Find On Your Body the Bruise, by Maricat Stratford | Shimmer
Fictional Worlds
By the Hand That Casts It, by Stephanie Charette | Shimmer
If there was one thing Briar Redgrave hated most about her current profession, it was the clients. “But I wish it to be yellow, and vibrant,” the client insisted with a shake of her head. via Pocket
By the Hand That Casts It, by Stephanie Charette | Shimmer
The Ghost Pet Detective, by Ryan Row | Shimmer
The Ghost Pet Detective, by Ryan Row | Shimmer
Art’s funeral is full of crying girls. Law thinks this should tip some of them off, but there it is. Crying girls everywhere. White flowers in their hair. Black dresses and the scent of clean underwear and Ivory soap. There’s a ghostly snake wrapped…
The Ghost Pet Detective, by Ryan Row | Shimmer
Monsters in Space, by Angela Ambroz | Shimmer
Jane by Margaret Dunlap | Shimmer
Allosaurus Burgers by Sam J. Miller | Shimmer
Ellie and Jim vs. Tony “The Nose” by Eden Robins | Shimmer
The Earth and Everything Under by K.M. Ferebee | Shimmer
Peter had been in the ground for six months when the birds began pushing up out of the earth. Small ones, at first, with brown feathers: sparrows, spitting out topsoil, their black eyes alert. They shook and stretched their wings in the sunlight. vi…
Methods of Divination by Tara Isabella Burton | Shimmer
But visions are not prophecies, he told me. Prophecies come true. “There is a place,” I told him, “where time runs back on itself, where parallel lines converge, and where visions become prophecies. Where you will be not alone. via Pocket
Jane by Margaret Dunlap | Shimmer
I had heard Rob’s question. It’s just that while I was in the middle of performing CPR in the back of an ambulance on a patient who had been very stable until he had all of a sudden up and crashed, I wasn’t going to stop and answer it. It was a stup…
The Seaweed and the Wormhole by Jenn Grunigen | Shimmer
“My mother is the swamp,” Peregrine said. He leaned towards the mire’s trees, heaped as dark and snarled as bull kelp on a beach. His movement was drunken—he swayed forward, and back, then stumbled in. Ebb hesitated. Peregrine had given him the kind…
Ellie and Jim vs. Tony “The Nose” by Eden Robins | Shimmer
via Pocket
Allosaurus Burgers by Sam J. Miller | Shimmer
Our teacher Mrs. Strunt said the allosaurus coming to Hudson Falls was the best thing that ever happened to Hudson Falls, but the worst thing that ever happened to the allosaurus. She herded us onto the bus looking mad about it, trying to keep us fr…
Why I Hate Zombie Unicorns by Laura Pearlman | Shimmer
The good news is, zombie unicorns almost never bite. The bad news is, even a tiny scratch from a zombie unicorn horn will turn you into a zombie. Mom discovered that by accident. Mom was really smart. via Pocket
Anna Saves Them All, by Seth Dickinson | Shimmer
Blackbird’s pilot waits, vitrified. Nine days since the ship closed around them and with the poison killing them hour by desperate hour, Anna decides she wants to see the alien once. Erik Wygaunt warns her, like Li Aixue before him: “Go in with an e…
Dharmas, by Vajra Chandrasekera | Shimmer
T he tuktuk driver spits a small fiery globule out of the side of his mouth. It spins as it flies, striated by angular momentum, and burns a hole in the street, burrowing instantly into the asphalt. via Pocket
We Take the Long View, by Erica L. Satifka | Shimmer
The snow crunches under our boots as us-in-Devora and us-in-Mel trace our way through the Forest-That-Thinks. We pause, waiting for directions. That way. via Pocket
Dream of the Fisherman’s Wife, by A.C. Wise | Shimmer
The fisherman’s wife breathes out, and tendrils of smoke curl around her. She listens to the tide inside and out — salt sea and salt blood, eroding shores of sand and making a hollow space within her skin and bones. She listens, and the ebb and flow…
A Whisper in the Weld by Alix E. Harrow | Shimmer
Isa died in a sudden suffocation of boiling blood and iron cinder in her mouth; she returned to herself wearing a blue cotton dress stained with fresh tobacco. She was younger and leaner, as she’d been when she first met Leslie Bell. via Pocket
The Half Dark Promise, by Malon Edwards | Shimmer
Something moves in the half dark two gas lamps ahead of me. I hold fast at the edge of a small circle of gaslight cast down from the street lamp above me. I don’t breathe. I don’t move. via Pocket
Of Blood and Brine, by Megan E. O’Keefe | Shimmer
Child’s mistress was out when the scentless woman entered the shop and laid a strip of severed cloth upon the counter. For once, Child wished her mistress were at her side. Child squinted, desperate to find a hint of the woman’s identity beneath the…
Be Not Unequally Yoked, by Alexis A. Hunter | Shimmer
Things used to be pure inside me. Separated. When I was a boy, I was wholly a boy. When I was a horse, I was wholly a horse. Things used to be simple inside me. I was all one thing or I was all another. And the two only got close when the change was…
Monsters in Space, by Angela Ambroz | Shimmer
When I think oil rig, I think big metal Viking onslaught in the night. I think tower of the gods, fucking Valhalla, and a screeching guitar solo. My eyeballs of imagination are compelled to perceive beautifully inky black skies, inky black seas, ink…
The Scavenger’s Nursery, by Maria Dahvana Headley | Shimmer
A boy finds a baby in the garbage. It’s hotter this summer than it was the summer before. Everyone in the city is trying to get to the country, because in the city, the rat population is exploding. Rats themselves are exploding, though not of their …
The Cult of Death, by K.L. Pereira | Shimmer
The first time you saw her, she was getting change from the machine in the lavanderĂa; copper and nickel clacked against her metal palms, a rain of clicks pricking your eardrums. via Pocket
Come My Love and I’ll Tell You a Tale, by Sunny Moraine | Shimmer
Tell me the story about the light and how it used to fall through the rain in rainbows. via Pocket
The Proper Motion of Extraordinary Stars, by Kali Wallace | Shimmer
Smoke rose from the center of Asunder Island, marring a sky so blue and so clear it made Aurelia’s eyes ache. The sailors had been insisting for days she would see the Atrox swooping and turning overhead, if only she watched long enough, but there w…