Call It Living
We rise as stars they hoped would never burn, glow as sparks they tried to smother in ash. Let them build walls to keep us out, draw lines that define…
We rise as stars they hoped would never burn, glow as sparks they tried to smother in ash. Let them build walls to keep us out, draw lines that define…
Book Review: A Half-Built Garden Ruthanna Emrys's delicately strong near-future book A Half-Built Garden explores first contact via the prism of hope, sustainability, and thoughtfully rendered human (and extraterrestrial!) interactions. Emrys deftly combines ecological themes, subtle family drama, science fiction, and an underlying compassion grounded even in the most expansive ideas. Starlit Conversations and Familiar Rituals: Emrys writes with compassion, catching a personal warmth even in…
C. L. Clark's Unbroken is what happens when colonial revolt, powerful women with muscular arms, and Sapphic yearning crash together in a fiery fantasy epic.…
Rena Rossner's rich historical fiction The Light of the Midnight Stars is set in medieval Hungary, where three sisters inherit mystical abilities linked to the stars. Rossner deftly combines vividly developed family drama, Eastern European folklore, and Jewish myth into a gently magical and softly unsettling story. What's delightful? Rossner's writing is beautiful without being overpowering; it is dreamy and atmospheric, like telling tales in front of a fire on a chilly evening. The sisters’ re…