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Maiden, Mother, Crone - Lightspeed Magazine
Maiden, Mother, Crone - Lightspeed Magazine
The mule nipped at Marjan’s hand as she burdened it with her packs. She pushed its nose away, careful not to hurt it. She needed the mule to be well. Her life — and her unborn child’s — depended on it. She led the mule outside the stable and carefully latched the door behind them. She didn’t want the other animals to suffer from the cold. Bad enough she was stealing the mule.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Maiden, Mother, Crone - Lightspeed Magazine
What Glistens Back - Lightspeed Magazine
What Glistens Back - Lightspeed Magazine
Come back. You hear the call as the lander breaks up around you. You’re aware of the entirely arbitrary concepts of up and down before you realize what’s happening, and then they’re a lot less arbitrary. Down is not so much a direction as a function of possibility, of what might happen to you, of what is happening now. You finally get down as an idea.
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What Glistens Back - Lightspeed Magazine
Clarkesworld Magazine - Science Fiction & Fantasy : Botanica Veneris: Thirteen Papercuts by Ida Countess Rathangan by Ian McDonald
Clarkesworld Magazine - Science Fiction & Fantasy : Botanica Veneris: Thirteen Papercuts by Ida Countess Rathangan by Ian McDonald
Subscribe to Clarkesworld and never miss an issue of our World Fantasy and Hugo Award-Winning Science Fiction and Fantasy Magazine. This page: Botanica Veneris: Thirteen Papercuts by Ida Countess Rathangan by Ian McDonald
·clarkesworldmagazine.com·
Clarkesworld Magazine - Science Fiction & Fantasy : Botanica Veneris: Thirteen Papercuts by Ida Countess Rathangan by Ian McDonald
What I Told My Little Girl About the Aliens Preparing to Grind Us Into Hamburgers - Lightspeed Magazine
What I Told My Little Girl About the Aliens Preparing to Grind Us Into Hamburgers - Lightspeed Magazine
Pretty much everybody made peace with it very early on in the process. It wasn’t the most pleasant prospect in this world, or any other. But it had been explained to us in the most rational and persuasive terms imaginable, in sentences so simple that even the dumbest among us were capable of getting it; and once we swallowed that pill and incorporated it into our daily lives, it really didn’t make much of a difference in the scheme of things. We were adults about it. But that doesn’t make much of a difference when your four-year-old daughter looks up at you with her big brown eyes and asks ...
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
What I Told My Little Girl About the Aliens Preparing to Grind Us Into Hamburgers - Lightspeed Magazine
Becoming - Lightspeed Magazine
Becoming - Lightspeed Magazine
The stranger emerged from the shadows by the backstage door, proffered lighter held in long pale fingers. Winged eyeliner emphasized the charcoal of his heavy-lidded eyes. He wore the absence of a smile like expensive jewelry. Morgan leaned in for the light. “Hello,” she said huskily. She liked the look of him. She was stuck working this show as a stagehand, staring at the actresses who could get real work, and she wasn’t even supposed to smoke during her well-earned breaks.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Becoming - Lightspeed Magazine
The Dragon of Dread Peak (Part 2) - Lightspeed Magazine
The Dragon of Dread Peak (Part 2) - Lightspeed Magazine
Back in originspace, Basher sobbed in Doom Maiden’s arms. Sparks stared at the ground. I didn’t know what to do with my hands. I wanted to punch something. Mostly I wanted to punch myself. Or maybe Domino. If only he had listened to me! Why did I ever think I could be a leader? Not even my best friend listened to me when it counted. How could I have been so stupid? How could he? “We’ll get him back,” Basher said. She was frantic. “He’s still alive. Right, Sparks? He’s still alive.”
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
The Dragon of Dread Peak (Part 2) - Lightspeed Magazine
The Dragon of Dread Peak (Part 1) - Lightspeed Magazine
The Dragon of Dread Peak (Part 1) - Lightspeed Magazine
When I made the decision to take up an after-school job closing trans-dimensional portals into pocket-worlds full of dangerous monsters and traps, I thought it would be easier—or at least more fun—than working the counter at a fried cockatrice joint or selling newssheets on a street corner at the crack of dawn. My team’s first outing into dungeonspace—when we defeated The Cavern of the Screaming Eye on our first try—had gone pretty good. Since then, we’d been running low threat level, poorly synced dungeons as practice, the kind that don’t actually kill you if you take damage inside them.
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
The Dragon of Dread Peak (Part 1) - Lightspeed Magazine
The Walk Up Nameless Ridge - Lightspeed Magazine
The Walk Up Nameless Ridge - Lightspeed Magazine
It was difficult to sleep at night, wishing good men dead. This was but one of the hurtful things I felt in my bones and wished I could ignore. It was an ugly truth waving its arms that I turned my gaze from, that I didn’t like to admit even to myself. But while my bag warmed me with the last of its power and my breath spilled out in white plumes toward the roof of our tent, while the flicker of a whisperstove melted snow for midnight tea, I lay in that dead zone above sixty thousand feet and hoped not just for the failure of those above me, but that no man summit and live to tell the tale....
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
The Walk Up Nameless Ridge - Lightspeed Magazine
Crossing the Midday Gate - Lightspeed Magazine
Crossing the Midday Gate - Lightspeed Magazine
Dan Linh had walked out of the Purple Forbidden City not expecting to return to it---thankful that the Empress had seen fit to spare her life; that she wasn’t walking to her execution for threefold treason. Twenty years later---after the nightmares had faded, after she was finally used to the diminished, eventless life on the Sixty-First Planet---she did come back, to find it unchanged: the Midday Gate towering over the moat; the sleek ballet of spaceships between the pagodas and the orbitals; the ambient sound of zithers and declaimed poetry slowly replacing the bustle of the city at their...
·lightspeedmagazine.com·
Crossing the Midday Gate - Lightspeed Magazine
Clarkesworld Magazine - Science Fiction & Fantasy : Artificial Wombs and Control of Reproductive Technology by Stephanie M. Bucklin
Clarkesworld Magazine - Science Fiction & Fantasy : Artificial Wombs and Control of Reproductive Technology by Stephanie M. Bucklin
Subscribe to Clarkesworld and never miss an issue of our World Fantasy and Hugo Award-Winning Science Fiction and Fantasy Magazine. This page: Artificial Wombs and Control of Reproductive Technology by Stephanie M. Bucklin
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Clarkesworld Magazine - Science Fiction & Fantasy : Artificial Wombs and Control of Reproductive Technology by Stephanie M. Bucklin
Clarkesworld Magazine - Science Fiction & Fantasy : Pan-Humanism: Hope and Pragmatics by Jess Barber and Sara Saab
Clarkesworld Magazine - Science Fiction & Fantasy : Pan-Humanism: Hope and Pragmatics by Jess Barber and Sara Saab
Subscribe to Clarkesworld and never miss an issue of our World Fantasy and Hugo Award-Winning Science Fiction and Fantasy Magazine. This page: Pan-Humanism: Hope and Pragmatics by Jess Barber and Sara Saab
·clarkesworldmagazine.com·
Clarkesworld Magazine - Science Fiction & Fantasy : Pan-Humanism: Hope and Pragmatics by Jess Barber and Sara Saab