short stories, these tales beautifully captured my imagination, and stirred my emotions, which for me is the perfect combination.

This was my first book by Samantha Mills and definitely won't be my last. This author writes beautifully, and each story in this collection deserves a place here.

My favourite story was Rabbit Test, which captures the universal struggles of women throughout time, who face unwanted pregnancies. What do you do if abortion is outlawed, and contraception is unavailable or too expensive, but having a child is not an option? And what consequences do women face, often through legislation designed by men, when they are forced to take the risky route? This story ignited my fury for women who are having to go through this, have gone through this, and who will have to in the future. It really hit hard.

There was also an emotionally compelling tale involving time travel that I loved, and the story of a girl and her pet bear was beautiful.

One of the best short story collections I've read in a while.
Profile Image for toloveabook.
126 reviews6 followers
April 22, 2026
(4.5 stars) I received a free ARC from the publisher; these are my honest opinions. ~ This is one of the best SFF short story collections I’ve ever read (and I read A LOT of short fiction). Samantha Mills is an incredible writer. My first exposure to her writing was her 2022 short story, Rabbit Test (included in this collection). It's a story about abortion rights throughout the past and far into the future. It won a slew of awards and absolutely devastated me. I’ve been a fan ever since!

Some of these stories are filled with magic and wonder, others are pure rage, and some are very sweet. Narrowing down a “highlights” list was nearly impossible, but I did my best…

Highlights (in order of appearance):
- The Death of the God King
- Strange Waters
- Rabbit Test
- The Limits of Magic
- 10 Visions of the Future; or, Self-Care for the End of Days (EDIT: just nominated for a 2026 Hugo Award)
- Kiki Hernandez Beats the Devil
- Anchorage

If you’re a fan of SFF short stories, you will love this. And if this is your first time picking up a SFF short fiction collection, you can’t do better!
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