SF/F, sociology, some recipes. Updates every other Friday.

Author: roscoe.mathieu (Page 5 of 6)

Dancing in the Rain [Flash]

This is a little piece prompted by mon ami Lachlan Atcliffe. I’ve always liked Marybeth, and now I like her more.

Marybeth Delilah Potter loved the thunder, and she loved the rain. She loved it to every drone and cirrus, this wonder God wrought where clean, cool water fell from His sky, even onto the deserts of Arizona. Other kids at school pretended they were too old and too cool, but they secretly tilted their heads back when no one was looking to drink the rain that tasted like communion. Marybeth wasn’t too old to love the rain, and she knew it, but she waited until no one was looking anyway. Marybeth sometimes dropped her human seeming when she danced in the rain, when she threw her head back and drank her fill, and her drones shone purple-green in the lightning while her cirri writhed in the thunder-rich air.

That kind of thing could give the humans the wrong idea.

Besides, Mrs. Hutchinson wanted her foster daughter safe at home during thunderstorms, safe from flash floods and landslides, innocent that Marybeth could survive and even thrive out there. It was only a little naughty to sneak out into the rains to dance and drink and worship God, especially if she was back before morning so Mrs. Hutchinson wouldn’t know.

She was alone, up in the hills where no one would see. She felt no human presence, or dog, on her hive mind, nothing that drove shards into the Hum of psychic harmony she had brought with her from Home. But in the blackened rain, she felt something. Not the jagged shards of Earth minds, something …else.

Slowly, Marybeth Delilah Potter whirled back into humanoid shape, slipped her human face back into place, pink hands and pale cheeks. She stretched her awareness. There was nothing, nothing Earth-like in the rain, not even lizards or coyotes slinking away from God’s rain.

Could it be…?

At Home, the Hum had been her religion, and her foremothers before her. She had come to Earth alone, the only hive being in on this dry planet, the only being with the Hum inside her.

She felt something like the Hum out there, in the rain, in the darkness. A distributed mind, not all trapped and individual like humans. She Hummed in the rain, her thousand golden eyes closed to the darkness.

And Marybeth heard something she’d never heard before.

Marybeth felt dissonance in the Hum, and it nearly tore her soul apart.

She withdrew her awareness furtively, the thousand golden eyes snapping open. She saw nothing, heard nothing but the drumming of the rain and the roaring of the floods. Marybeth stood stock still as lightning tore the sky asunder, revealed nothing.

She’d read about demons and devils in her Bible, but Mrs. Hutchinson explained about metaphors and stories, explained to a frightened foster daughter that they weren’t real like the rain. Now Marybeth wasn’t so sure. God would never make a being that could sound a false note in the Hum, she was certain of that.

She reached out again with the one sense that had felt the …presence. Tentatively, with the psychic sense by which her drones shared sensation and thought, which made Marybeth Marybeth. Marybeth reached out with her soul.

She had to stretch to sense that…dissonance in the Hum now. Was it moving? Where was it moving to?

Her attention trailed down the darkness, down the slick hills, toward town and the school and an old farmhouse on Cuttle Creek Road where Mrs. Hutchinson nuzzled against Mr. Hutchinson as the rain pattered on the window.

She brought her attention back, reached out again. She felt that impossible dissonance again. It was definitely moving toward town, toward all those humans who had no idea what wrongness was coming. They could not feel the Hum, but Marybeth knew they could feel when it was wrong.

But she knew the Hum from Home, among her kin and all the creatures of the wide seas there. And she could make her memories and thoughts known through the Hum. This presence would hear her trumpet-blast.

As the rain splashed against her rubbery skin, Marybeth dropped her seaming. Her true face writhed. She would speak truth.

“Go.” She pushed out into the darkness, and it was all her memories and all her kin’s memories of flight, evacuation, separation. It rang in the Hum.

“I claim this planet. Mrs. Hutchinson is mine. Mr. Hutchinson is mine. The swim team are mine. This town and this place and this whole world is mine! I came from Home as last of my kin. They do not Hum but they have made me their kin anyway. I bear royal eggs and I will bear queens and my daughters and the sons and daughters of Man will share the bounty of God’s green and blue Earth in the days to come! They do not Hum, but they sing. And if you would harm even the least of them, you must go through me!

 The darkness did not answer. She reached out again.

A memory came to her, one of her own, one she shied away from into physical sensation of the rain on her flesh. A memory of salt in her wounds, when humans were cruel to her like they were cruel to each other, separated and alone.

She whimpered out loud, but stared up into the rain, a writhing mass of squidlike flesh in a modest green pinafore and no shoes. Marybeth drew from her great racial store of memory a fresh one, one which had happened to her, the one that hurt most.

“Leave! My! Planet!” Marybeth burst with the memory, the memory of leaving Home, crossing the Pane that separated Home from Earth, the Pane she could never cross again. Marybeth knew no stronger way to deliver her message, and doubted one existed.

The darkness trembled, but it could have been the rain. Marybeth waited in the darkness, praying psalms from her Book of Common Prayer as she slowly extended her awareness again.

Nothing out there but the jagged shards of Earth minds, separated and alone, and the quiet lonely Hum between her every drone.

She wondered if it had even ever been there, that unearthly dissonance in the Hum. If it was a trial of God’s to test her, or some strange madness covering her from too much pain and fear among the humans. Things like that had happened to her kin, and the suffering hives sadly eaten by their families.

Regardless, she was here, and it was not. She had left her planet and come here, among creatures that could not feel each other’s sensations nor hear each other’s thoughts. She’d left the Hum of her foremothers for the sound of the chorus singing hymns on Sunday.

Marybeth had come from Home, but Earth was her planet now. Her planet, her people, her God.

And soon, even the humans would know that.

On the Eve of the Nebulas

Tomorrow is the first day of the Nebula Conference.

When I signed up, I thought I’d be getting on a train today bound for Woodland Hills after requesting time off from work. I don’t have to tell you how much can change in two months. Now I’m testing audio equipment and my internet connection and teasing my friends about going to John Scalzi’s virtual dance party.

It took me some time to decide whether or not I still wanted to go. Especially when I couldn’t write for weeks, it made little sense to go to an SF/F writing convention. And while I am sad I can’t walk into the ballroom with a completed draft of Doña Ana Lucía Serrano …To The Future! in hand, I have started making progress again and made it to the place in my notes marked [CLIMACTIC BIG ENCHILADA BATTLE ROYALE WITH CHEESE].

So why go?                                                                                

Because at heart, it’s still a convention. There’s still a lot to learn from the panels and discussions, and you never know who you’re going to meet in the common areas. The focus on small groups in the common areas means we’ll be able to hear each other talk (at least, once I have my mike set up). And cons keep me in touch with what’s happening in SF/F publishing, and usually spurs me into action.

And if you’re coming too, come say hi to me! I’ll be at the following panels all weekend. If I’m not at one of these, I’m probably hanging out in the Vorkosigan Suite. See you there!

May 29
8:00-9:00 Crowdfunding for Authors
9:30-10:30 Being a Creative in 2020
10:30-11:30 Mentorship Meeting
2:00-3:00 Blades and Badasses
3:30-4:30 Managing Choice in Games and Interactive Fiction

May 30
8:00-9:00 Urban Development
11:00-12:00 Writing Multiply Marginalized Characters in SFF
2:00-3:00 Making Video for Authors
3:30-4:30 Spending Money to Make Money as an Indie Author
5:00-8:00 55th Annual Nebula Awards

May 31
8:00-9:00 The Landscape of Audiobook Production for Authors
9:30-10:30 Who and Where I Am
11:00-12:00 The Second Life of Stories
2:00-3:00 Moving the Line
3:30-4:30 Forming and Sustaining a Successful Writing or Critique Group

Doña Ana Lucía’s Prithvi Empanadas

Doña Ana Lucía’s Prithvi Empanadas

I have never been able to make empanadas quite so perfect as my mother’s, even with all those long monsoon afternoons helping her make batches on batches of them. However, I perfected a recipe of my own as a college apprentice that serves me in good stead now as a professor myself. I like to gather a small group of people interested in Latin culture together in my kitchen to make a whole batch together, with enough for everyone to take home.

My favorite filling involves some of the best of three separate worlds, with a nice tail of slig and golden Buddha-potato from Prithvi, lagoon-olives and sea vegetables from Parvati, and spices and velociraptor eggs from my native Sati. However, I have adapted it to what I believe the original Serrano recipe was on Earth, with Earth ingredients only.

Ingredients:
Pastry

  • 1L all-purpose flour (if you can’t find quatrotriticle)
  • 10mL baking powder
  • 5mL salt
  • 250mL olive oil
  • 250mL warm milk (cow will do, goat is better)
  • 100mL cornmeal, or enough to cover baking sheet(s)
  • 1 egg (to brush with)

Filling

  • 500g beef, ground or chopped to approximately 11mm (the size of one of Doña Ana Lucía’s iron slugs)
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 250g cubed potatoes, boiled
  • 3 hardboiled eggs, rough chopped (duck eggs for more of a Devi flavor, chicken eggs for more of an Earth flavor)
  • 200g red and green peppers, chopped
  • 1 can of olives, chopped
  • 1 bulb garlic, minced
  • dash cumin
  • dash paprika
  • dash achiote powder
  • sprigs parsley

Instructions
Mix together flour, salt, and baking powder, then mix in oil and milk until dough forms a ball. Knead on cornmeal, then let stand 30 minutes. Open can of olives, drain, transfer olives to rice bowl. Boil potatoes.

Fry the beef with the garlic and onions in a little olive oil until onions translucent, then add potatoes, cumin, chili, achiote, red and green peppers, and enough potato water to cover. Cook, covered, until the meat is tender. Take off heat and add parsley, olives, and chopped hard-boiled eggs.

Roll out dough with pin until 5mm thick, then cut out circles with wide-mouth olives can. If too large, cut into working pieces first. Preheat your oven for 180*C. Take each circle, ladle a generous helping of filling in the middle, fold over and fold it repulgue-style with your fingers. Brush with the egg to help seal and set a shiny finish, then lay on a cornmeal-lined baking sheet. Repeat until you run out of either filling, dough, or baking sheets.

Bake at 180*C for 15 minutes or so, or until the scent drives your blood to unspeakable things. Enjoy with crisp dry rice lager or sips of good rum.

Many Returns

Bonjour, everyone.

This is a short note to let you all know that yes, I’m still alive. However, I got hit with the SIP order in early April and barely had time to get my equipment home from the office before I found out I was laid off (along with half my team at work). I know I haven’t spent the worst SIP by a long shot, but the one-two punch has had nasty effects for my mental health. I was unable to even write for most of the month. It’s still difficult now.

It’s for that reason I’ve had to cancel the rest of the short fiction ratings up until the Nebulas. As of this moment, there isn’t the time nor, honestly, the spoons to do those novellas and novelettes justice. I have decided to attend the (online) Nebulas, and am trying to put back together all the things that fell apart in April…including my blog and Patreon.

So, stay tuned to this wavelength.  There’s many more futures to come.

– Roscoe

2020 Nebula Nominees: Short Stories (pt. I)

We’ll start off the Nebula nominee reviews with three of the short stories, ranging from a threadbare-elbow tale of Las Vegas to Edwardian schoolgirl cannibals to blood-stained generation ship cathedrals.


How the Trick is Done
A. C. Wise

This first story on my Nebula reading list is a strange one. It seems to take place on a Vegas on the edge of the horizon, slightly tilted, slightly too real to be real, a Vegas where Resurrectionists bring potted plants back to life and Assistants falling off the Hoover Dam grow sequined wings and, most importantly, where titles have power.

The story is how the Magician died, how the Magician’s Girlfriend/the Resurrectionist, the Magician’s Stage Manager, the Magician’s current Assistant and the Magician’s former Assistant all play a part in it. “How absurd,” the narration notes as two of them first meet, “that they should define themselves solely in relation to the Magician.” These two have had names for some time, but as they introduce themselves, their titles fall away. Similar moments of transformation happen for everyone, except the nameless rabbit called Gus (and his lack of a name is important) and the Magician himself.

Watching the way Wise played with titles and names, names and titles, who’s called what when, was its own delightful little magic show. And I thank her for breathing new life into a whole set of tired old tropes about ledgerdemain, making something new of them. I’m sure Meg and Becca, in particular, would appreciate that trick.

Moon Phase:
Crescent

Ten Excerpts from an Annotated Bibliography on the Cannibal Women of Ratnabar Island
Nibita Sen

I remember reading this little gem when it came out last May, I was quite pleased to find it the same story that I remembered. A ghoulish academic summary revolving around distant Ratnabar Island and an unspeakable supper in a girls’ boarding house in rural England, Nibita Sen has a keen awareness of how close academia and cannibalism really are.

On this read-through, I noticed how interesting it was to watch the names and narratives change over time, and watch the Gaurs start elbowing their way back into their own story amidst Rainiers and Cliftons and Schofields. And my God does Sen command the tones! I could place each excerpt’s academic era within a sentence or two, each one distinct and ringing true to its sources. And everyone, from the Angloest Anglo to the Gaur cousins, wants to take Regina Guar and the never-explicitly-stated Churchill Dinner, and carve them up for themselves, for their theories and their narratives.

One has the rather sickening feeling, afterward, that one has just seen the Churchill Dinner all laid out with ten separate diners all commenting on the delicacy of the meat.

It is a delicious sensation.

Moon phase: Quarter

The Dead, In Their Uncontrollable Power
Karen Osborne

At first, I thought I was reading a fantasy story – a cathedral, a sin-eater, a cup of sin and a cup of virtue, a dying cleric, and a bomb. But it quickly became clear that we were cooped up in one of science fiction’s hoariest of hoary stock plots: the generation ship gone bad.

But the trappings are just that, window-dressing for the two cups, the cup of virtue and the cup of sin, and the two women who drink from them: the captain, and the sin-eater. The one contains all the dead captains’ fine and regal memories, desires, impulses, the other all their…well, all their sins. All the slain mutineers, all the spaced excess, all the foul deeds decided. And Karen Osborne would like you to take a minute and consider what the souls of the unquiet dead can do to people. Especially their virtues.

What I love about this story is how Osborne twists the ending. You know how this story is, you’ve seen it a hundred times on the news and a thousand times in fiction. You can already smell the iron tang and viscera. And Osborne barrels down toward that fetid, horrifying climax…and what she does instead made me cheer.

Read it, if only to see for yourself.

Moon Phase:
Gibbous

Didn’t see your favorite story? Part II is here, including my choice for this year’s Nebula-winning short story.

Moon images courtesy of Emoji One.

500 Followers and a Free Book!

Wow.

Seriously, wow.

On January 1st, I did not expect to have 500 Twitter followers by the end of the year, much less by March 6th! But as of @svnsxvi Thank you all for your follows and for your attention.

And, in thanks, I’m offering everyone a present.

Courtesy Melissa Weiss Mathieu.

I’m giving away free copies of my Kindle short, “Hull Down”, from now until Thursday. All you need to do is head to Amazon, search for “R. Jean Mathieu” and grab your free Kindle edition.

(While you’re there, you could even follow me on Amazon!)

So what’s it about? I’ll tell you:

“The room pulsed around him, its fetid breath almost palpable even through the helmet. The bodies of Commander Wu Suzhen and Major Sam Harris were woven into the wall, a superimposed lovers’ embrace developed in resin and red light. Their shapes were fuzzy; the inside of Matt’s helmet sticky with condensation like his hair was sticky with sweat. His inner ear couldn’t find north or down, his eyes stung and he could taste something salty, but whether blood, sweat or tears, he couldn’t tell.

Why did you live?”

From “Hull Down”

Pvt. Matthew LeWald is surprised when a Navy officer leads his Marines on the Search and Rescue operation. He’s even more surprised to be the only survivor of a mission gone disastrously wrong, when better men than him died left and right. Why did he live? But there are stranger things afoot than war, things like love and things like enlightenment.

The reviewers are saying it’s “not your Dad’s military SF” and calling it “strange [and] haunting.”

Whether you’ve known me for years or just followed me yesterday, this is for you, and you have all the way until Thursday, March 12th to claim it.

Thank you again for the follows. Here’s to 500 more.


PS – If you still can’t get enough of my work (and yay!), there’s still time to become mon patron in time to see the teaser for “Doña Ana Lucía Serrano y la Caja de Venuswood (Lady Ana Lucía Serrano and the Venuswood Box)!” Just head over to Patreon and sign up for the price of a cup of coffee per month.

2020 Nebula Nominees: Mathieu Takes the Nebulas!

Well, takes on might have been more accurate…oh well. Because that’s right, R. Jean Mathieu is going to the Nebulas!

For those of you just tuning in at home, the Nebulas are the professional award of science fiction, SF’s version of the Oscars, given each year by our union, the Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America. The Nebulas rival the Hugos for prestige, and this year they’ll be awarded in Woodland Hills, CA on May 31.

Like WorldCon two years ago, I’ll be going for professional reasons, but keeping my eyes open to wonder and strangeness. And in the countdown to May, I have something for you. Here, at Tor.com, is the complete list of Nebula nominations (including the special awards for YA, media, and game design).

Everyone is gonna be issuing their reviews of the novels. Everyone. But you folks know me, you know how I feel about short fiction. So in the leadup to the Nebula Conference, I’ll be reviewing all the short works of SF, all the nominees for Short Story, Novelette, and Novella. When and where able, I’ll link you directly to the story, otherwise, to the Amazon.com or publisher page.

In addition to crowning my choice in each field to win their respective Nebulas, I’ll be rating each story on its merits, measuring in moons from new to full.

Stay tuned as the reviews for your favorites go live! Which one will win? Which one will I push? You’ll just have to find out.


Short Story
“Give the Family My Love” – A.T. Greenblatt (Clarkesworld)
“The Dead, In Their Uncontrollable Power” – Karen Osborne (Uncanny)
“And Now His Lordship Is Laughing” – Shiv Ramdas (Strange Horizons)
“Ten Excerpts from an Annotated Bibliography on the Cannibal Women of Ratnabar Island” – Nibedita Sen (Nightmare)
“A Catalog of Storms” – Fran Wilde (Uncanny)
“How the Trick Is Done” – A.C. Wise (Uncanny)


Novelette
“A Strange Uncertain Light” – G.V. Anderson (F&SF)
“For He Can Creep” – Siobhan Carroll (Tor.com)
“His Footsteps, Through Darkness and Light” – Mimi Mondal (Tor.com)
“The Blur in the Corner of Your Eye” – Sarah Pinsker (Uncanny)
Carpe Glitter – Cat Rambo (Meerkat)
“The Archronology of Love” – Caroline M. Yoachim (Lightspeed)


Novella
“Anxiety Is the Dizziness of Freedom” – Ted Chiang (Exhalation)
The Haunting of Tram Car 015 – P. Djèlí Clark (Tor.com Publishing)
This Is How You Lose the Time War – Amal El-Mohtar & Max Gladstone (Saga)
Her Silhouette, Drawn in Water – Vylar Kaftan (Tor.com Publishing)
The Deep – Rivers Solomon, with Daveed Diggs, William Hutson & Jonathan Snipes (Saga)
Catfish Lullaby – A.C. Wise (Broken Eye)

If You’re Voting For Bernie, v 2.0

In honor of Sen. Sanders’ win in New Hampshire last night, I’m reposting this post from 2016, when we were all younger and more innocent. Some edits have been made in concession to changed political realities, but the opinions are vintage ’16.

sanders

If you’re voting for Bernie, good for you! I agree with you that Bernie Sanders is the best candidate running, both for the many accomplishments he’s got done in his time in Congress and because of his voting record of consistently voting in the interests of the American people, especially the worst-off Americans. I support him for his well-thought out tax plan, his willingness to confront race issues, and for letting the rest of us democratic socialists out of the red closet.

If you’re voting for Bernie, you’re probably stirred by his message of revolution: “not me, us.” You want to see a more democratic, more just America, where mothers don’t have to choose between nursing their newborns and getting a paycheck, where veterans aren’t begging for change on the street, where CEOs aren’t taking home millions while their workers count pennies. You’re passionate, you’re inspired, you want to change the world.

But if you’re voting for Bernie, voting for Bernie isn’t enough.

If you’re voting for Bernie, you know how many seats in Congress are up for grabs this election. Socialist (or at least socialist-friendly) Senators and Representatives will make President Sanders’ term a lot easier. But do you know who your current Senator and Representative are? Here’s your answer. Do you know who’s running against them? Find out here. Do you know which candidates side with Bernie on issues like minimum wage, antitrust action, and campaign financing? Check their websites! (I’d also peek at their ranking with the Citizens’ Congress.) Now you know, and you can tell your friends and neighbors to vote for whomever in the same breath you mention Bernie Sanders. You might even volunteer for those down-ticket campaigns, where every vote counts.

If you’re voting for Bernie, you care about your government and what it’s doing to you and to the rest of us. Get involved in local politics. Your state, county, and especially city governments have a much bigger impact on your life than the resident of the Oval Office – and vice versa. Look up your city council’s agenda for their next meeting, and go speak at public comment. Sign up for a city board or commission appointment, such as Public Works, Planning Commission, Recreation and Parks, or, erm, Citizens’ Finance Advisory Committee. Run for elected office! San Luis Obispo became the first city in America to get money out of elections and clean up campaigns because of a small group of dedicated citizens. Start there.

If you’re voting for Bernie, you care about working people. Unionize your office  Half the reason we need Bernie in the first place is because capital convinced white-collar workers and service people that we didn’t need unions. But the same laws of economics apply to white-collar jobs as blue-collar: If all you working stiffs are on the same page about demanding a living wage or paternal leave or inclusionary hiring practices, you can win against management. You don’t have to strike, you just have to be willing to negotiate…and be willing to stand with your brothers and sisters when they need you.

If you’re voting for Bernie, you care about the downtrodden members of society. Volunteer a few hours or a few loaves of bread at your local homeless shelter. Organize a #BlackLivesMatter march. Join a campus or city social justice activist group. If you’re church-going, demand your congregation help. If you’re a frat boy or sorority girl, get your brothers/sisters behind you for community service. If you have five hundred Facebook friends, get a tenth of them to show up. Put your skills, time, and resources to making this country more just, more fair, and more equal, so that  we really do have liberty and justice for all.

If you’re voting for Bernie, you want a revolution. One man isn’t a revolution. It can’t just be him, it has to be us. We have to carry the revolution forward. And while it sometimes involves waving banners and shouting slogans, most of it is doing homework, sitting in meetings, speaking at podiums, and making agreements. It’s coalition-building and voting your conscience and doing a job. It’s keeping in mind the vision of a new America, and making your corner of America look more like that. Then, and only then, will we have a real revolution. Then, we’ll see body-cams on policemen and bankers in jail. Then, we’ll earn the right to say “we fought the revolution.” Until then, there’s work to do.

If you’re voting for Bernie, you don’t mind a little work to bring the revolution. If you’re voting for Bernie, you live for it.

“I Sexually Identify as an Attack Helicopter” by Isabel Fall

I first read this story after the furor and the fire, after it was taken down, after all the apologies. I read this story in the quietest corner of McCarthy’s Bar, as a cisgender bisexual man who, in my wife’s words, “butches pretty hard,” watching the drunken interplay of a cross-section of San Luis Obispo dance their dance of sex and gender at one another.

And as I sipped my Guinness, scrolling down my phone, I fell into Barb’s story.

Barb is one of the two biological components of a Boeing AH-70 Apache Mystic. “America names its helicopters for the people it destroyed,” says the career soldier, with only tarnished patriotism. Barb and Axis, the gunner, fly across a Mojave Desert occupied by a hostile credit union to blow up a school in the California valley. They’re spotted by enemy craft, and hunted across the desert. That’s the story.

The real story is in Barb’s asides, on gender, on patriotism, on how the war came and why we fight. As an attack helicopter, Barb’s views on gender, on her past life as high-femme Seo Ji Hee and on performing and being an attack helicopter, on where gender comes from and what functions it serves the individual and the human race as a whole…

…isn’t my place to say. It might be in fifty years, after I’ve been digesting this story long enough. But not today. I can’t speak to that condition.

Barb is wry about the United States, and about its war against the Pear Mesa Budget Committee, but ultimately believes in flawed human oversight and its official apparatus, democracy. Barb’s isn’t the full-throated patriotism of midnight rallies or even parade grounds, but it isn’t the time-serving “just to pay for dental school” enlistment soul either. Barb believes. But Barb does not believe unthinkingly. Barb accepted a gender reassignment, not a mind wipe.

Because Barb has things to say about Pear Mesa, too. About how the Pear Mesa actuarial algorithms identified American flags as the enemy and systemically removed every one of them. About how it plants pear orchards on pear orchards, for reasons not even Pear Mesa’s subjects understand. About how Pear Mesa stayed there as the waters rose and consumed the Mississippi Valley and the Feds fled for their northern fastnesses to hunker behind polders of new Amsterdam.

You wouldn’t expect to be afraid of these, but when Melissa offered me a pear at breakfast the next day…

And all the while, Barb performs delicate, unstable flight maneuvers (“Did you know instability is one of the most vital traits of a combat aircraft?”) and conducts electronic warfare, the way I roll my shoulders and bellow my laugh and wear a broad snap-brim fedora just so.

This story is beautiful, and to me, that’s all the justification it needed to be published and see the light of day. It is beautiful, because it is sincere. This story took a sneer of a right-wing mockery, “I sexually identify as an attack helicopter!!!” from the mouth of some red-hatted miltech LARPer, and took it dead seriously. Barb is an attack helicopter, and quickly clarifies that that is a gender assignment rather than a sexuality. Isabel Fall is completely, utterly sincere with this story, sincere about Barb’s gender, sincere about her own gender, sincere about war, and patriotism, and uncertainty, and fluidity, and instability.

That’s why it works. That’s why it’s the best science fiction short story of the year, and still will be in December.

That’s why this story is beautiful.

And that’s why it deserves to be read.

Doña Ana Lucía, Up Close & Personal

“Pardon me my attentions. I have no wish to give offense. Would you consent to let me continue admiring your every word and gesture?”
— Doña Doctora Ana Lucía María Keiko Maximiliano Ghaziyah Hector Luz Serrano y Veracruz, immediately before your drink arrives from a mysterious benefactor

(credit again to PockToffee, who has outdone herself. Merci beaucoup, PockToffee.)

Once again, alternate versions available for my patrons on Patreon. See if you can spot the difference!

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