I really enjoyed this collection. So many great themes explored. I liked all of these stories, but here are some standouts.
(Apologies if titles or names are messed up. I listened to the audiobook and I don’t have great audio processing (and maybe have ADD). The book isn’t out yet, so I wasn’t able to look up a list of the stories to get the correct spellings of names. )
**Ocasta** by Daniel H Wilson – The story of an AI created to watch for and analyze patterns of data. We see its various iterations looking into issues of maternal mortality (specifically how women of color are much more likely to have bad outcomes), police brutality, and how an autistic woman uses it to help with social interactions. I don’t like AI (find it mildly creepy actually haha) but I thought this was pretty interesting. I could have done with more delving into the issues mentioned because they’re important things to question.
**The Farmer’s Wife and the Fairy Queen** by K Tempest Bradford – I think this is my favorite of the bunch. It’s a bit irreverent and the fairy queen proclaiming “some men ain’t worth shit”? Heh. That’s a mood. It’s sort of a spin on Tam Lin. So, Titania the fairy queen (who’s southern and says y’all) occasionally kidnaps pretty boys. When she tries to take the farmer’s son, his wife insists she be taken instead. So now the farmer is left to actually do his own cooking and cleaning and looking after his own children (*gasp* how horrible for him). I liked the lighthearted, teasing tone and way it was told. Very entertaining. Highly recommended.
**Juan** by Darcie Little Badger – another favorite. Big Owl sets a monster after Juan, and Juan must fight back and try to outwit him. I think what makes this one so good for me is Juan. He’s just a sweet guy. It takes place at the height of covid, and he’s freaking living in a tent in the yard to not spread work germs to his wife and his grandmother who is undergoing chemo. The one phone call he has with grandma shows what a sweet relationship they have. I would happily read more of Juan trying to outfox various creatures from Native American folklore and having adorable phone calls and making his grandma laugh too hard.
**Equal Forces Opposed in Exquisite Tension** by Jon Chu – Another one I really enjoyed. It’s about Tam as he sits his exams for a prestigious telepathic engineering school. One of his fathers is a powerful telepath, and the other is the legendary engineer who designed and built The Barricade which holds back the Turbulence (not sure what that is exactly, but apparently it is bad). His father has been rigorously preparing him for this day for his entire life. There’s a loving but rather complex dynamic there. He also has an exam for the archivist librarian track. And he meets a smoking hot telepathic guy and they start talking. (That is kind of adorable as they maybe start a relationship.) I’m white and don’t have high achieving parents so no tiger parents for me, but I could definitely relate to the theme of pressure and the weight of others’ (or your own) expectations and worrying you won’t be good enough. The world seems pretty cool, I mean engineers who use telepathic powers to like fashion things out of thin air, hello? I am a science/STEM teacher I am all for it! Plus, the libraries are described as like elephants like beasts? I don’t know, but it sounds cool. I would totally read the adventures of Tam and the most stunningly gorgeous man he’s ever laid eyes on at telepathic library/engineering school. Like, please can I have that?
**Silk and Cotton and Linen and Blood** by Nghi Vo – soon as I heard Nghi Vo, I was like oh yes this will be great. And it was. (If you haven’t read her works, go do that!) It’s about the royal wardrobist whose king was just killed by invading barbarians. She takes pride in her life’s work and wants to do it right, but also she’s seen as a traitor by the people in town even though she’s just doing what she needs to do to survive. That tension and how she quietly fights back in her own way. So good. If you like her other works, you will love this one too as it’s a similar theme/vibes.
**Chosen** by Saad Hossain – Opens with “We are the scum of the galaxy.” Well, ok, I’m in. Haha. Not usually into space stories, but this was a good one. Humans, or a group of them, somehow have wound up in another galaxy where there are hostile alien things. The narrator’s ship gets blown up, killing everyone, but due to the ancient alien tech remnant he used to do that blowing up, he is reincarnated. The aliens who left that tech are gone for like millions of years, but two bureaucrats in charge of bringing back dead souls somehow got left. And he takes them off on an adventure to get revenge on the ship that blew him and his captain and crew up and then maybe the whole empire. I like how the narrator went from ok wow this one is real psycho to ok psycho’s growing on me. Haha. If you like space stories and some cheeky humor, you should like this one.
**Haunted Bodies of Wombmen** by Tlolo Tsamasse – ok, this one should be longer. I want more. I really liked the themes and the horror leanings. It’s set in South Africa, and it follows a family that did really horrific, terrible things as human sacrifice to attain and keep power and wealth. The spirit of the victim (which has come back and been killed several times) is working to get its revenge. The men in this family get pregnant and give birth and die at age 30. Honestly, a real *good for her* moment. I seriously laughed out loud when aunt spills the beans to the main girl she’s all “how could they do this to me?” Yeah, sure, honey. Your ancestors mutilated and sacrificed people who are coming back as evil spirts for revenge, but way to make it all about you. I also really liked the line where the spirit wonders why women always sacrifice themselves. Like I said, I love the themes of how women are sacrificed and generational trauma and sins of the ancestors this one is exploring and fantasy and horror can mix so well when done right. I want more of this story.
**The Plant and the Purist** by Malka Older – Follows a crew as they explore an ancient burial from a long past civilization in a volcano. The MC has a number of tech implant to enhance senses and get readings and stuff. And the main historian type guy has none (which is odd in this world). Really cool mix of archaeology, studying history, and geology. Liked the exploration of what would our society look like millenia in the future, what will the make of our weirdness? Kind of Indiana Jones or Tomb Raider vibes. Really fun; I liked it a lot.