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Review: Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

  Point #1: Does the world need another book review of Project Hail Mary ? No, but you're getting one anyway (adapted slightly from the Goodreads review I posted back in April)  Point #2: I loved the movie. Go see it.    Someone on social media complained that this book is “80% math equations.” That’s an exaggeration, of course, but the protagonist does spend a lot of time math-ing. I’ve seen people complain that the book is all “science” at the expense of character and literary quality. Yes, there’s loads of science here, and yes, Andy Weir is never going to win acclaim for lyrical prose. In fact, this book is mostly structured as a series of escalating science puzzles to be solved in ingenious ways. Some people will be annoyed by that. Another type of person will eat it up. Turns out I’m the type of person who eats this up. By now, you've probably heard the plot basics of this best seller and basis for the blockbuster movie of the same name. Something is dimm...

Short fiction recs! January--March 2026

  Well, I fell way behind on my short fiction reading over the last few months, for a number of reasons.  But here are a few stories that I did manage to get to--a mix of old and new-- that I loved.   Stories of Love and Darkness   Last Flesh Ice-Skaters by Claire Jia-Wen in Khoreo  The first time I saw you, you laced up your skates, adjusted your knee mods, and I was just another unremarkable face as you fluttered to the ice. My mother snapped at me to watch you, but it was like asking a mallard to observe a flamingo. Our legs didn’t work the same. You’d been competing across the national circuit, in Boston and Orlando and Frisco, and this was my first competition.    A near-future science-fiction tale about two figure skaters—both Chinese-American, both from Southern California, and both using the latest in sports body modifications.   A propulsive sports rivalry story about competition, obsession, attraction, and love for the sp...

New story out! "Lotus Dew for the Emperor's Tea" at Lightspeed

  My newest story went live last week! “Lotus Dew for the Emperor’s Tea” is now free to read at Lightspeed Magazine . This tale   braids together Chinese immortality myths with a love for tea, and it is one of my favorite things that I’ve written yet. There’s also a beautiful narration by Si Chen, if you’d like to hear it in podcast form. And if you want to hear me gush about some of the inspirations for this tale, you can also check out the accompanying author interview!

Short fiction recs! November-December 2025

  Very late, but here are some stories I read and loved in the last months of 2025—a mix of older stories and new.   “Wolf Moon, Antler Moon” by A.C. Wise in Reactor (published in January 2025) Wolves have always ranged on the outside of the town, snapping jaws at its ragged edges. Sometimes they kill to cull. Sometimes they kill to eat. Sometimes they protect the town from worse things, older things, and newer ones as well. But the town would rather look away from the wolves, because the doe-girls’ radiant magic is so much prettier. Was. Now the doe-girls are gone.   A small town governed by a balance of unspoken powers. Wolves in the hills, and doe-girls in the form of high school students—beautiful and shining. But there are also human hunters, disrupting the balance of power with their greed. And there is Merrow, a high school girl who is a different kind of protector, inheritor to her grandmother’s power. What is Merrow—a semi-outcast, always on the ed...

Quote: from Opacities: On Writing and the Writing Life, by Sofia Samatar

  "I don’t want to reject confessional writing outright, I wrote to you, but it’s a tricky mode for works received as black or feminist texts. . . I’m less interested in “what happened to you” than the transmission of a feeling, something breathable and contagious, a vast, raw, untethered emotion, that’s how I want to be seen and how I want the writers I love to be seen, not for the self but for the ecstasy, the writerly ecstasy, caught and passed on like an electric discharge.”     --Sofia Samatar, from Opacities

Book review: Tell Me Yours, I'll Tell You Mine by Kristina Ten

  Kristin Ten expertly entwines humor and dread in this collection of strange, unsettling stories. Paper dolls come to life and take revenge; a computer game teaches a strange, possibly demonic language; a water dragon is entrapped by a cheating card player, and a girls’ volleyball team is caught in a horrifying cult dynamic. Children’s games and folklore form the basis of many of these stories; this book is stepped in the 90s’ milieu. In Ten’s hands, nostalgia takes a sideways turn: the familiar and mundane are just slightly askew, or recast in a dramatically new light. A childhood camp legend comes to life in “Bunny Ears” and childhood games become the basis for officially approved methods of predicting love in “Approved Methods of Love Divination in the First-Rate City of Dushagorod.” Ten’s stories explore issues of identity and immigration. Most of all, they examine the experience of girlhood and womanhood in the 90s and beyond: the fierce adolescent need to belong, the anxie...