Paula Guran Reviews Short Fiction: Uncanny, Anathema, Kaleidotrope, The Dark, and Mythic Delirium

Uncanny 1-2/18 Anathema: Spec from the Margins 12/17 Kaleidotrope Winter ’18 The Dark 1/18 Mythic Delirium 1-3/18

Although more concerned with character than plot, Elizabeth Bear‘s “She Still Loves the Dragon” (Uncanny) still tells the love story of a knight-errant and a dragon. (“She still loves the dragon that set her on fire.”) Since love stories often turn dark and end bit­tersweet, I feel justified in praising ...Read More

Read more

Paula Guran Reviews Short Fiction

Lightspeed 11/17, 12/17 Nightmare 12/17 Tor.com 10/24/17 Clarkesworld 11/17 Uncanny 11-12/17 Shimmer #40 Kaleidotrope Autumn ’17 The Dark 11/17 Black Static 11-12/17

It is already a new year as you read this, but it is not even Thanksgiving as I write. It is also the time of the year when those of my ilk are already considering what fiction was the “best” of the year: a rewarding endeavor, but also ...Read More

Read more

Paula Guran Reviews Short Fiction

Apex 9/17, 8/17 Black Static 9-10/17 Uncanny 9-10/17 The Dark 8/17 Nightmare 10/17 Beneath Ceaseless Skies 8/17

As of September 2017, Apex Magazine has survived for eight years and four months and made it to its hundredth issue – a more remarkable achievement than the average reader might expect. The issue’s three more-or-less originals are all entertaining and dark enough for me to write about.

Kameron Hurley‘s “Tumbledown ...Read More

Read more

Paula Guran reviews Short Fiction: May 2017

Fiyah Winter 2017 Gamut 2/17, 3/17 Apex Magazine 2/17 The Dark 4/17 Tor.com 3/8/17, 3/9/17 Uncanny 3-4/17

 

Fiyah is a new literary magazine dedicated to Black speculative fiction, a spiritual successor to the experimental FIRE!!, an African-American magazine of the Harlem Renaissance that managed only one issue in 1926. (The magazine’s offices burned to the ground shortly after it was published.) The theme of the first issue is, appropriately

...Read More Read more

Paula Guran reviews Short Fiction, October 2016

Uncanny Magazine 7-8/16 Nightmare 7/16, 8/16 Black Static 7-8/16 Shimmer 7/16 The Dark 8/16 Apex Magazine 8/16

This month we discover some dark delights, but also encounter fiction bogged down in the end-of-summer doldrums. Of the five original stories in the July/August 2016 issue of recent Hugo-winner Uncanny Magazine, two can be said to be truly dark. The only element of the fantastic in ‘‘El Cantar of Rising Sun’’ by

...Read More Read more