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D.I.Y

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When the the elitist institution of Ozymandias Academy and its headmaster, Vamon Kinctuarin, can't find a solution to the city's worsening drought, 2 self-taught magicians, Noah and his partner Manny, take it upon themselves to find a solution to the crisis.

At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

25 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 24, 2022

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316 people want to read

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John Wiswell

67 books1,010 followers

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5 stars
100 (32%)
4 stars
103 (33%)
3 stars
73 (23%)
2 stars
26 (8%)
1 star
10 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 81 reviews
Profile Image for Fiona Knight.
1,443 reviews296 followers
August 30, 2022
If the Ozymandias Academy accepts you, the image of Vamon Kinctuarin visits you. He projects himself as a transparent green specter. It’s tradition or something. The two of you are supposed to have an intimate conversation about the future of your education.

When he was ten, Noah had the transparent green action figure of Vamon on his person at all times. He asked it things.

“Are you proud of me?”

“Am I as brave as you were?”


A sweet but firey short story that feels all too relevant but allows room for hope.

Free from Tor! https://www.tor.com/2022/08/24/d-i-y-...
Profile Image for Silvana.
1,299 reviews1,241 followers
March 13, 2023
Magical crowdsourcing to solve a water crisis. It's cute. At first I was bored, but it got better right after this quote: "There is no educational resource in the cosmos greater than a nerd who thinks you’re wrong.”

Profile Image for Ruxandra Grrr .
918 reviews145 followers
February 12, 2025
Read this with my little queer short story reading group (for the theme Solidarity) and we had lots & lots to talk about. I thought this was very rich thematically and loved the two main characters, their relationship and how the story approached their disabilities, their interaction with a necropolitical system.

It's kind of amazing how much tantalizing worldbuilding John Wiswell put into only 25 pages. The 'entrepreneur' with the magical school you might get an acceptance letter (hologram) for, with shades of evil JKR, Voldemort, and Evol Musk at the same time. The water plot made me think of the Flint water crisis and how Evol Musk promised to help (reader, he did not).

I got teary-eyed at the end and this story really cemented my desire to read whatever Wiswell comes up with next. Even if the Hercules retelling sounds massively different than these two other things I've read by him. I'm in it for the long haul!
Profile Image for Jen.
3,430 reviews27 followers
July 8, 2023
DIY by John Wiswell, free from Tor.

Eh. Characters were good, but the world is a sketch. What’s Cherub lung? What does it mean that he has it and he’s ten? Why is there a drought? What are the Seraphs? How does the magic system work?

Too many questions, not enough answers. This needs yo be longer so the answers can be given to the reader naturally. It’s well written, just too short for anything but the moral.

2, needs more meat, stars.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for urwa.
356 reviews284 followers
October 20, 2023
Nominated for the Hugo and Nebula Awards, D.I.Y is a really short story about two friends living in a post-apocalyptic drought-struck world where magicians are trying to find ways to make more water. While the idea was intriguing, two amateurs doing what the evil elitist organization with an unlimited budget could not, there really isn't anything more to the story. I am honestly surprised this made it onto the ballots when it is so damn mediocre. Shocked that this got nominated and Alix E. Harrow's The Six Deaths of the Saint didn't. However, I have noticed that many of the short fiction nominated or winning these awards seem to be about political topics. General fiction seems not to be favoured much.

Read it for free here.
Profile Image for Mitticus.
1,158 reviews240 followers
October 23, 2022
3 stars

Hay una severa sequía y los magos potentados abusan de la gente; nada nuevo bajo el sol, excepto un par de jovenes magos aficionados que parecen dar tick a todas las minorias posibles para expresar el David vs Goliath.

I snarked, “We could tell the internet it’s impossible and see if they fix the problem for us. Think you can be annoying enough to fool them into altruism?”
Profile Image for luna.
258 reviews5 followers
April 13, 2023
adored this short story! I really liked how the world was built and the glimpses of the magic system!
Profile Image for Jassmine.
1,145 reviews71 followers
January 29, 2025
Noah said, "There is no educational resource in the cosmos greater than a nerd who thinks you're wrong."

This is a story about two disabled teens saving the world and also falling in love as a bonus!

I love how this story centres community and cooperation as opposed to individual heroism and chasing after profit. I went through quite a bit of reviews of this one and it just hurts my heart seeing how many people just didn't get it. And I mean, that's fine. Our experiences are different and you do you BUT just let me tell you a secret.

Nevermind, end of the rant, it's just brilliant and yes the story is highly political so I do understand why it rubbed a lot of people the wrong way.

I loved the way in which disability was part of the narrative:
"If you have infinity, can't you help me out? People helped you out when you were a kid."
"Me?" Vamon scoffed. "I got where I am by working harder than anyone else."

And I loved the asexual romance:
He gave me a hug and nuzzled into my shoulder for a bit. Most couples would've kissed there and ridden off into the sunset. We weren't into allosexual stuff. I preferred a good hug.


Overall, loved it and as I already said, I kind of want to read in Wiswell's brain. Itching to read more by him already!

Read here: https://reactormag.com/d-i-y-john-wis...
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Profile Image for Debby Tiner.
487 reviews8 followers
September 18, 2025
I’ve been a huge fan of John Wiswell ever since I read Someone You Can Build a Nest In, and this short story does not disappoint!

A little bit of wizardry and a lot a bit of critiquing capitalism. This story was on the nose in the best of ways for someone who is a California native. Given the theme of the story it was really nice that this story was provided on the Tor website free of charge.

Favorite quote:

“How're you going to memorize spells in dead languages if you can't even remember ze/zir?”
Profile Image for JR.
197 reviews16 followers
October 6, 2024
You don't know how much I need this short story turned into a novel... Or just a new story with these characters.

I just need to spend more time with them, because for a story this short, it packs SO much heart and humor. Definitely a new top favourite for me!!
Profile Image for Nicholas.
11 reviews
August 24, 2022
D.I.Y displays the trademark creative wholesomeness of its author, John Wiswell. Those familiar with some of Wiswell's other works, such as Open House on Haunted Hill and That Story Isn't the Story, will recognize the idiosyncratic characterization in D.I.Y: Noah and Manny radiate personality off the page through clean, genuine prose and a sharp, urgent plot.
Profile Image for Lis Carey.
2,213 reviews137 followers
September 3, 2023
The opening of this story does not bring us to a happy world. Climate change has had a major impact, most strongly felt in the heat and the shortage of potable water.

The tech that's involved here, though, includes magic. The companies expected to address the problem are the great magic academies, among them Ozymandias Academy, where once upon a time, a young man named Noah hoped to become a student. When he's finally accepted, though, it's without any financial aid, and his mother, struggling just to support the two of them, has no money. Noah, being a bright young man, puts the blame where it belongs, and in some ways, that sets up later events.

Noah meets up with a podcaster, who goes by MX_POTLUCK, or, to friends, simply "Manny." Both shut out of any serious magical training, they do their own research and experimentation, including coax water out of the air into glasses. The amounts are small, but it's a start. They proceed to build on their start, especially as Ozymandia Academy gets more control of the limited water supply, and gets more restrictive, and more elitist, in its distribution of water.

But both Noah and Manny have serious health problems, and when they make a real breakthrough, it coincides with Manny having a major health crisis.

I'll just say that these are two tough, clever, young men with integrity. This is a more hopeful story than "Rabbit Test," and I enjoyed it. Sadly, while I think it deserves its nomination, I think "Rabbit Test," which I will never voluntarily reread, really is the better work.

I received this story as part of the 2023 Hugo Voters Packet.
Profile Image for sophie.
623 reviews114 followers
February 22, 2023
4.5. I cannot possibly justify this as part of the reading challenge, but I can't believe so few pages Got Me like they did. These two characters are funny and wonderful and perfect — they remind me of my friends, and their anger feels like ours. such good worldbuilding and plot for so few pages, too. this short story (free on tor dot com) is queer and radical and exactly what I wanted in this moment. outstanding. plus aspec relationship rep!! it's wonderful!!! read this short story if it sounds interesting to you, you will not regret it.
Profile Image for Eden.
193 reviews1 follower
February 1, 2024
This is a tearjerker for sure. this was a mix of queer, disability and hopefulness. I loved it. It's such a challenge to make a short story make people feel something and it did.
Profile Image for Sacha.
Author 1 book11 followers
July 6, 2023
I thought this short story had a lot of potential. However, instead of focusing on the world, which I'll admit probably isn't easy to do in a short story, the author focused heavily on the characters. We only get to read about what they're doing but outside the context of exactly why it's needed. I understood only that there was a drought and one entity had control over the magic to create water. What I failed to get from such a character focused short story was the wider world, why there was a drought, how magic works in this world, and why people in the world needed magic. It was all very confusing because the world was basically earth with magic that was never explained. It lead to a confusing short story that made me feel like it needed at least a novella length to be fully fleshed out.
Profile Image for Terri.
2,850 reviews59 followers
August 26, 2022
Fantastic. I've been reading Wiswell's stories for years now. Always there is a core of kindness, sympathy for disabilities of all kinds, inclusivity, all that good stuff. But also always there's some sharp commentary you don't even feel until it hits bone. I love that. I get to be entertained, and fall in love, and bare my teeth at the real bad actors we all have to live with. Fantastic.
Profile Image for Kieran McAndrew.
3,064 reviews20 followers
July 17, 2025
Vamon Kinctuarin, headmaster of the Ozymandias Magical Academy, is holding the state to ransom for a water spell during a drought so two self taught magicians, Noah and Manny, use the internet to teach themselves the arcane art.

Gently humorous and positive about willpower triumphing against the odds, Wiswell's "DIY" is a fun story.
2 reviews
August 24, 2022
This short story takes only minutes to read.

What I love about this story is that every scene is simple yet has a lot going on with it. The irony is rich and throughout. The world is scarily similar with a healthy dose of cynicism and yet it leaves you with hope and left me in tears.
3 reviews
August 24, 2022
This is a wonderful and hopeful story with wonderful characters and an ending I didn't see coming.
Profile Image for Ken Richards.
889 reviews5 followers
April 7, 2023
Noah's dream was to attend the Ozymandius Academy to learn wizarding. So why would he turn it down? It turns out that sometimes your dreams turn to ashes when reality intervenes.

John Wiswell's Nebula Award nominated short story is a celebration of self education and of crowdsourcing for solutions.

When the Ozymandius Academy cannot wizard the way out of a drought (well except for the benefit of wealthy donors) Noah and his friend Manny decide to fix it themselves. Working on the premise that “There is no educational resource in the cosmos greater than a nerd who thinks you’re wrong” they do their own research.

You can find the story here https://www.tor.com/2022/08/24/d-i-y-...
Displaying 1 - 30 of 81 reviews

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