The Invisible Stars, by Ryan Row | Shimmer
All the Colors You Thought Were Kings, by Arkady Martine | Shimmer
Red Mask, by Jessica May Lin | Shimmer
Palingenesis, by Megan Arkenberg | Shimmer
You Can Do It Again, by Michael Ian Bell | Shimmer
The Mothgate, by J.R. Troughton | Shimmer
Dreadful Young Ladies | Shimmer
And in That Sheltered Sea, a Colossus, by Michael Matheson | Shimmer
Fallow, by Ashley Blooms | Shimmer
List of Items in Leather Valise Found on Welby Crescent by Alex Acks | Shimmer
The Moon, the Sun, and the Truth, by Victoria Sandbrook | Shimmer
Fixer, Worker, Singer, by Natalia Theodoridou | Shimmer
The Creeping Influences, by Sonya Taaffe | Shimmer
The Atomic Hallows and the Body of Science, by Octavia Cade | Shimmer
Boneset, by Lucia Iglesias | Shimmer
The Triumphant Ward of the Railroad and the Sea, by Sara Saab | Shimmer
Almost everyone I entertain over a frosted fifth of vodka—bottle balanced precariously on a foldout tray, half my attention on keeping it upright—wants to know how I became a competitive eater. Also, how I found myself living on the Dbovotav Coastal…
Faint Voices, Increasingly Desperate, by Anya Johanna DeNiro | Shimmer
The silk threads of grief and time snap and spin away from the black looms, but all Freia wants to do is go back to Vienna. Dozens of women work the looms in the magnanery. Hands fly as the threads spin out of the boiling cocoons. Freia doesn’t work…
The Passenger, by Emily Lundgren | Shimmer
I try to take a picture of the eerie. The power’s out, so I’m like, okay, standing outside the Pump n’ Stuff, looking at the gas pumps. My last customer was twenty minutes ago. Down the street by the McDonald’s, the black veiny power lines seizure u…
You, In Flux, by Alexis A. Hunter | Shimmer
Something happened to you after you had the baby. via Pocket
What the Skeleton Detective Tells You (while you picnic), by Katherine Kendig | Shimmer
What the Skeleton Detective Tells You (while you picnic), by Katherine Kendig | Shimmer via Instapaper https://ift.tt/2nQmExa
Gone to Earth, by Octavia Cade | Shimmer
Gone to Earth, by Octavia Cade | Shimmer via Instapaper https://ift.tt/2Bp4v3h
The Imitation Sea, by Lora Gray | Shimmer
The Imitation Sea, by Lora Gray | Shimmer via Instapaper https://ift.tt/2MwugD9
They Have a Name For That, by Sara Beitia | Shimmer
They Have a Name For That, by Sara Beitia | Shimmer via Instapaper https://ift.tt/2BrS2eX
If a bear… by Kathrin Köhler | Shimmer
If a bear… by Kathrin Köhler | Shimmer via Instapaper https://ift.tt/2MFfFFl
Me, Waiting For Me, Hoping For Something More, by Dee Warrick | Shimmer
Me, Waiting For Me, Hoping For Something More, by Dee Warrick | Shimmer via Instapaper https://ift.tt/2wdLye2
An Incomplete Catalogue of Miraculous Births, or, Secrets of the Uterus Abscondita, by Rebecca Campbell | Shimmer
Mary Toft is in the garden on an August morning rich with bees. Five months along, her belly presses against the rough linen of her skirt while one hand curves protectively around it, half support, half caress. via Pocket
Held, by Ian O’Reilly | Shimmer
Madu is a satchel who is in love with Eliza, who is a woman and who is also a princess. Sometimes Madu thinks of herself as a girl, and sometimes she thinks of himself as a boy, and at other times all she thinks is that she is just another thing tha…
Raise-the-Dead Cobbler, by Andrea Corbin | Shimmer
The air was muggy, a heatwave burning through the spring, on the night that we met to conjure two people out of almost nothing at all. None of us could’ve done it without the others, and none of us would’ve dared, except Mason said please and I said…
The Weight of Sentience, by Naru Dames Sundar | Shimmer
The bullet fire drew a boundary between Masak and me and the rest of our brethren, laser tracers demarcating the distinction between safety and capture. While we curled up small and invisible underneath the leaking truck, those who were not so lucky…
En la Casa de Fantasmas, by Brian Holguin | Shimmer
Everyone knows about La Bruja. They say she lives somewhere down in the Avenues south of Eagle Rock. She is a tiny thing, short and round. Always dressed in black no matter the weather or time of year. Draped in mourning, they say, like La Llorona. …