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Even Greater Mistakes: Stories

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Infinite worlds, and infinite possibilities, brought to you by the electric talents of Charlie Jane Anders. This collection cracks open science fiction with joyous exuberance and a riotous cavalcade of ideas. Witness vampire zombies and fairy werewolves, fully-immersive AR cat brains, love in the form of tentacles, the amateur Time Travel Club’s first successful experiment and transformations of all kinds. Whatever you do, don’t stop trying new things, and don’t be afraid of Even Greater Mistakes.

Contents:
*Introduction (Even Greater Mistakes) • essay by Charlie Jane Anders
*As Good As New (2014) / short story by Charlie Jane Anders
*Rat Catcher's Yellows (2015) / short story by Charlie Jane Anders
*If You Take My Meaning (2020) / novelette by Charlie Jane Anders
*The Time Travel Club (2013) / novelette by Charlie Jane Anders
*Six Months, Three Days (2011) / novelette by Charlie Jane Anders
*Love Might Be Too Strong a Word (2008) / short story by Charlie Jane Anders
*Fairy Werewolf vs. Vampire Zombie (2011) / short story by Charlie Jane Anders
*Ghost Champagne (2015) / short fiction by Charlie Jane Anders
*My Breath Is a Rudder (2021) / short story by Charlie Jane Anders
*Power Couple (2021) / short story by Charlie Jane Anders
*Rock Manning Goes For Broke [Rock Manning] (2018) / novella by Charlie Jane *Anders
*Because Change Was the Ocean and We Lived By Her Mercy (2016) / short story by Charlie Jane Anders
*Captain Roger in Heaven (2016) / novelette by Charlie Jane Anders
*Clover [All the Birds in the Sky] (2016) / short story by Charlie Jane Anders
*This Is Why We Can't Have Nasty Things (2019) / short story by Charlie Jane Anders
*A Temporary Embarrassment in Spacetime (2017) • novelette by Charlie Jane Anders
*Don't Press Charges, and I Won't Sue (2017) / novelette by Charlie Jane Anders
*The Bookstore at the End of America (2019) / short story by Charlie Jane Anders
*The Visitmothers (2020) / short story by Charlie Jane Anders
*Acknowledgments (Even Greater Mistakes) • essay by Charlie Jane Anders
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480 pages, Paperback

First published November 16, 2021

165 people are currently reading
5038 people want to read

About the author

Charlie Jane Anders

163 books4,045 followers
My latest book is Victories Greater Than Death. Coming in August: Never Say You Can't Survive: How to Get Through Hard Times By Making Up Stories.

Previously: All the Birds in the Sky, The City in the Middle of the Night, and a short story collection, Six Months, Three Days, Five Others.

Coming soon: An adult novel, and a short story collection called Even Greater Mistakes.

I used to write for a site called io9.com, and now I write for various places here and there.

I won the Emperor Norton Award, for “extraordinary invention and creativity unhindered by the constraints of paltry reason.” I've also won a Hugo Award, a Nebula Award, a William H. Crawford Award, a Theodore Sturgeon Award, a Locus Award and a Lambda Literary Award.

My stories, essays and journalism have appeared in Wired Magazine, the Boston Review, Conjunctions, Tin House, Slate, MIT Technology Review, the New York Times, the Washington Post, the San Francisco Chronicle, Tor.com, Lightspeed Magazine, McSweeney’s, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine, ZYZZYVA, Strange Horizons, Apex Magazine, Uncanny Magazine, 3 AM Magazine, Flurb.net, Monkey Bicycle, Pindeldyboz, Instant City, Broken Pencil, and in tons and tons of anthologies.

I organize Writers With Drinks, which is a monthly reading series here in San Francisco that mashes up a ton of different genres. I co-host a Hugo Award-winning podcast, Our Opinions Are Correct, with Annalee Newitz.

Back in 2007, Annalee and I put out a book of first-person stories by female geeks called She’s Such a Geek: Women Write About Science, Technology and Other Nerdy Stuff. There was a lot of resistance to doing this book, because nobody believed there was a market for writing about female geeks. Also, Annalee and I put out a print magazine called other, which was about pop culture, politics and general weirdness, aimed at people who don’t fit into other categories. To raise money for other magazine, we put on events like a Ballerina Pie Fight – which is just what it sounds like – and a sexy show in a hair salon where people took off their clothes while getting their hair cut.

I used to live in a Buddhist nunnery, when I was a teenager. I love to do karaoke. I eat way too much spicy food. I hug trees and pat stone lions for luck. I talk to myself way too much when I’m working on a story.

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Profile Image for Krista.
1,469 reviews847 followers
June 8, 2021
Short stories are dangerous: tiny sparks of pure narrative fire that burn hotter because they snuff out sooner. Small, self-contained adventures gave me the freedom to fail — to push my limits, to experiment with styles and ideas that I wasn’t sure I could pull off. And fail I did, over and over. I wrote scores of short pieces before I managed to turn out one that fired on all cylinders. The wonderful thing is, if you blow it with something short, you’ve only wasted a week or three of writing time. And if someone reads your story in a magazine and hates it, there’ll be another story, by another author, on the next page.


Even Greater Mistakes is a collection of nineteen short stories by Charlie Jane Anders; mostly sci-fi and fantasy, mostly set in space or a near-future/post-apocalyptic Earth. As the author notes in an intro, this collection spans her entire career, and as she was encouraged to “showcase the full range of (her) writing”, this is a real mixed bag: as a consequence, there were a few misses for me, but many more hits. Anders can swerve from angrily political to gonzo comedy, and consistently, display a lot of heart and relatable human characters (even if those humans are engineered or cat-shaped or zombie vampires). Throughout, people are having uninhibited sex, making meaningful art, and trying to find where they belong in the world (the answer usually being: San Francisco). This was quite a long and varied read and I’d expect there would be something for most everyone in it. (Note: I read an ARC through NetGalley and passages quoted may not be in their final forms.)

Anders helpfully introduces each story (explaining its inspiration or process; adding content warnings where appropriate), and as an example of something I found interesting, she noted that If You Take My Meaning is a sort of sequel to the novel The City in the Middle of the Night; and although I hadn’t read that book, it wasn’t necessary to have found the short story moving and meaningful (I could feel that these characters had a complete back story, even if I didn’t know it.) On the other hand, I learned that the story Clover was written as a followup to the novel All the Birds in the Sky (which I have read, and loved), but I didn’t get much out of that story; hit and miss. Move on. I loved the concept behind Six Months, Three Days: A woman who can see every possible future for herself (and who spends her life arranging things to her best advantage) is finally about to have her first date (which she has anticipated her entire life) with the only other clairvoyant on Earth — a man who can only see the actual future that will occur. They both know that they are about to experience the happiest days of their lives and that the affair will end terribly: what does this say about free will and the power of love? From the story:

“I don’t think you’re any more or less powerful than me. Our powers are just different,” Doug says. “But I think you’re a selfish person. I think you’re used to the idea that you can cheat on everything, and it’s made your soul a little bit rotten. I think you’re going to hate me for the next few weeks until you figure out how to cast me out. I think I love you more than my own arms and legs and I would shorten my already short life by a decade to have you stick around one more year. I think you’re brave as hell for keeping your head up on our journey together into the mouth of hell. I think you’re the most beautiful human being I’ve ever met, and you have a good heart despite how much you’re going to tear me to shreds.”

When I was reading Love Might be Too Strong a Word (about a spaceship manned by a variety of specially-bred humanoids), I couldn’t decide how I felt about the main character’s use of confusing pronouns. Mab uses “be and ber” when referring to Dot the pilot (“I came up with the correct pronoun by instinct, even before my mind took in the fact that a pilot was touching my hand”), “yr and ym” when referencing their roommate Idra, and I couldn’t decide if that was really inventive or an unnecessary barrier to my own understanding. When I asked my daughter what she thought, she said that was the coolest thing she ever heard: Why should nonfamiliar characters, who don’t even have human genitals, need to be divided only into standard males/females? And especially in the realm of scifi — where geeks and nerds turn for belonging — why not be ultimately inclusive? When she put it like that, my own understanding was expanded, and I have to thank Anders for that. (As a trans author, Anders goes on to explore more ideas regarding gender and invents more pronouns in these stories, and if someone is looking for a truly horrifying story that goes a long way towards explaining why these ideas are important, Don’t Press Charges and I Won’t Sue is about a stomach-churning “conversion therapy” for trans folks.) From Love Might be Too Strong a Word:

“I can’t stand it among the other pilots anymore, or any of the upper dars. The spirers with all those fingers, with their base-twenty-seven cleverness. The breeders, tending those breedpods as if they’re going to amount to something. It all makes me feel so hopeless. But when I’m with you, it’s different. I feel alive. Like life is worth something after all.”

Anders introduces Rock Manning Goes for Broke as “a meditation on violence, slapstick comedy, and the relationship between the two. The part of us that lets us laugh at someone else’s pratfall might also be what allows us to tolerate horrific violence against people who aren’t part of our in-group.” (The exploration of societal ills through niche artforms comes up again with the use of standup comedy in Ghost Champagne and mural painting in My Breath is a Rudder) A group of outlandish antifascist filmmakers find themselves even more popular after some kind of pressure bomb destroys everyone’s hearing:

Sneaking up on people was suddenly way easier — but so was getting snuck up on. The fear of somebody creeping up behind me and cutting my throat was the only thing that kept me from being bored all the time. I always thought noise was boring, but silence bored me even worse. If you walked up behind someone, especially a member of the red bandana militia who were keeping order on our streets, you had to be very careful how you caught their attention. You did not want a red bandana to think you were sneaking up on them.

And I was really intrigued by the concept of Captain Roger in Heaven: As Anders writes, “Marith didn’t mean to start a sex cult, she just wanted to feel sexy for once.” But Marith does start a sex cult (attributing all of the esoteric teachings to some absent guru) in order to combat loneliness, and once her group gets large enough to attract Christian protestors, they are required by law to own a “Visualizer”; a device that will show where any given person is spending their afterlife. When a member of the cult dies and ends up in a fiery hell, the rest of the group scrambles to invent an afterlife worth living for:

The longer he stared, the more it seemed to Leon that the Christians were generating their afterlife, focusing psychic energy so that they made a stable conduit and created something on the other side of it. They were almost writing lines of code in the fabric of reality.

Again, there’s a lot of variety in this collection — not everything worked for me — but it’s overall smart and heartfelt and relatable. I need to remember to read more of Anders’ novels.
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 9 books4,853 followers
August 22, 2021
I was actually rather impressed with a number of these short stories. The sheer creativity is highlighted and when the shorts work, they have some pretty brilliant world-view skewing and worldbuilding that is definitely off-center and enjoyable.

I enjoyed most of these. There were, however, a few that were still good for the worldbuilding, but there were a LOT of stories that just seemed to glorify truly hot messes of relationships. Now, mind you, I don't care one way or another what KIND of relationships are described (use a large alphabet soup that goes on for a long time after the standard LGBTQ) but my enjoyment is kind of limited when the number of BAD relationships, slippery relationships, screwed-sideways relationships, and anchorless, random relationships take over the tale.

I'm all... huh, that sounds like some kind of hell and he/she/them is just fine with the insanity. I can't even tell what's going on. But good for them... this insanity isn't for me. I had the same issue with Ander's second novel. I loved the first one. And this happens many times in these stories.

So my takeaway is: It's one thing to represent. but it's another thing to dump pots of hot spaghetti on my head. HOWEVER, for any of you folks who want the wild, take anything you can get from any kind of person who'll give it up, THIS WILL probably be your speed and you'll love it.

Me, I just want good SF.


As Good As New - Easily my favorite of the bunch with a great dystopian Genie twist.

Rat-Catcher’s Yellows - Pretty interesting game setup.

If You Take My Meaning - Carry on with Ander's second novel.

The Time Travel Club - A good drill-down into space travel by way of a funny club.

Six Months, Three Days - Re-read, a classic Cassandra-type story about different kinds of future knowledge and how it messes with relationships.

Love Might Be Too Strong a Word - One of my favorites. Post-human, equivalent alien love story. :)

Vampire Zombie vs Fairy Werewolf - Good mostly for the schlock value. But it IS valuable to fandom. :)

Ghost Champagne - Very eerie and lovely and emotional.

My Breath Is a Rudder - Queer life in SF.

Power Couple - Didn't really do anything for me.

Rock Manning Goes For Broke - Pretty interesting stab at UF.

Because Change Was the Ocean and We Lived By Her Mercy - Great drowned SF story but the good worldbuilding parts were also drowned in way too much drama.

Captain Roger in Heaven - Not my favorite, but props to sexual violence and mental health issues.

Clover - Carry over to All the Birds in the Sky.

This Is Why We Can’t Have Nasty Things - Not SF so much as a regular LGBTQ extravaganza.

A Temporary Embarrassment in Spacetime - Fairly amusing space opera with a humorous vein.

Don’t Press Charges, and I Won’t Sue - Ander's response to 45's rise.

The Bookstore at the End of America - Also a political piece but it's still fun to have books involved. :)

The Visitmothers - A transitioning SF.
Profile Image for Richard Derus.
4,007 reviews2,248 followers
June 26, 2022
Real Rating: 4.5* of five, rounded up because it's that good a collection

WINNER OF THE 2022 LOCUS AWARD—BEST COLLECTION! Watch the entire ceremony here.

I RECEIVED A DRC FROM THE PUBLISHER VIA NETGALLEY. THANK YOU.

My Review
: This is a collection to dip into not slurp down greedily. I mean, where else do you find, "A whole book of short stories can be overwhelming, like imaginative speed dating." This isn't even in a story! It's in the opening act, the Introduction! She's not keepin' her powder dry, unlikely for a seasoned campaigner who's founded geeky websites; or she's just got that immense an arsenal and knows she doesn't need to pace herself.

The best thing I can say of this epitome of Author Charlie Jane Anders's career is that you are unlikely to become bored. A story about time travel that includes, as I've never seen any other place, the fact that the Earth is moving in space; the Sun is moving in space; and not one bit of that enables a careless time-traveler to land where they began. Another story about time travel, but for an extremely specific time, and how that affects a love affair. Love, in every guise you can imagine, underpins every story. Love unspoken, love requited, love rejected...love all over the shop. Seriously. Get some towels.

You'll note that you're denied the story-by-story breakdown...you must venture blogwards to bring you the flavor of the tales.
Profile Image for Tim.
229 reviews179 followers
June 27, 2023
A collection of sci-fi short stories. It was a mixed bag for me. Some I loved, some were OK, and some I couldn't get into at all.
Profile Image for Sunny Lu.
974 reviews6,364 followers
June 10, 2022
The good ones were incredibly good, the mid ones were incredibly mid
Profile Image for Oblomov.
185 reviews71 followers
September 17, 2023
Year of Ishtar: Year of only women authors.

Charlie Jane Anders writes the weird, wonderful and whacky, flinging us through sci-fi, fantasy and magic realism, along with a short paragraph explaining her thoughts and reasons before each new story in this rather morish collection of strange tales.

I've been informed Charlie Jane Anders is like Ursula le Guin's sucessor, but since I've never read her, I'm going to call her a contemporary James Tiptree (alias of Alice Bradley Sheldon), another writer with no fears of letting her imagination run riot, punching societal norms and being delightfully full on kinky. Unlike Tiptree, Anders never has me grimacing over underage characters, she's certainly more sex positive and is able to explore both tech and the understanding of sexuality more than Tiptree ever could have hoped to, what with writing in the 70s.

The stories themselves are ridiculously fun. We have home trained pratfalling stuntmen working for the revolution, genderfluidity in space, disapproving goth ghosts haunting their living selves, dapper genies, sex cults with TV channels from the afterlife, polyamory in the apocalypse and planet sized demi-Gods with confidence issues. It's all a perfect mix of the utterly bizarre and entertaining.

Downsides are few and mostly personal. Several stories in a row are set specifically in a California that is crumbling from political upheaval or catastrophic climate change, which not only distanced my British arse a bit, but I couldn't shake Mamas and The Papas Earthquake from my head for days afterwards. Not much of a criticism but more a gigglie for me was Anders trigger warnings in her little mini essays. I'm all for trigger warnings (they're a suggestion, not a big iron gate you can't pass so why the fuck do people whine about them?), but after the rancid shit I've read over the years, I find Anders gentle cautions somewhat unwarranted as 90% of the blood and guts is rather tame. Yes, someone gets set on fire and there's an arm broken, but she never goes into gruesome detail and most of her characters seem to shrug off a fractured limb or decapitation.
The only story that did leave me disturbed was fairly bloodless, that being Don't Press Charges and I won't Sue, a story that Anders wrote after Trump got into power and started taking shots at transgender people, something which affected the author as a transwoman in America. The story concerns 'curing' trans people, starting with kidnapping, . It's a bit fucked and I doubt even J.K Rowling would approve (or she might just retcon it into Harry Potter via a tweet, or whatever the hell you call them nowadays. Post an X?).

There might be some misses but every story here is at least interesting or lovably silly when it isn't fascinating and hilarious. Give it a go.

Profile Image for Dan Trefethen.
1,191 reviews68 followers
November 28, 2021
Charlie Jane Anders is my favorite gonzo techno-geek romantic queer trans science fiction writer.

In a field where there's a lot of new representation of diverse voices, Charlie Jane stands out as someone who writes silly spoofs, heart-wrenching romances, characters whose dialogue sounds like real people speak, difficult scenes of sexual and other types of violence...and more.

She epitomizes the contention that science fiction and fantasy allows us to take a closer look at the reality of human affairs. As Ursula Le Guin put it, she is a “realist of a larger reality”.

Some of these stories are really difficult to read, dealing with the aforementioned topics of sex, violence, and oppression; to her credit, she provides trigger warnings in the introductions. Some, however, are just a hoot, like “Love Might Be Too Strong a Word”, where a spaceship holds six different kinds of alien life, and each alien has various protuberances and orifices that correspond to all the other aliens' anatomy. She must have had fun creating names for all the different types of what we would call genitalia.

I also commend her and her editor to decide to include stories showing different aspects of her growth rather than just an 'award-winning stories' collection. The variety in quality shows her progression as a writer, while also showcasing all the different types of themes and plot devices she has tried out.

She is categorized as a science fiction writer, but a lot of these stories show that she is a romantic at heart. Really, some of these could be classified as romances even though they involve aliens with unusual parts or a single-celled organism in the shape of a person.

Charlie Jane has had recent success with novels, but short stories allowed her to look into themes that might not warrant a full book, and play with story structures just to see what she could do. It's an engaging look at an author who almost always wears her heart on her sleeve.
Profile Image for Bandit.
4,937 reviews578 followers
July 20, 2021
I like Anders writing. This is based originally upon reading a short story in a dystopian anthology about the future of the US about a peculiarly split bookstore (the penultimate entry in this collection) and then Anders’ novel The City in the Middle of the Night. So I was excited to try out her short fiction, a format she claims to be her favorite.
She indeed does a good, occasionally great, short story. They are on the longer side of short and are always well rounded, meaning they read more like a mini novel than a slice of life scenes from a movie sort of things. They are lively, fun and wildly imaginative. They are pretty much exactly what you might want out of speculative fiction, but…here comes the but…they are also imbued heavily with messages (political, social, economic, you name it, it’s there) and messages can overwhelm the story and here at times do.
Mind you, sometimes a message is what takes the story from good to great, but the thing is that purely depends of how relevant the readers finds the message and so when it comes to Anders’ writing, user mileage may vary. Drastically.
With that said, for this reader some of the stories didn’t work and not because of the disagreement with the message, more because of how much message there were.
The collection begins perfectly with what might have been my favorite story about surviving apocalypse with only a genie for company. It’s clever, cute and fun and demonstrates all of Anders’ effervescent charms as a writer perfectly. The next story is good too. And then it begins to meander. It stands to mention that Anders is a transperson and as such the subjects of gender, sexuality, etc. are obviously very important to her and these things are heavily featured in her writing. Her favorite story is one of three in this collection from a postapocalyptic queer wilderness of San Francisco. Those stories did nothing for me. I mean, everyone’s pansexual, queer and hip…yey, great, and then what. The pronoun juggle alone was exhausting. It’s almost as if the author took this opportunity to try out every pronoun there is and imagine some more. That’s the recurring theme in the book and with a lot of characters, their love lives are a rainbow colored mess, often in a way that steals focus from the narrative itself. It’s understandable for an author who considers themselves one of a marginalized minority to want to imagine words where it’s the norm, but it’s just so…overpowering.
And I know, I know, I’m most definitely going to get accused of homophobic anger or transphobia or something, because these days political correctness has all but steamrolled any attempt at critical thinking and who would dare not to wave the flag right next to the person waving it. And I can assure you that isn’t the case. I’m hugely supportive of the queer community and I’m thrilled for Anders to have her literary platform. It just doesn’t quite work for me in fiction in these quantities.
And having dared to say that…it stands to also mention that the general tone of the stories started to get tiresome after a while, the effervescence can only take you so far, the hip bubbly quality of youth and young hip characters who seem to be composed almost entirely of quirks…tiresome. This is far from YA, but there’s a certain underlying dearth of maturity in Anders’ characters.
When she’s on, she’s on. Power Couple is such a clever story about the insanity of the unrealistic expectations our society paces on young people to have their entire life worked out by college. Or 6 months, 3 days, a story of a relationship between a man who can see the future and a woman who can see many possible futures. Very clever, indeed. Although the latter story does have that heavy quirk thing going for it. The time travel story is fun too.
Overall, it’s very much a mixed bag. A wildly left of the center, quirky, rainbow coalition of queer punks of all stripes surviving the strikingly imagined speculative scenarios of Anders’ terrific hopped up imagination. There’s plenty of organic storytelling talent and genuine cleverness on display here. Context wise it’ll work differently for different readers. But celebrating diversity is kind of a theme here anyway. Thanks Netgalley.

This and more at https://advancetheplot.weebly.com/
Profile Image for Trisha.
5,884 reviews230 followers
November 18, 2024
Short stories really are a great way to get more reading done when you are short on time. I love grabbing anthologies when my reading time will be broken up and I can only take a minute or two to enjoy!

And this is an interesting set. There's a nice mix of sci-fi stories that some I loved and a few I struggled to connect with. I did love that each set was given with a small note from the author - it added an additional layer to the stories and I love when authors add that!

It's a nice set, I recommend it!

A huge thank you to the author and publisher for providing an e-ARC via Netgalley. This does not affect my opinion regarding the book.
Profile Image for Jessica Haider.
2,181 reviews320 followers
July 19, 2025
4.5 stars!

This is the 3rd book that I have read by Charlie Jane Anders. Even Greater Mistakes by Charlie Jane Anders is a witty, wildly inventive trip through 19 genre-bending tales that feel like neon confetti tossed into thoughtful sci‑fi and fantasy.

Anders channels a stage-comic’s timing and some deep curiosity, from the gut-punch emotional punch of “Six Months, Three Days” (a Hugo winner for good reason) to the zany karaoke‑battle stakes of “Fairy Werewolf vs. Vampire Zombie”

She covers a wide range of topics—love, loss, politics, magical genies, dystopian chills, sparkling community—but you never quite know what surprise is coming next.

If you're looking for speculative fiction that’s smart, surprising, and just a little bit weird in the best possible way, Even Greater Mistakes is your jam. And personally, I love things a little bit weird.
Profile Image for Christina Pilkington.
1,796 reviews238 followers
November 9, 2021
The thing that struck me about Ander’s short story collection, the thing that all the stories had in common, was how imaginative, cleverly crafted and fantastically bizarre they all were. While I didn’t always connect with each story, some were just not for me, I always admired Anders ability to create characters and world-building that felt fresh and new.

I also really enjoyed her commentary before each story, telling readers where the story first appeared and a little about her writing inspiration. In her intro Anders talked about how she had over 600 rejections and 93 stories published within the past 10 years. It was in the process of writing these stories that helped her master beginnings and endings, world building and character creation.

While I still enjoy Anders novels more than her short stories- I believe her strengths work better in novel form- I’m glad to have read these stories since there were a few standouts for me that I will remember for a long time.

Here is a brief description of each story and the individual ratings I gave:

1. 3.5 stars- As Good as New- A playwright who decides she can make more of a difference in the world as a doctor meets a genie during the apocalypse and must carefully decide her three wishes. Thoughtful-provoking.

2. 4.5 stars - Red Catcher’s Yellows-Is about a character with dementia who finds a degree control over her life through a cat role playing game and how her partner finds a connection with her through the game, even if it wasn’t what she imagined. Very poignant for me after having a father and father-in-law with dementia.

3. 3 stars - If You Take My Meaning- Takes place after Ander’s novel The City in the Middle of the Night. You won’t get the full effect without reading the novel first, but you can still understand what is going on. My favorite part? How memories are shared through tentacles.

4. 3.5 stars -Time Travel Club- A unique way to approach time travel-considering displacement of space due to the Earth’s moving orbit so you can’t land in exactly the same place. While I liked the dry humor, there was an abrupt ending and I wanted more development of main character.

5. 4.5 stars- Six Months, Three Days -One of my favorites of the collection. I love the dilemma of whether it would be better to know one fixed future or be able to see a variety of possible futures and how would you live life differently depending on which type of future you could see. This type of story and its themes are what make me love the sci fi genre!

6. 3 stars -Love Might be too Strong a Word- Interesting world-building and commentary on gender. Not my favorite plot or characterization.

7. 3 stars- Fairy Werewolf Vs. Vampire Zombie- Reads like fun, campy, urban fantasy fan fiction. Not really my thing, but it kept me entertained.

8. 3.5 stars- Ghost Champagne-A woman is haunted by a ghost of herself from the future. Loved the premise, buildup of the character, and the strong ending, but I wanted more of an exploration of the idea of making peace with the past.

9. 2 stars - My Breath is a Rudder-One of my least favorite in the collection. I liked where the story was going with the theme of repression and the proximity to danger-of how people secretly want to be in close proximity to dangerous behavior or ideas because they can’t explore those things themselves- but the execution wasn’t there for me. Not enough focus and too an abrupt ending.

10. 4 stars- Power Couple -A woman and man agree to go into cryogenic sleep until each finishes their schooling and starts their career. Well-though out commentary on the pressure high paying jobs and how people put their life on hold for a decade only to find out it’s not all they thought it would be.

11. 4 stars- Rock Manning Goes for Broke - I gave most of these 4 stars to Andres for crafting a highly creative slapstick story with a lot of heart underneath.

12. 2.5 stars- Because Change Was the Ocean and We Lived by Her Mercy - A near future story that felt underdeveloped and would have worked better as a longer piece of work.

13. 2 stars - Captain Roger in Heaven -A woman inadvertently starts her own sex cult. Not my type of story, but props for originality.

14. 3.5 stars - Clover-If you’ve read All The Birds in the Sky, you’ll enjoy learning what happened to Patricia’s cat, Berkeley. If you haven’t read it, it’s still a fun read.

15. 2 stars- This Is Why We Can’t Have Nasty Things- A seven page story about a group of friends displaced from their usual hangout. It’s about change and the meaning of home, but it was too short for me to make any connection with the characters or care about the plot.

16. 3.5 stars - A Temporary Embarrassment in Spacetime -Creative world building and a zany plot. It felt more like an episode of a larger work, though, than a complete story in itself.

17. 2.5 stars - Don’t Press Charges and I Won’t Sue- Just ok for me.

18. 5 stars - The Bookstore at the End of America-Of course a story about bookstores is gonna be my favorite! But I also love the discussion of the way books can bridge divides and bring people together in ways other media cannot.

19. 3 stars -The Visitmothers-A modern day Cinderella-type story that felt like it needed to be fleshed out just a little bit more-but great concept!

*Thank you to Tor and NetGalley for the ARC copy in exchange for an honest review
Profile Image for Lisa | Lady_Logomancer.
359 reviews22 followers
November 14, 2021
Thank you so much @torbooks for this free copy of Even Greater Mistakes!

I love Charlie Jane Anders. I don’t know how to explain what a ray of sunshine she is in the pandemic dampened reality we live in. There’s always kindness, support, a smile, a laugh and an uplifting dance and of course, excellent writing there for you whenever you need it.

I feel like this anthology of short stories, each introduced with context in how they were inspired and what time in her career they were written, is a most welcome and uplifting escape.

Each story is unique, quirky, imaginative..I can’t even choose a favorite!

It’s really difficult for me to put my feelings on this book into words other than to say: it’s important and it’s amazing just like it’s author.

Additionally, the LGBTQIA+ rep is inspiring. I love when stories have rep and it’s the norm in the world, and the focus of the story is the character development and the storyline. It’s just *chef’s kiss*.

Most of the stories are based in sci-fi or speculative fiction, but I think there’s a story for everyone and something relatable to enjoy. Even if that’s not your regular genres, it’s well worth a read!
Profile Image for Andrea Blythe.
Author 12 books86 followers
February 17, 2025
Even Greater Mistakes by Charlie Jane Anders is a phenomenal collection of speculative short stories, mostly science fiction exploring the humanity, hopes, and horrors of our society. In “Because Change was the Ocean and We Lived by Her Mercy,” a young rebel joins an idealistic commune attempting to clean the oceans a generation after they’d been poisoned. The community works together grows, makes mistakes, and falls apart, all while trying to hold to the hope of shaping a better future.

In “Ghost Champagne,” a struggling comedian is haunted by her own ghost, and though she tries to ignore it, it becomes a looming presence. All her efforts to make her ghost leave are fruitless, and its presence begins to create frictions in her relationships.

In “The Bookstore at the End of America,” a woman runs a bookstore that stands on the border between California and America, which are on the brink of war with each other. The bookstore stands as almost a no man’s land, a seemingly neutral territory that allows people to cross from one side to the other — a fascinating liminal space that opens the possibility for understanding.

And these are just a few of the fantastic stories in this volume.
Profile Image for Riju Ganguly.
Author 36 books1,855 followers
July 8, 2022
Charlie Jane Anders had overwhelmed me with her "Six Months, Three Days, Five Others". Consequently, her first complete collection of stories had become a "must buy".
I bought it. Read it.
Unfortunately, this one turned out to be not that glorious.
Why?
Because the sublime combination of pathos and humour, love and strangeness that used to distinguish her works, seemingly have got submerged by personal angst and fears.
As a result, despite having those stories here, duly accompanied by the awesome "Fairy Werewolf vs. Vampire Zombie", this book generated rather mixed feelings in me.
It’s got an award and all. But I would like to retain that small, beautiful and wondrous volume in place of this tome.
Your call.
Profile Image for Johan Haneveld.
Author 112 books105 followers
May 24, 2022
9+ This is a great example of modern speculative fiction, that contains a raucous collection of stories from all kinds of genres (ghost stories, body horror, dystopia, space opera and fantasy) with great 'what if?'-scenario's that remain a purely human focus, centering around ideas of deteriorating relationships, queer identities, found family and repressive systems. They differ enough to remain entertaining to the end, every story offering something different and managing to be surprising within the pages of the story as well. They also have enough in common to recognize the author in her, even if she is multifaceted. There is the enthousiastic writing style, without a lot of pondering but with a lot of joy in the creating of prose. A youthful exuberance maybe - I don't know Anders' age, but she is one of the more recent authors to break through in SFF. Also the stories feel 'young' as they are truly 'of our time'. It feels like this is the direction a lot of speculative fiction will be going in in the future.
These stories are often about hipsters, with hipster sensibilities. They are woke and contain all kinds of pronouns and queer identities. I can imagine that some readers will describe this all as 'identity politics' and 'virtue signaling' - but I think these voices deserve to be heard, and the author herself has dealt with lots of these issues seeing how she is trans and living in a country where this is not something everybody embraces. She clearly loves her queer communities, describing the protection of a group of outcasts where one is free to find his/her/their-self but also free to leave if necessary.
Further more, the stories are anti-kapitalist and pro-environment, often dealing with the fall out of the election of Trump or the deterioration of our climate. They are postmodern, quoting other media and embracing cliché without the fear of being unoriginal (there's time travel here, a ghost offering three wishes and more) but adding a modern twist to them as well. What I didn't like as a bit of a traditionalist on the issue of story structure, were the endings. In a lot of the stories I sensed that they were about the idea and the exploration of that in a certain context, but not necessarily about a surprising ending. In other words: it's the idea of the story that stays in mind, not the conclusion, or denouement - often it peters out a bit and the reader is left having to come to their own conclusion. I think this is a matter of preference and not a shortcoming in the stories, as others will like the freewheeling nature of these stories and the sense of openness that they leave in their conclusion. Also a couple of stories felt insubstantial, more like filler material than stories that really had someting to say. But most were very good.
The best were 'Rat Catcher's Yellows' - a touching story about a woman losing her wife to early onset dementia and finding a way she can still communicate with her.
'Six Months, Three Days' - the story of a man who can see the future, falling in love with a woman able to see all kinds of possible futures ...
'The Time Travel Club' - an enjoyable tale of a group of make believe time travellers giving shelter to a recovering alcoholic and finding one of them may really have built a working time machine.
'Rock Manning Goes For Broke' - a novella about young filmmakers making slapstick comedy in a country slowly slinding into fascist dystopia.
'Captain Roger in heaven' - a great story about a sex cult having to invent its own afterlife ...
'Don't Press Charges and I Won't Sue' - a scary story about a society that tries to change trans people into a new identity.
'The Bookstore At The End of America' - I had read this one already in two anthologies, but it's still very good.
All in all, if you want to be thoroughly entertained by a bunch of very diverse genre stories, if you are interested in diversity in fiction, and you are interested in the direction speculative fiction will be going in the next five to ten years, this is a collection you definitely need to pick up.
Profile Image for Beth Tabler.
Author 15 books198 followers
November 16, 2021
Charlie Jane Anders's short stories always span the spectrum of emotion and world-building. Some of her stories leave you gut-punched; others are uplifting. At the same time, others are deep science fiction. It is a nod to her as an author that she can evoke so many emotions from her readers in such a small word count.

"Short stories are dangerous: tiny sparks of pure narrative fire that burn hotter because they snuff out sooner. Small, self-contained adventures gave me the freedom to fail — to push my limits, to experiment with styles and ideas that I wasn't sure I could pull off. And fail I did, over and over. I wrote scores of short pieces before I managed to turn out one that fired on all cylinders. The wonderful thing is, if you blow it with something short, you've only wasted a week or three of writing time. And if someone reads your story in a magazine and hates it, there'll be another story, by another author, on the next page."

Short stories need to be concise to the point of being brutal. A short story is no time to go mucking around with your reader's attention. There aren't enough words. By the time a writer gets done fancifully describing a door know, the story needs to be done. This is why Anders does brilliantly as a short story writer and long-form if you have read her long-form novels. She gets to the point. I appreciate that as a short fiction reader.

Even Greater Mistakes, her newest anthology of work, is a beautiful collection of stories that run the gamut. And while I won't go into each one, I can call out some that are excellent:

As Good As New is one of the first short stories I read. It is such a unique story to me as a reader because apocalypses, while awful essentially, take the individual and their lives after the fact out of the equation. Yes, life is terrible, but people need to move on. There has to be some joy, or life isn't worth struggling for.

"It is astounding to me that Anders wrote so much about human emotions in only 28 pages. I have IKEA instructions longer than 28 pages. But it works, and it is damn good."

In this case, it is Marisol and her ability to find hope and joy, even amongst the muck and mire. It is uplifting and joyous.

"The first thing I thought of when I finished "Rat Catcher's Yellow" was the Hamlet quote, "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, / Than are dreamt of in your philosophy." This seems like an odd quote for this story, but it is a vast world that is constantly changing. Even after a significant disease destroys people's minds, they interact and build kingdoms online with cats. It seems absurd, but it is steeped in the truth. There is more to this world than we know, and depending on the angle in which you approach a problem, anything is possible.

If you Take My Meaning was one of the more complex stories to read and understand. But through the context of Ander's story The City in the Middle of the Night, it makes a lot of sense. It is a continuation after the end of the novel. It gives us a hint as to the future of the characters.

Six Months, Three Days is when an unmovable object meets an unstoppable force: two characters, one who can see all possible futures and another who can see only their lot. Nothing deviates; nothing changes. What if they have a relationship? What would it look like? Yes, we know there will be lots of pain in this relationship. Yes, we know exactly how it is going to end. However, there are many beautiful moments, moments of love, and life that are worth celebrating even if you have already seen them in your mind's eye; you haven't experienced them. The juice is worth the squeeze!

There is a brilliant variety in this collection told by a master short story author. It is vibrant and queer and wonderful but holds to concise storytelling. These stories might not hit for everyone, but they hit pretty hard for me as a reader and reminded me why she is one of my favorite storytellers.



Profile Image for Jaimie Pitts.
161 reviews8 followers
March 16, 2023
Even Greater Mistakes has cemented Charlie Jane Anders as one of my favorite authors.

This is a collection of Anders' short (mostly) speculative fiction over the years, each beginning with a half-page forward from the author about when and why she wrote each one. The content is wonderfully varied. There are gutwrenching and horrifying stories that she says she pulled from her deepest personal fears and anxieties, and then there are stories with names like "Fairy Werewolf vs. Vampire Zombie," which she described as "a little bit Vampire Diaries fanfic." While some of them didn't quite land for me (hence the -1 star), they all demonstrate so much creativity, talent, and again, pure love for writing.

I've said something similar in the past, but my favorite thing about the way Anders writes is how clearly I can feel the passion and giddy enthusiasm she has for her craft. Everything I read from her makes my brain itch to create something. Seriously, I went back to work on two of my abandoned short story ideas while reading this. When I finish them, I'll have her to thank.

My personal favorite stories in this collection are:

The Time Travel Club - A funny and inventive story about a group of time traveler LARPers who have to figure out what to do when they invent an actual time machine

Six Months, Three Days - Probably my favorite story in the bunch. A woman who can see all of her possible futures dates a man who can only see his one true future. The two try to navigate their relationship while grappling with the knowledge that it will end.

Ghost Champagne - A woman is followed by the ghost of her future self. This one takes a strange turn that I really appreciated.

Captain Roger in Heaven - A weird new sex cult/religion/thing, discovering that they are destined to go to hell, tries to open up a pocket universe in which they can build a new, better afterlife. And that's just one part of it, this one is kinda crazy.

Don't Press Charges and I Won't Sue - A short speculative horror story brought about by Anders' anxiety about "[her] body becoming illegal." MAJOR tw for

(Also FYI: I skipped over "If You Take My Meaning" and "Clover" for now because they're related to other Anders novels that I haven't read yet)
179 reviews2 followers
September 21, 2021
Time traveling fakers meeting up with the real thing, werewolves, and vampires and zombie and fairies (oh my), being haunted by your own ghost, cryogenic false promises.

All of this and so much more is in Charlie Jane Anders' book of short stories. I got this from Netgalley as an early release. I try really hard to read these Netgalley things as soon as I get them, but I just couldn't with this. Don't get me wrong, I loved every story, that 5 stars is no lie. But, once I finished a story I like to sit with it. Think about the what ifs, and the where did they gos. And jump into another author's world. There are a ton of stories here, so it took me a while to get through it all. I enjoyed the trip all of the way through.

The sort of stories in this collection really ran the gamut. Outrageously fun space opera? Check. Horrific body horror with toxic relationships? Some of that, too. Through it all is well defined characters I enjoyed getting to know, and wanted to know more about them.

As mentioned, it took me a while to read this whole book, but I was surprised when I went back to look through the stories rarely did I need to read past the first couple of pages to realize what this story was about, how it made me feel, and whether I liked the characters.

There were a few stories I wanted to hear more. In the general "Ohhh what happened next?!!?!" feeling that a good short story is able to easily engender. A couple of them I wanted to hear more in the I don't mean to tell authors what to do, but Charlie Jane Anders I need to read more about the adventures of Sharon and Kango. More of their stories need to be heard!

Great collection. I enjoyed every story. Thanks Netgalley! Getting the book early did not affect my review.
Profile Image for Lewis Szymanski.
410 reviews30 followers
July 12, 2022
I like Anders' writing based originally on reading a short story in Press Start to Play. Even Greater Mistakes is a collection of nineteen short stories by Charlie Jane Anders. Anders helpfully introduces each story, explaining its inspiration or process and adding content warnings where appropriate.

This kind of stuff is called sci-fi even though it mostly isn't. Speculative fiction fits best, but nobody seems to like that term. These stories cover various genres: soft sci-fi, urban fantasy, dystopian, post-apocalyptic, contemporary, and contemporary but with a speculative element added, a ghost, or precognition. Even most of the soft sci-fi is really more fantasy, think Bradbury or Sturgeon. This collection reminds me a lot of Sturgeon, not stylistically, but in content. Whatever the setting, or speculative element, these stories are really about relationships.

Charlie Jane Anders is a trans person so many of these stories contain non-heteronormative stuff. There are same-sex couples, polyamorous relationships, trans characters, characters with indeterminate gender, and many invented pronouns. The book can feel like Tumblr at times. I consider that a good thing. If you are looking for a pride month read, this is worth considering. There are also plenty of stories where none of this appears or matters and two very good stories that are cishet romances.

This is a long and varied read and I’d expect there would be something for almost everyone in it.
358 reviews16 followers
June 12, 2022
All short story collections are, by their nature, of varying quality. Exactly because Charlie Jane Anders has a wild imagination and a vast breadth of styles and subjects, that might be more true of this book than most. The best stories are breathtaking, including "Rat-Catcher's Yellows," "This Is Why We Can't Have Nasty Things," and, of course, "Don't Press Charges and I Won't Sue." I was underwhelmed by "Rock Manning Goes for Broke," the longest story in the collection, and in some ways the centerpiece. However, the main point for me was that I never (even in "Rock Manning") stopped being impressed by Anders' stylistic control, and her unremitting commitment to human complexity, violence, and sweetness. Plus, the introductions to the book and each story are worth the price of admission. Anders has one of the quirkiest, most original minds around, and she will always surprise and intrigue you, even if one story or another doesn't knock your socks off.
Profile Image for Elizabeth Mellen.
1,656 reviews60 followers
November 26, 2021
Thanks to Netgalley and Tor/Forge for the ARC of this in exchange for my honest review.

This was such a well done collection of short stories, that vary greatly in type of science-fiction and fantasy. There was time travel and aliens and post apocalyptic settings, diversity of characters, all with different feelings being evoked. The ones I struggled with were based on the author’s other works, which I haven’t read yet. My favorites were the last two which kind of felt a little more hopeful than the other stories. I’m definitely planning to go back and read more of the author’s books!
324 reviews
October 12, 2024
Sehr viele interessante Ideen gut in Geschichten verpackt.
Profile Image for Chris.
622 reviews10 followers
February 23, 2023
This is a very 2010's piece of work, all the stories come with trigger warnings, specified pronouns, and a panoply of non-cis characters. Which is all well and good. By all means, express the gender and sexuality of characters, if it's a plot element and moves the story forward. In a lot of these stories it just felt every side character and bit player was called out and identified which tended to distract from the story being told. Made me wonder if this was something editorial for the modern short-story, a kind of litmus test for a stories acceptability.

There were some gems in here (noted below) and a lot of chaff (also noted below). One general complaint I had for a number of the stories is that they didn't really end so much as they just stopped. Things are building to a climax, the main character starts to do a thing and then next story. I suppose it could be a style thing but it feels like lazy writing.

• As Good as New: **** A wanna-be playwright finds a genie in a post-apocalypse world. Very much liked the careful consideration and work the protag put into the whole wishing process.
• Red Catcher’s Yellows: *** A spouse finds a video game that lets her relate to her partner with dementia. I enjoyed the story but it really just felt more like an introduction to something else than a standalone piece.
• If You Take My Meaning: ** Kinda weird story about human/alien hybrids but the world building and random background details really tended to get in the way of the story.
• Time Travel Club: ** Poorly organized story about a club of LARP time travelers who end up with a time machine. There was a lot of wasted potential here.
• Six Months, Three Days: *** Story about a relationship between a woman who can see all of her possible futures and a man who can sees his own future as a predestined series of events. The writing is good, the voices of the characters are believable but overall I think I enjoyed the concept of the story more than I enjoyed how it played out.
• Love Might be too Strong a Word: ****? A story about an alien society with multiple gender castes and a protag who isn't interested their role.
• Fairy Werewolf Vs. Vampire Zombie: * Dumb, dumb, dumb
• Ghost Champagne: ***** A depressed stand-up comic is haunted by her own ghost. An interesting concept, well executed.
• My Breath is a Rudder: ** A mural painter looking for inspiration for a painting. Kind of an aimless story that just ended without getting anywhere.
• Power Couple: ** A college couple alternatingly go into suspended animation so that they can start their lives together after they both finish school. Couldn't buy into the premise at all.
• Rock Manning Goes for Broke: **** Enjoyed this riding the edge of the apocalypse story.
• Because Change Was the Ocean and We Lived by Her Mercy: ** Life in a post-climate change world that's just set dressing for a thin relationship drama.
• Captain Roger in Heaven: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ I wouldn't have thought a story about accidentally founding a sex cult could be boring, but there you go.
• Clover: ***** Possibly the best story in the collection about a cat protecting the couple he lives with.
• This Is Why We Can’t Have Nasty Things: * San Francisco navel gazing
• A Temporary Embarrassment in Spacetime: *** An attempt at space-opera rogue story a'la "Stainless Steel Rat".
• Don’t Press Charges and I Won’t Sue: ** A story apparently resulting from cognitive dissonance following the 2016 election. Another one of the many stories here that just kind of ends in the middle.
• The Bookstore at the End of America: *** A story I found vaguely offensive with it's tired stereotyping of religious conservatives & godless liberals.
• The Visitmothers: *** This very short and abrupt story pairs well with the opening story about being careful how you wish for something.
Profile Image for Stephanie.
Author 80 books1,352 followers
Currently reading
July 4, 2022
The first story in this collection, "As Good as New," is the only post-apocalyptic story that has ever made me laugh out loud (and it did that multiple times)! So (startlingly) much fun.

And oof, that second story, "Rat Catcher's Yellows"! This one packs SUCH an emotional punch, it is absolutely heartwrenching - and yet, it still made me laugh a couple of times along the way, which is incredibly impressive. (Also, I have to say here that I usually *hate* stories told from the perspective of someone looking after a disabled partner - there's sooooo much ableism usually folded into that fictional framework - but this one actually really worked for me, which is a near-miracle.)

I'll keep on updating as I read my way through the collection!
Profile Image for Laurel.
65 reviews
July 24, 2021
Note: I received an ARC through NetGalley, and the passages quoted may not be in their final forms.

With Ted Chiang's Stories of Your Life and Others and Exhalation being two of my favorite books, I couldn't wait to get my hands on another science fiction short story collection. Charlie Jane Anders is the first (out) trans author I've read in the SciFi genre, and I hope to read many more stories from trans voices. The wide range of topics and gender identities Anders explores in this book provide an excellent example of science fiction at its best.

From the intro to the last line, this collection kept me captivated and on my toes. As this was my first Anders' read, I appreciated the background information the intro provided as well as the individual introductions before each story. Her love of short fiction is intoxicating, and she conveys these thoughts in evocative detail.

Short stories are dangerous: tiny sparks of pure narrative fire that burn hotter because they snuff out sooner.

Let's delve into a few of these stories. Many of these stories touch close to home, with discussions of depression, gentrification, and the current socio-political climate we live in today. The Time Travel Club, one of the longer stories in this compilation, offers a science fiction narrative that feels true-to-life, with flawed characters and convincing discourse.

People can justify almost anything, if their perspective is limited enough.

Six Months, Three Days reminded me of Ted Chaing's Story of your Life. Those who love to debate fate vs. free-will will enjoy this read that explores both sides of the debate. Both stories examine the concept Anders provides in the story intro from an optimistic and pessimistic lens.

We all go through life knowing that horrible loss and devastation awaits us in the future, no matter what we do.

Finally, we have The Bookstore at the End of America, where Anders imagines America's current socio-political divide in physical form. California and the United States have become two separate entities, with a bookstore straddling the border. I loved this story and especially loved this meta quote about authorship.

An author is just someone who tried their utmost to make sense of their own mess, and maybe their failure contains a few seeds to help you with yours.

Overall, I fell in love with many of these stories and their concepts, and I believe everyone can find a piece in this collection that speaks to them. This collection solidified my adoration of short science fiction, and I hope it becomes a staple in the SciFi community!
Profile Image for Kam Yung Soh.
946 reviews51 followers
March 31, 2025
An interesting collecting of stories from an interesting writer. Not all the stories are to my taste (which is more into Worldbuilding and Hard SFF) but they reveal the concerns the author has with society's interaction with the LGBT community.

What follows are individual reviews of the stories in the collection.

- As Good As New: the world has ended, apart from one person. In the aftermath, she finds a genie in a bottle who can grant her three wishes, including the wish to restore the world. But an off-hand comment by the genie makes her pause: so while thinking about the wishes, she has conversations with the genie, which turned out to be a former play critic. This suits her fine, as she is a former writer of plays (now studying to be a doctor). In the course of the conversations, she gets an idea for a new play and, in the process, come up with three wishes that may just save the world.

- Rat Catcher’s Yellow: a woman gets a Cat Kingdom game for her partner, who is suffering for a neurological disease (Rat Catcher’s Yellow) and is only responsive when playing the game. And it turns out the partner is very good at the game, to the point where an organisation asks them to join a competition. And it is at the competition that the woman discovers that she doesn't have to be alone in taking care of others with the affliction.

-If You Take my Meaning: a follow-up to a book by the author (who suggests skipping the story to avoid spoilers), it concerns a girl who goes on a journey to get alien tendrils embedded into her. The tendrils enable a person to send and get emotional messages from others, and she wants to use it to send political messages. But it is only after the surgery does she realise that she has another mission to fulfil.

- The Time Travel Club: a club of people who talk about their fictional time-travels is shown a real time-travelling machine. Problem is, the machine moves objects only through time and not space, so it ends up somewhere else (since the Earth has moved). Close to giving up after other plans to use the time machine fail, one girl convinces the group to try one more time to make the machine work. The end result should be expected to those who know what happens to people to make the first time travel journey.

- Six Months, Three Days: a man who can see the future dates a girl who can see alternate futures. Their lives together for six months and three days would be full of love and conflicts over what kind of future can they have when one expects events to always happen while the other sees alternative events that can happen.

- Love Might Be Too Strong a Word: a on city sized ship heading to a colony world, a 'higher' level pilot falls in love with a 'lowly' general cleaner and sets out to woo the cleaner. In between the romantic letters being sent, we see a ship where genders have been split between different types of city inhabitants (the gender for the pilot is 'Be') making you wonder how such trysts are seen and handled by the ship's inhabitants.

- Fairy Werewolf vs. Vampire Zombie: a 'wild' story mostly set in a bar that hires a fairy singer before discovering the fairy is also a werewolf. Her singing makes a person falls for her: a person who later is found to be a vampire and a zombie and has designs on her. The only way out is, via a spur of the moment thought, a karaoke contest. But that doesn't go as planned, leading to general mayhem.

- Ghost Champagne: a depressive project manager, who also moonlights as a comedian, sees a ghost that looks like her. Her thoughts on the ghost, and wondering what she did to become one, only make the ghost appear closer to her and become more of a mental and physical distraction. Until one day, at a wedding, she 'steals' the drink the ghost is holding. The effects would cause a re-evaluation of her mental condition and to see things from the ghost's perspective that would change her own life.

- My Breath is a Rudder: in a future San Francisco, now protected by a sea wall against the sea, an artist is contemplating the mural she has been asked to create on a section of the wall, to help remind the inhabitants about the ocean they can no longer see and the danger it represents.

- Power Couple: a couple who want to Change the World start a relationship, but it gets interrupted by their studies. Then, the girl gets an idea on how to delay their relationship until they have done their work, which involves hibernation. You have to read the story to see how this idea for delayed gratification turns out.

- Rock Manning Goes For Broke: a hilarious story set in a future America whose society is crumbling. Rock Manning is a well-meaning person who loves to do stunts and gets involved with a girl doing film studies, which means lots of short meme-type films will no storyline but lots of dangerous stunts, distracting people as the world slowly goes to bits. But things get serious when a school bully becomes a big-time bully and tries to enlist him into making films for him to gain support; or else. And we follow their lives, we see a country tearing itself apart.

- Because Change Was The Ocean and We Lived by Her Mercy: in the future, when climate change has raise sea levels by metres, society is slowly rebuilding itself. We follow a person as he leaves a city which he feels is becoming too civilised and moves to a fringe town to lead his own life. But the call of civilisation is strong.

- Captain Roger in Heaven: one woman meets another; to keep her interested, she invents a sex prophet on the spot. This snowballs into a popular cult that is picketed by other religions, claiming that the sex cultist are going to (of course) Hell. Then, a device reveals where people go after death, and now the cult will have to invent a kind of heaven for themselves to go to.

- Clover: a cat abandoned by a girl is given to a couple by a mysterious person. After the cat settles in, another stranger gives them another cat. The first cat is not happy with this. But then the second cat does something unexpected, and now it is up to the one member of the couple and the first cat to do all they can to protect her from the strangers.

- This is Why We Can’t Have Nasty Things: two friends get together for the last time at a bar that is closing down, with one of them contemplating moving away.

- A Temporary Embarrassment in Spacetime: a hilarious story of two people who engineer a heist from a large space organism. They then discover a stowaway, and offer to infiltrate a planet to find out information about a weapon, in return for being able to open a restaurant (their dream). Events would bring the organism and weapon together in a rather embarrassing climax.

- Don’t Press Charges, and I Won’t Sue: a disturbing story about a person who is abducted by the government to undergo a rather radical gender change treatment to give the person the expected 'body' type to match the gender. Further tension is raised in the story when one of the administrators of the treatment is a long-time friend who is now in two-minds over the treatment.

- The Bookstore At The End of America: a bookshop on the border between an independent California and the rest of the US is a meeting point for people on both sides. But a crisis between the countries forces people to shelter in the shop, and now they have to manage their tensions in the only was possible in a bookshop while waiting for the conflict to end.

- The Visitmothers: aliens grant 'wishes' to certain people who seek them. But like genies, you have to be careful what you wish for. One girl who wishes not be alone any more gets her wish answered in a most unusual way.
Profile Image for Craig Childs.
1,034 reviews17 followers
April 13, 2025
“Civilization, you know, has always been a relative thing. It rises, it falls, who can keep track?”

Charlie Jane Anders' second short story collection highlights the author's range and versatility. While I do not embrace what I consider to be the book’s extreme social worldview, there is no denying these nineteen stories showcase a wild imagination and deep world building. The author also writes with sensitivity and conviction.

I alternated between the Kindle edition and the audiobook. Here are my individual story reviews ordered from most- to least-liked:

Six Months, Three Days (2011) -- Two clairvoyants embark on an intense but ill-fated love affair. Doug sees his future as a single timeline from which he can never deviate. Judy sees many branching timelines that result from her decisions. Their relationship becomes a referendum on free will versus predestination, and optimism over self-fulfilling prophecy.

Love Might Be Too Strong a Word (2008) -- The crew of an ark ship is composed of six species of genetically engineered humanoids, called dar. Each species has unique sexual reproductive capabilities and genitalia. Interspecies couplings are encouraged, perhaps even required. The courtship customs, gender roles, and pronouns in this system get complex. This is a fascinating milieu that leaves me with more questions than answers. This deserves to be explored at greater length, maybe a novel.

Rock Manning Goes For Broke (2018) -- Two young filmmakers become a streaming success with their slapstick stunt comedy--a cross between Harold Lloyd and Jackass. But their lives are affected by violence and revolution as America's urban spaces fall apart around them. This novella was also published as standalone hardcover by Subterranean Press.

Rat Catcher's Yellows (2015) -- A woman watches as her life partner becomes disabled by dementia and can only maintain contact with others through an advanced online role playing game. This is a very effective story with a thoughtful message about technology as an enabler for the seriously ill.

The Time Travel Club (2013) -- A group of people gather weekly to pretend they are time travelers, until the day "Madame Alberta showed up and brought the one thing that's guaranteed to ruin any Time Travel Club ever: an actual working time machine." This one has a fun ending.

Captain Roger in Heaven (2016) -- A free-wheeling sex cult is horrified when one of their own dies and her soul is sent to hell, where everyone can stream images of her eternal torture. They decide the solution is to manipulate space-time to create a new version of the afterlife that aligns with their beliefs. The problems begin when they learn their founding guru is not real; their entire religion is a hoax invented for picking up women. A laugh-out-loud satire.

Power Couple (2006) -- Two graduate students are too busy with school and careers to make a life together. Their solution? Take alternating turns in suspended animation… but people can change a lot during seven years of cryo sleep.

If You Take My Meaning (2020) -- The smuggler Alyssa goes to the midnight city to give up her humanity, to turn herself into a hybrid with the alien species Gelet. A sequel to The City in the Middle of the Night that contains some spoilers for the novel.

Fairy Werewolf vs. Vampire Zombie (2011) -- This lighthearted urban fantasy wonders what happens when a fairy is bitten by a werewolf, and what if she falls in love with a vampire zombie? Plus, the evils of North Carolina zoning laws. "I swear, there should be a special fairy edition of Getting to Yes, just for dealing with all their Fae drama."

As Good As New (2014) -- The last surviving human on an ecologically decimated planet finds a genie in a bottle who grants her three wishes. But he warns her the earth has been destroyed six times already. How do you structure your wishes to prevent not only the most recent apocalypse, but all potential apocalypses as well?

A Temporary Embarrassment in Spacetime (2017) -- Sharon and Kango are a pair of spy-thief-smuggler-adventurers who have escaped being sex slaves in the Pleasure Nexus. They look human, but Sharon was created as a monster and Kango is a single-celled organism designed to be a background extra in a brothel party. Together they save the galaxy from a sentient superweapon while fleeing a space blob the size of a planet. Silliness in space, inspired by Harry Harrison's Stainless Steel Rat series.

Don't Press Charges, and I Won't Sue (2017) -- Rachel's consciousness is transferred into a reanimated corpse by a fascist government, with the hope of preserving her personality and memories without her transsexuality. This begins as an examination of the trans experience, then morphs into body horror. While the writing is impressive, the ending is too ambiguous for me.

The Bookstore at the End of America (2019) - First and Last Page is a bookstore that straddles the border between America and the new nation of California, the coalition of West Coast blue states that have seceded from red state USA. Molly tries to keep the peace between all her customers and occasionally sneaks runaways across the boundary. The message about the power of books to bring people together overshadows the politics.

Ghost Champagne (2015) -- A woman is haunted by her own ghost which has traveled backwards in time after death to make peace with its past.

Clover (2016) -- A married couple experiences nine years of good luck after taking in an unfortunate cat. However, the arrival of a second cat wreaks unexpected havoc. This story is a sequel to the author's debut novel All the Birds in the Sky. I suspect some of the events might make more sense if you've read the novel first.

This Is Why We Can't Have Nasty Things (2019) -- Two lovers say goodbye to the Glamrock, their favorite watering hole. "San Francisco used to have a million pockets and folds in her long flowery skirts, where the strange and barely loved could create their own reality. Lately, not so much."

The Visitmothers (2020) -- Are they aliens, angels, or fairies? A trans woman asks these strange beings for a life-changing gift.

My Breath Is a Rudder (2008) -- The Pacific is rising and San Francisco is building a wall to keep the ocean out. A local painter searches for new artistic and sexual discoveries. This story is meant to be a celebration of the city's queer and genderfluid community, I think, but it lacks an interesting plot. A slice-of-life snore fest.

Because Change Was the Ocean and We Lived By Her Mercy (2016) -- San Francisco is mostly underwater and the sea no longer supports life. A group of queer musicians live on the archipelago by converting algae to edible proteins. This loose sequel to "My Breath Is a Rudder" examines the dynamics of found families.

4 stars.
Profile Image for Joan.
2,884 reviews52 followers
August 2, 2021
Review of Uncorrected Digital Galley

A collection of nineteen science fiction/fantasy tales filled with unexpected twists on classic tropes, gender, heartbreak while offering [often with humor] social commentary in a variety of settings. Each imaginative story stands alone, filling its own particular niche in this compilation.

Consider a genie in a bottle, found by a survivor in an apocalyptic world. Or a game developed for dementia sufferers. Perhaps a tale of Human-Gelet hybrids or a contemplation of the possibilities of time travel. Perhaps a vampire/zombie tale or a bookstore standing at the border between the United States and the now separate country of California. The widely-varied content is sure to give readers much to consider.

A short commentary by the author prefaces each story.

Recommended.

I received a free copy of this eBook from Macmillan-Tor/Forge and NetGalley
#EvenGreaterMistakesy #NetGalley
Profile Image for Pat.
Author 20 books5 followers
December 12, 2021
Okay: I give up. Not a fan of the one novel by Anders that I tried to read, but I did like a couple short stories, so placed a hold on the copy of this that the Daniel Boone Regional Library had ordered. There were the two short stories I'd enjoyed. Unfortunately, the book also includes ... others.

I like a plot. Yes, also an engaging way with words, but I also need a story line; and most of what I read here seemed more like notes for a novel. And a novel I didn't actually want to read. Part of the problem seems to be Anders' writing style, which is breezy, even when the story is serious. The mismatch doesn't always work. (It should have in "Rock Manning Goes for Broke," but somehow didn't work for me.)

So it's going back to the library. Maybe Anders and I just weren't meant for each other. But I've still got those two stories I enjoyed, so there is that.
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