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Asimov's Science Fiction January/February 2020

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January-February 2020. Edited by Sheila Williams. Cover art by Dominic Harman, illustrating the story "Not this Tide" by Sheila Finch. Also in this issue:

"The Palace of Dancing Dogs" by Allen M. Steele
"An Alien on Crete" by Neal Asher
"A Pack of Tricks" by Leah Cypess
"Third Shift" by Mar Catherine Stratford
"The Antidote" by Dominica Phetteplace
"GO. NOW. FIX." by Timons Esaias
"The Way To Compostela" by Jean-Louis Trudel
"The Refraction of White Lies" by Meredith Lozaga
"The Kaleidoscope City" by Doug C. Souza
"You'll Live" by B. S. Donovan
plus poetry by Robert Frazier, Jane Williams, Jane Yolen and Marie Vibbert

211 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2020

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About the author

Sheila Williams

276 books66 followers
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name. See this thread for more information.

Sheila Williams is the editor of Asimov's Science Fiction magazine. She is also the recipient of the 2012 Hugo Award for Best Editor, Short Form.

Sheila grew up in a family of five in western Massachusetts. Her mother had a master's degree in microbiology. Ms. Williams’ interest in science fiction came from her father who read Edgar Rice Burroughs books to her as a child. Later Ms. Williams received a bachelor's degree from Elmira College in Elmira, New York, although she studied at the London School of Economics during her junior year. She received her Master's from Washington University in St. Louis. She is married to David Bruce and has two daughters.

She became interested in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine (as it was then titled) while studying philosophy at Washington University. In 1982 she was hired at the magazine, and worked with Isaac Asimov for ten years. While working there, she co-founded the Dell Magazines Award for Undergraduate Excellence in Science Fiction and Fantasy Writing (at one time called the Isaac Asimov Award for Undergraduate Excellence in Science Fiction and Fantasy writing). In 2004, with the retirement of Gardner Dozois, she became the editor of the magazine.

Along with Gardner Dozois she also edited the "Isaac Asimov's" anthology series. She also co-edited A Woman's Liberation: A Choice of Futures by and About Women (2001) with Connie Willis. Most recently she has edited a retrospective anthology of fiction published by Asimov's: Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine: 30th Anniversary Anthology. Booklist called the book "A gem, and a credit to editor Williams."
She has been nominated for 4 Hugo Awards as editor of Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine.

See also Sheila Williams's entry in the Internet Speculative Fiction Database.

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Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
Profile Image for D Dyer.
356 reviews38 followers
March 7, 2020
A better than average issue. Some of my favorite stories were, “an alien on Crete” eight first contact story with a slowly building twist, “third shift” A very different sort of alien contact story featuring a non-binary character, “The palace of dancing dogs” which is a continuation of the adventures in “escape from sanctuary” which appeared in an earlier issue and The heartbreaking dystopian tail “you’ll live.”
Profile Image for Paul.
1,360 reviews195 followers
February 26, 2020
Not This Tide by Sheila Finch was amazing, my favorite novella of the year so far. It is a WWII story about a young girl who is trying to survive the bombing of London and her future self as an old woman being recognized for her efforts for peace. It also has her father manning an anti-aircraft gun in the English channel and the decisions he must make there. So good and emotional. - 5

The Reflection of White Lies by Meredith Lozaga Really solid short story that had a killer ending. It centers around a family that is testing having an AI as a spouse. - 4

A Pack of Tricks by Leah Cypress - A woman is a model for Renaissance painters and she meets someone from the future. Great story about cultural norms and accepting those norms or not. - 4

I also liked Doug C. Souza's story The Kaleidoscope City and B.S. Donovan's depressing story You'll Live.

Other stories were:
Neal Asher An Alien on Crete
Jean-Louis Trudel The Way to Compostela
Timons Esaias Go.Now.Fix
Dominica Phetteplace The Antidote
Mar Catherine Stratford Third Shift

Overall, it was a good issue. I didn't read the other novella by Allen M. Steele because it was a follow-up from the previous month's novella. This was my first entire Asimov's magazine edition and I'll definitely keep subscribing.
Profile Image for Michael Frasca.
347 reviews3 followers
January 16, 2020
Here are my favorite stories:

- The Palace of Dancing Dogs by Allen Steele. The continuing saga of the human settlers on Tawcenty and their ongoing low-level conflict with the indigenous Cetans. A human contingent makes a surreptitious ocean voyage from their Pale of Settlement to a more advanced city/state of the Cetans. Along the way, the humans discover more about how they came to be on this world. Steele avoids making this a travelogue while building up to climatic scene between two long standing rivals. Can you find the Grateful Dead Easter egg?


- Not this Tide by Sheila Finch. “A thing that seems of enormous importance can amount to nothing in the grand sweep of history…And conversely, a little thing can bring down an empire” A wonderful story split between three settings: London - December 1944, Shivering Sands Maunsell* Army Fort in the English Channel - December 1944, and Oslo Noble Peace Prize ceremony December 2035. At first, you might not think this a science fiction or fantasy story, but little things start popping up and you’ll say “Ah Ha!” Pairs well with Black Out/All Clear by Connie Willis.


* Be sure to check out Maunsell forts on Wikipedia.


- An Alien on Crete by Neal Asher. A meteor fall in the mountainous interior of Crete…or was it something else? A British expat takes a hike, changing his life, and perhaps everyone’s life, forever.


- A Pack of Tricks by Leah Cypress. Women during the Renaissance had three career choices - marriage, the convent or prostitution. Because of circumstance, Lucia seems destined for the last, but she seeks a fourth way as an artist’s model. “My beauty was my only possible path out of starvation.”
 However a Visitor has been hanging around the atelier.


- Third Shift by Mar Catherine Stratford. A lonely diner just off the highway. The third shift. Strange violet lights in the desert mountains. A man who is not tall driving a black car. And two people who have escaped abusive situations, but may have been ‘taken.’ All it needs is some invisible pie. Pairs well with Welcome to Night Vale.


- GO. NOW. FIX. by Timons EsaiasTimons Esaias. Over-powered smart devices to the rescue…led by a plushy! Give it a hug, because it deserves one.


- The Refraction of White Lies by Meredith LozagaMeredith Lozaga. Whites lies in a constructed relationship…what could go wrong? If Lozaga pitched this idea to Rod Serling, it for sure would have appeared on The Twilight Zone.


- The Kaleidoscope City by Doug C. SouzaDoug C. Souza. Sometimes a loved one’s bucket list becomes your own. And that can be a good thing.
Profile Image for Amelia.
49 reviews25 followers
July 26, 2020
PandaPillow is the greatest hero of our time and deserves the world
Profile Image for Antonio Ippolito.
419 reviews41 followers
February 9, 2020
"Not this Tide" by Sheila Finch. 80% romanzo storico e 20% fantascienza, la storia di copertina è senz’altro la più bella di questo numero. Il titolo è ispirato a una poesia di Kipling, dettata come altre dal dolore per il figlio perso nella I Guerra Mondiale. Il tema è appunto l’impatto della guerra sulle vite dei singoli, visto attraverso le esperienze (in parte autobiografiche) di una bambina che vive con la madre e la sorella nella Londra sottoposta ai bombardamenti delle V1 e delle prime V2, nel dicembre ’44, mentre il padre è stato richiamato in una postazione antiaerea nell’estuario del Tamigi. Un vivido racconto della vita quotidiana in questi due ambienti (i giochi dei bambini, con la curiosità macabra per case bombardate e aerei abbattuti; la noia della vita in una fortezza affollata dove non c’è poi davvero molto da fare..) si alterna con i preparativi per la consegna dei Nobel della Pace nel 2035.. sembrerebbe tutto realistico, se la piccola Rosemary non avesse un amico immaginario, proprio somigliante al Francis Drake dei suoi libri di scuola, che la avvisa dei pericoli peggiori; e anche suo padre, nella solitaria fortezza sulla Manica, incontra un commilitone che non sembra essere davvero parte della guerra.. tutto si legherà, alla fine; e il messaggio più importante è che è inutile vincere una guerra contro il Male se diventiamo Male anche noi: perchè davvero una guerra possa “metter fine a tutte le guerre”, come si era sperato durante la precedente “Guerra europea”, serve un approccio diverso. E chi pianterà i semi di questo approccio?
L’idea fantascientifica non è originalissima ma usata con profondità. Della Finch Asimov’s aveva pubblicato un buon racconto weird 2 anni fa.

"The Palace of Dancing Dogs" by Allen M. Steele.
Questo episodio conclude la saga iniziata più di un anno fa con “Starship Mountain”: i nostri protagonisti, che all’inizio come tutti i terrestri vivevano confinati sull’isola di Santuario per volontà dei Cetani, ignorando tutto della loro storia ma anche del mondo intorno, ormai sanno di essere i discendenti di un’astronave precipitata secoli prima; e hanno capito che la scienza è più solida e seria della magia. Ora li aspetta la sfida più grande: attraversare l’Oceano su una nave di mercanti- contrabbandieri cetani per raggiungere un continente sconosciuto, ma di fatto ben più importante della loro isola d’esilio!
Proprio qui questa serie mostra le sue debolezze, insieme ai pregi. Se indubbiamente Steele sa mantenere il ritmo e la piacevolezza di tutti i suoi romanzi, trovo che manchi il respiro e la fantasia visiva di “Coyote”: è significativo che della traversata di un Oceano sconosciuto nulla ci venga detto, ma si passi direttamente all’arrivo in porto! Quanti misteri si celavano invece nei fiumi e nei mari di Coyote!
La sorpresa davanti alle imponenti costruzioni cetane, la vita di una capitale ben più raffinata di Landencite (il “Landing Site”, capitale di Santuario, volutamente tenuta arretrata dai Cetani), addirittura l’impensata presenza di umani! Sono tutte situazioni rese con “sense of wonder”; ma troppi fatti sono narrati o saputi indirettamente più che vissuti. La benevolenza della principessa Ikko verso gli umani, l’odio implacabile del Guardiano Bart verso il nostro protagonista, l’antipatia di questi verso la compagna di avventure Pilot.. restano sentimenti superficiali e non troppo spiegati, meno concreti dei contrasti tra i coloni di Coyote; un po’ da fumetto, senza voler parlar male dei fumetti.

"An Alien on Crete" di Neal Asher. Un inglese espatriato a Creta vive, tra fascino e timore, un primo contatto con un alieno oggettivamente orrendo. Trama non originalissima ma molto ben narrata: i sentimenti del protagonista, la sfida con l’esercito che vorrebbe appropriarsi dell’essere..
"A Pack of Tricks" di Leah Cypess. La Cypess, versatile e simpatica autrice di racconti, ci porta questa volta in una non precisata città dell’Italia rinascimentale, dove una giovane modella per sopravvivere nella competizione con le altre (non è nata povera e pronta a tutto come le altre: è caduta in miseria da una buona condizione sociale, quindi non vuole fare l’amante o la prostituta..) decide di affrontare il rischio di farsi ritrarre dal grande artista Don Taorzi, che però ha rapporti con i misteriosi e malvisti Visitatori. Scoprirà che essi vengono dal futuro per studiare gli snodi fondamentali della storia dell’arte; in questo caso i rapporti tra Taorzi e il suo discepolo. Saprà che il ritratto che le verrà fatto le darà fama immortale, e che il discepolo la desidera.. il racconto però termina senza chiarire se i pittori in questione erano figure storiche, se il ritratto in questione era uno di quelli che ammiriamo nelle nostre pinacoteche, qual era il mistero indagato dall’Inviato, se c’era un’altra inviata che lo spiava..


"Third Shift" di Mar Catherine Stratford. Anime perdute si scambiano confidenze durante il turno di notte di un locale tra le montagne dell'Arizona. Rapimenti alieni e successivi sogni/memorie come trasparente metafora delle conseguenze dei traumi che la protagonista ha subìto a opera del suo violento ex fidanzato, nonché quelli che l'amic* Rattlesnakes (indicat* nell’originale con il pronome “they” in quanto probabilmente in transizione sessuale; così come “zir” sostituisce “her” o “his”) ha ricevuto da parte della famiglia da cui è fuggit*. È il racconto di come vengono superati i traumi, ma vale soprattutto per la bella atmosfera alla Edward Hopper in cui si muovono i tre personaggi (contando Miguel, il cuoco marxista).

Gli altri racconti costituiscono una stimolante panoramica della vita del prossimo futuro:
"The Antidote", di Dominica Phetteplace, ci mostra il futuro prossimo della danza: impianti bionici e sensori aptici dànno una dimensione alla danza, ma solo per chi ha alle spalle famiglie che li possono finanziare. La protagonista per sbarcare il lunario lavora come hostess in una spa che offre trattamenti personalizzati (“percorsi di benessere e rinnovamento” su misura del proprio DNA), finchè non viene convinta a fare il doppio gioco da un inventore di molecole.. Scritto con brio e ironia, ci dà un’altra vista sul futuro del mondo del lavoro e dei servizi.
"GO. NOW. FIX." di Timons Esaias è il primo racconto scritto dal punto di vista di un collare da aereo, però smart: coordinandosi con gli altri dispositivi presenti su un aereo passeggeri, dagli orologi ai carrelli delle bibite, riusciranno a soccorrere e salvare molti passeggeri. Davvero brillante lo svolgimento con numerosi protagonisti digitali.
"The Way To Compostela" di Jean-Louis Trudel. Anche qui abbiamo una danzatrice, ma soprattutto cervelli in affitto. Anche per i geni della matematica il futuro è gramo: ognuno ha bisogno di uno sponsor che paghi i supercomputer che tramite miliardi di iterazioni verificheranno le loro intuizioni; per esempio, su come imbrigliare la forza di gravità. Oltre tutto, se si è sulla buona strada, c’è il rischio che le industrie degli attuali propulsori spaziali vogliano toglierti di mezzo: meglio trovarsi un altro sponsor e tornare sulla Terra, dove è meno facile morire (c’è aria dappertutto, per dire). Ma dopo una lunga permanenza sulla Luna, l’organismo va riabilitato alla gravità terrestre: ecco quindi la geniale invenzione del treno circolare, che percorrendo un binario chiuso e inclinandosi gradualmente permette di ricreare una forza di gravità maggiore e, nel giro di qualche settimana, mettere in grado i passeggeri di tornare al pianeta d’origine. Ma anche in questo ambiente chiuso può nascondersi un sicario: e in questa situazione da Agatha Cristie, il nostro fisico cercherà anche l’amore.. o gli costerà la vita?
"The Refraction of White Lies" by Meredith Lozaga. Vita coniugale di una famiglia tipo, raccontata dal marito.. piccolo dettaglio: come lui spiega, lei è un’androide, e la loro vita un esperimento di particolare successo che prosegue ormai da molti anni. Ma le cose non sono sempre come sembrano al narratore.. quando Philip Dick incontra il Mulino Bianco, detto con simpatia.

"The Kaleidoscope City" by Doug C. Souza. Breve ma un po’ faticoso racconto su un intenso momento tra padre e figlia: lei porta lui (forse biologicamente già morto, ma ricostruito a sufficienza) a rivedere le caverne di Callisto dove erano vissuti come famiglia.


Profile Image for Rachel.
324 reviews2 followers
May 26, 2020
This was my first issue of Asimov's (I have a few on the 'to read' pile) and I enjoyed it thoroughly. It's an interesting setup, with a mix of short stories, novelettes and novellas. All of the stories were really good and a number were excellent. I particularly enjoyed "An Alien on Crete" (creative and analytical), "Third Shift" (well-developed, flawed characters), "Go. Now. Fix." (incredibly creative and moving), and "The Way to Compostela" (cool world building / setting).

Looking forward to reading the other issues on my stack!
Profile Image for Tad Kilgore.
20 reviews2 followers
April 6, 2021
Simply!y fantastic. Every story was compelling.
Profile Image for Denise Barney.
391 reviews10 followers
May 22, 2020
This issue has several stories that I loved, including a poem by one of my favorites, Jane Yolen ("Taking Care"). Ms. Yolen uses fairy tale and folktale tropes and gives them a fresh twist and this poem is no exception. It begins with an epigraph by Ursula K. LeGuin: "All wizards, including writers, are extremely careful about their spells." (What a great writing prompt!)

Another favorite of mine, Allen M. Steele, makes an appearance with another chapter in his Tawcety series. The only catch was this was the previous chapter was in the November/December 2019 issue which I haven't read. So I found that issue, read the previous chapter, then returned to this one. I'm glad I did--the story made much more sense!

"Not This Tide" by Sheila Finch is the second novella in this issue and combines two of my favorite subjects: history and science fiction. The story takes place in England during December of 1944 and alternates between Rosemary, living in London with her mother and older sister, and her father, a gunner on a Maunsell Fort (a real thing--there are some remaining) on the the water, guarding the entrance to the Thames, and (for good measure) Oslo in December of 2035. Rosemary's story is told in the present tense, her father's and the Oslo story in the past. This gives Rosemary's story that kind of immediacy that a nine-year-old would live in while the adults are more measured and a somewhat passive.

The other stories and poems in this issue were excellent as well, with a nice variety of subjects and scenarios. One, "You'll Live," was really science fiction in setting only--the story was entirely human and contemporary.
Profile Image for Kaiju Reviews.
487 reviews34 followers
June 8, 2024
As close to a terrible issue as Asimov’s gets. Only a quarter of a page out of 208 pages exceeded 3 stars, and that’s the poem by Vibbert. Some okay three-star stories were drug way down by the absolute dead weight of Not This Tide and a few other weak outings.

Novellas:

The Palace of the Dancing Dogs by Allen M. Steele – The fourth, and silliest, of the already very silly Sanctuary series of novellas. Allen Steele never fails to entertain, but he sometimes struggles with originality and impact. The Sanctuary series falls into that comfort food category of space opera. This fourth outing is burdened with a ton of exposition that really slows the pace and a finale that frankly I’ve seen and read several times before. But it was never bad. 3 stars.

Not This Tide by Sheila Finch – This novella went on forever with virtually zero pay-off for me. So many of the scenes felt completely redundant, almost to the point of baffling. Outside of a few key segments, one could literally skip ‘chapters’ without any impact to the story. Finch’s writing unfortunately also doesn’t wow. It plods. Not unbearably so, but still, this felt more a chore than an entertainment. Negatives aside, I did read the whole thing, so something in these characters, despite their irrational behavior (Harry’s distrust/dislike for Frank goes from zero to murderous with almost no explainable motivation) had me reading to at least see what happened. Sadly, I wish I hadn’t. 1.5 stars.

Novelettes:

An Alien on Crete by Neal Asher – A mostly solid story with some expositional and pacing issues. Enough narrative came through to keep me invested, though the ending felt somewhat pat. 3 stars.

A Pack of Tricks by Leah Cypess – Fantastic world building, the characters breath, and Cypess makes it all such a pleasure to read about Lucia sitting for a portrait while mysterious visitors watch on. The surprise ending – intended to shock – neither shocked nor surprised and fell flat for me. A mores visceral punch or denouement would’ve helped bring it home. An enjoyable read regardless. I really like Cypess’ writing style. 3 stars.

Short Stories:

Third Shift by Mar Catherine Stratford – This read like a writing exercise. The diner premise and writing brought me in well enough, but then got boring as the story drug along without any moments to hold on to. While the writing was totally serviceable, none of the characters or the thin premise ended up impressing me. It didn’t help that there’s no resolution or really any impact at all by the end. 2 stars.

The Antidote by Dominica Phetteplace – A scary future and a great setting for a story, even, debatably, a pair of interesting characters… but the story just didn’t work for me. To thin. This read as a sketch that needed a lot more work. 2.5 stars.

GO. NOW. FIX. By Timons Esais – This felt like a lost clipping from Stephenson’s Snow Crash, but with lest snark and wit. A good idea that could’ve run even shorter and for me, needed a pov I could latch on to and care about besides a non-sentient or artificially intelligent pillow. A short film of this same subject matter I could see an audience anthropomorphizing the pillow into a full-blooded character, but I wasn’t able to do it with the words. Maybe too much emphasis was put onto the technical specs, I don’t know. Regardless, still a mostly fun and painless read. 3 stars.

The Way to Compostela by Jean-Louis Trudel – Like the train gradually increasing the simulated gravity in this tale, the story goes nowhere. I found the threat level always right at smug rather than fearful. A great setting and premise couldn’t make up for my feelings of meh. While not poorly written, I felt it could use some polish. A decent outing. Not painful, but not great. 2.75 stars.

The Refraction of White Lies by Meredith Lozaga – A tired been there done that ‘who’s the robot’ story with no reason to exist that I could determine other than it being short and readable. 2 stars.

The Kaleidoscope City by Doug C. Souza – Taking place in the same universe as Callisto Stakes, a story I read several years ago and remember having similar feelings about, the Kaleidoscope City has a great premise but doesn’t fully deliver despite an obvious personal connection to the author. The setting, a ghost town inside Ganymede, steals the show here; the characters just didn’t come alive for me. I didn’t feel they had time to bloom. This felt like a tale that needed more words and a longer gestation period. The end felt overstated and cliché, sad to say. 2.75 stars.

You’ll Live by B. S. Donovan – The futuristic setting is completely irrelevant here unless you figure it’s to show that spousal abuse will still be around in the future, a message I don’t think I needed. This Tokyo Ghost light future has been there done that written all over it. Nothing new to report. Writing is solid other than the cliches and especially cliched use of the title over and over. 2 stars.

Poetry:

Unlooping by Marie Vibbert – On a first pass, this sounds like more wordplay than content. But on a second closer read, its way more than that. A good poem about the human condition. Life is like a broken record. 4 stars.

Taking Care by Jane Yolen – 3 stars.

Meeting the Man from the Future by Jane Williams – Some decent images but didn’t resonate. 2.5 stars.

Departments:

On Books by Paul Di Filippo – De Filippo writes a decent books column. His review of Delaney’s book is superior to the other reviews that tend to stray overly into synopsis territory, which I can’t stand. Sure, I understand a brief synopsis is needed, but Asimov book reviewers just suck the joy out with their long blow by blow plot descriptions. Thankfully, that’s bearable in this assortment. His inclusion of quotes I also like. I don’t feel his review of Black Leopard Red Wolf does that novel justice though, having read it. He doesn’t seem to understand that it isn’t using the same old tropes but subverting them, especially with the upcoming volumes of the trilogy (perhaps info Di Filippo didn’t have access to at the time) that retell the same story from alternate perspectives. – 3 stars.
Profile Image for Timons Esaias.
Author 46 books80 followers
February 24, 2021
I have the very bad habit of not reading anthologies or issues of magazines in which my own stories appear. Note, also, that I am required by law and custom to give this issue a minimum of five stars, since I'm in it. Six stars would not be too few.

This three-grimace (pp. 21,25,74) volume contains two novellas, both of which are entertaining, if you are willing to accept the premises. I did better with Allen Steele's than Sheila Finch's "Not This Tide" due to some personal fussiness over the details of V-2 rockets and time travel stories in general. Finch is drawing on childhood memories of London in WWII, though, so you can feel reality coming through the fiction. Quibbles aside, I recommend them both.

Mar Catherine Stratford's first Asimov's appearance had my interest all along, so I recommend "Third Shift" and hope to see more from this author.

The other two pieces I especially liked were Meredith Lozaga's "The Refraction of White Lies" (which is the other half of the podcast that my story is in), and Doug C. Souza's "The Kaleidoscope City."
Profile Image for Poetreehugger.
540 reviews13 followers
February 18, 2020
An Alien on Crete by Neal Asher: the creepiness of an alien life form was neatly conveyed in this story, and I liked how the alien's intelligence and personality (?) came through. Also, some good twists in the story.
The Palace of Dancing Dogs by Allen M. Steele: a return to this world, good imagination of entire cultures and histories.
GO. NOW. FIX.: by Timons Esaias: a very satisfying story, with a penetrating glimpse into the moment by moment heroics of an undervalued entity.
The Refraction of White Lies by Meredith Lozaga: a surprise twist in the ending of this domestic cyborg (or robot?) story, reminiscent of the Twilight Zone type of story.
All the stories in this issue are well worth reading.
Profile Image for Paul.
655 reviews
January 1, 2020
Ratings for this issue:

A (excellent):

The Palace of Dancing Dogs by Allen M. Steele
Not this Tide by Sheila Finch
An Alien on Crete by Neal Asher
The Antidote by Dominica Phetteplace
Go. Now. Fix. by Timons Esaias
Editorial: Happy Birthday, Isaac Asimov! by Sheila Williams

B (very good):

A Pack of Tricks by Leah Cypess
The Way to Compostela by Jean-Louis Trudel
The Refraction of White Lies by Meredith Lozaga
You'll Live B.S. Donovan
Reflections: The Pharaoh's Trachea (non-fiction) by Robert Silverberg
On the Net: Live Long & Whatever (non-fiction) by James Patrick Kelly

C (average):

Third Shift by Mar Catherine Stratford
The Kaleidoscope City by Doug C. Souza
115 reviews1 follower
February 16, 2022
A solidly enjoyable issue. I liked very much:

“The Palace of Dancing Dogs” by Allen M. Steele, in his stories about humans crash-landing on an inhabited planet. In this one, we start to learn more about the society that hosts the humans…. This whole series of tales reminds me of CJ Cherryh’s Foreigner series of books — two very different riffs on a similar premise.

“GO. NOW. FIX.” By Timons Esaias, a tale about an AI emotional support unit that goes above and beyond.

“Not this Tide”, by Sheila Finch, a time traveling WWII tale that reminds me of Connie Willis’ many entries in the genre.
Profile Image for Alex Zoubine.
58 reviews9 followers
November 18, 2020
The Palace of Dancing Dogs: 2/5
Solid writing but I didn't end up caring much for the main character, the minor characters seemed to get a bit of a short shrift, and I have a pet peeve against stories that describe, at length, a piece of technology with which I'm intimately familiar (like a light bulb).

Not This Tide: 4/5
Really lovely writing, this story makes me care about the characters involved. There were 2 things that stopped me from giving this a 5/5. 1) I didn't quite get why the father's story line ended up mattering and why it needed to involve the time traveler. 2) The twist of why the time traveler was talking to Mary felt just a little too predictable for me.

An Alien on Crete: 4.5/5
I thought the writing and the detail on this were really great and I thoroughly enjoyed the story beginning to end. The story was clever throughout without being either hokey or obvious.

A Pack of Tricks: 4.5/5
Although this is a bit of a "typical" time traveler story, it feels very well written and thought-out. I also liked the moral questions it raises and forces readers to confront. Beyond that, it also raises a fascinating question: what would you want to find out about your favorite artwork and/or artist if you could? Would you even want to get the answer? Or is it better not to know?

Third Shift: 5/5
This is my favorite story of the issue. Although it is not long, the story masterfully weaves different strands of time together to create a deep and rich narrative. The characters are desperate, hungry, relatable. They don't have things figured out. They know it. We know it. And the scene it all paints, the setting - everything is just great!

The Antidote: 3/5
I felt this story was on the verge of being very good but was ultimately just a little too short. The main character's relationship with her parents was touching but not explored in enough depth for my liking and the ending felt like a bit of an afterthought.

GO. NOW. FIX.: 4.5/5
For a story that doesn't really contain many important humans, I thought this story did a great job keeping my attention and getting me emotionally involved. Very impressive and very engaging!

The Way to Compostela: 3.5/5
I felt like the longer I read this particular piece, the less sense it made to me. The story takes elements of Murder on the Orient Express and adds a scifi dimension to them. Unfortunately, the central question of the story doesn't seem to have a clear bearing on the conflict. Nevertheless, the language and execution of the story kept me reading avidly.

The Refraction of White Lies: 3/5
I think that overall, this story is written well but it doesn't quite explore its central mystery to my satisfaction.

The Kaleidoscope City: 4/5
This was a very, very touching story with a fantastic, off-world setting.
The interplay between the setting, the characters, and the semi-mystery of what's going on weaves together into a really fantastic story.

You'll live: 3.5/5
Brutal. Interesting. Engaging.
Sadly, the ending left me wanting a little more...and not in the good way.
1,700 reviews8 followers
October 4, 2025
Erickson stumbles across a bullet-riddled arachnoid alien who he brings back to his shack to recuperate. When they start to communicate the alien is deliberately vague about how he got to the island but the reason is astonishing. Neal Asher's "An Alien On Crete" is very good. Allen Steele takes us back to Tawcety where the inhabitants of Sanctuary travel to Gruhar to find not only revived Terran technology but humans descended from a different starship. And the Guardian Bart has followed them there, in "The Palace Of Dancing Dogs". PandaPillow® saves the day after a terrifying high altitude plane disaster in "Go. Now. Fix." by Timons Esaias, and Leah Cypess takes us to Renaissance Europe and a young model who meets some unusual Visitors in "A Pack Of Tricks". Indrek Kelm is a simulationist - virtual physicist - whose latest discovery earns him a contract on his life on board the Carousel - a gravitope train on the Moon in the exciting "The Way To Compostela" by Jean-Louis Trudel, but the standout story is Sheila Finch's novella "Not This Tide", set in London during the last desperate blitz of December 1945 when strange visitors warn of peril..
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