The March issue of Lightspeed Magazine is a fairly strong issue with one meh story and one I really didn’t care for. The other six were very enjoyable and thought-provoking. There seemed to be a bit of a theme of love/relationship in this issue. On to the individual reviews.
“Crystalline” by Daniel H. Wilson stars a father who has lost his wife. He and his young daughter are in a cave where a glowing crystal connects them to a multitude of alternate worlds where the wife and mother still lives. The father is coaxing his daughter to approach the crystal and retrieve an alternate version of his wife for them both. Things do not go to plan. This is a bittersweet story of longing and loss and the things it can make us do. (My rating: 4/5)
A countess who can see, experience, and move through the past, present, and future attempts to save a spaceship from falling into a black hole in “One Pinch, Two Pinch” by Beth Goder. This is a tale told in an usual manner that is part of the storytelling itself. I enjoyed that but the whole thing didn’t quite land for me. (My rating: 3/5)
“Contracting Iris” by Peter Watts takes a page out of The Last of Us on HBOMax as it tells the story of a world plagued by a parasitic virus called Iris that slowly takes over its host. We follow a girl named Iris who is trying to navigate this world as she is not feeling well. As she seeks help, she is more and more concerned she might have the virus. But no one seems to be taking her seriously. This tale is creepy and got under my skin. I really felt for Iris the girl and what she was going through. (My rating: 4/5)
In “Four Years Minus Twelve Days” by Samantha Murray, you are a human who is married to an alien knowing that it can only last the period of the story title. But you are so in love that you ignore the metamorphosis that they will go through, forgetting you in the process. It doesn’t matter. You are in love. But as your time grows shorter you start to realize what this really means. This is well-told stuff touching the soft spot in all of us and the fairy tales we tell ourselves when we are in love. (My rating: 4/5)
“Every Little Change” by Aimee Ogden also touches on the struggles of love. Here the husband can leap through time. He does so for reasons he is not allowed to share with his wife. She feels left out and alone, and it starts to wear on their relationship. But is where/when he is going for work or for her benefit or both? For anyone who has gone through a heartbreaking alienation of affection, this story will really resonate with your experience and perhaps make you look at it in a new light. (My rating: 4/5)
In the epistolary story “The Chosen Six” by Oyedotun Damilola Muees, six people are chosen for their magical skills to help a refugee society trying to survive and thrive in a climate-ravaged world. The story here is deeply engrossing but the clunky prose kept pulling me out of it. (My rating: 2/5)
The narrator in “Our Exquisite Delights” by Megan Chee describes an experience that happens over and over again to the people in her story. Each person sees an extra door where they had only seen one previously. What might be on the other side of that door? How might life be different if they opened that extra door? This is a fanciful exploration of those tantalizing thoughts of “what if”. (My rating: 4/5)
The last story of the issue was actually included accidentally in the January issue ebook version and published again in this issue where it was originally intended to be. “The Ministry of Saturn” by Benjamin Peek, explores the nature of creativity, freedom, power over others, and what we owe others. This is the tale of a magician, a homunculus, and his creator. (My rating: 4/5)
By my ratings, this issue wasn’t as good as the others so far this year at an average rating of 3.625. There were no five ratings for me but I still enjoyed reading it. For me, still worth the subscription price and the time to read.