Simply one of the best short stories I have ever read. There is so much feeling in it.
The Comebacker by David Eggers (2023) — 6,400 words (about 26 minutes for the average reader)
Originally published in The Atlantic, September 2023.
"A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies. The man who never reads lives only one." – George R. R. Martin
Simply one of the best short stories I have ever read. There is so much feeling in it.
The Comebacker by David Eggers (2023) — 6,400 words (about 26 minutes for the average reader)
Originally published in The Atlantic, September 2023.
This is one of the stories I read as a kid in a volume of Hugo winners that kindled my love for short science fiction.
Or All the Seas with Oysters by Avram Davidson (1958) — 3,539 words (about 14 minutes for the average reader)
Originally published in Galaxy Science Fiction Magazine, May 1958.
A poignant story about a mother doing her best for her daughter and the challenge this creates.
The Letters They Left Behind by Scott Edelman (2023) — 7,461 words (about 30 minutes for the average reader)
Originally published in Lightspeed Magazine issue #159, August 2023.
A rich story with so many layers for its brevity. Subtle. Much is explored without coming right out and saying it. The story really sank into me.
A Guide to Matchmaking on Station 9 by Nika Murphy (2023) — 4,052 words (about 16 minutes for the average reader)
Originally published in Clarkesworld Magazine issue #204, September 2023.
This is the most recent five-star story I read. I read it this morning. It is an intriguing allegory exploring difference and change.
After the Invasion of the Bug-Eyed Aliens by Rachel Swirsky (2025) — 9,750 words (about 39 minutes for the average reader)
Originally published in Reactor magazine, 19 March 2025.
For March my book club reads women’s fiction or a book written by a woman. We selected this book. It was published in 2018 and proceeded to win numerous awards including the Hugo, Locus, and Nebula Awards for best novel. I finished it the night before our book club meeting this past Wednesday.
The book is an alternate history. In the spring 1952 with Dewey as president (not Truman), a meteor strikes and wipes out the entire east coast of the United States. The damage to the whole planet is so bad that the world immediately starts making plans to get off of it. Elma is the main character and narrator, a female computer (one who does math, not a machine) and former WASP pilot who dreams of becoming an astronaut.
The book starts with a bang, literally. You are dropped right into the action as the meteor hits in the first few pages. A number of the computers in the new space agency are former WASPs eager to get into space. The male leaders are eager to maintain the status quo while Elma’s husband is the image of support. In this way, it was a bit cliché for me. And certain aspects of the story seemed a bit drawn out. Overall I really enjoyed the novel. It always kept me wanting to find out what happened next. I will definitely be reading the next book in the series.
My rating: 4/5
I finally finished reading the March issue of Clarkesworld last week. Here are my brief review of the fiction there.
From Enceladus, with Love by Ryan Cole (4,970 word) — A young teenager stows away on a ship to find her mom on Enceladus, one of Saturn’s moons, where she is a miner. Everything changes when the ship wakes up. A fresh look at a newly awakening AI. (My rating: 5/5)
Pollen by Anna Burdenko, translated from Russian by Alex Shvartsman (5,330 words) — A family is the lead mission to a planet with psychedelic pollen. It hard to say much more without spoiling it. An emotional story of a family dealing with a difficult situation. (My rating: 4/5)
Mindtrips by Tlotlo Tsamaase (7,730 words) — A young woman with a traumatic past is forced to take therapy pills to deal with it so those in authority can figure out what actually happened to cause her mother’s death. Explores the ethics of forcing other to take mental health meds. (My rating: 4/5)
Those Uncaring Waves by Yukimi Ogawa (18,140 words) — A pattern maker who helps to heal people’s pain tries to help a person whose own skin patterns have damaged her mental health. A deeply moving story of helping others for its own sake as well as the importance of having difficult discussions. (My rating: 5/5)
Hook and Line by Koji A. Dae (4,150 words) — An old medium on a generation ship tries to find a way to stay connected to the spirits of those who boarded the ship on Earth. A story about reconciling the past with the future. (My rating: 4/5)
The Sound of the Star by Ren Zeyu, translated from Chinese by Jay Zhang (3,820 words) — A man visits a number of planets where their stars all affect how sound works. For example, on one sound stays available in the atmosphere almost forever. A very unique exploration of sound in our lives. (My rating: 5/5)
Funerary Habits of Low Entropy Entities by Damián Neri (3, 500 words) — A crab-like explorer who subsumes the minds of the dead he eats, finds a dead human, eats it, and builds a spaceship to leave one of Jupiter’s moons. This feels like a scientist wrote it without considering his layman audience. (My rating: 2/5)
The average rating for the stories in this issue: 4.14 out of 5 stars.
On the dangers of making your small child an internet video star.
Starpoop by Sandra McDonald (2023) — 3,244 words (about 13 minutes for the average reader)
Originally published in Lightspeed magazine, issue #158, July 2023.
This Hugo award winner in 1960 is a bit long but well worth the time invested.
Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes — 12,349 words (about 49 minutes for the average reader)
Originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Volume 16, No. 4 (April 1959)
Let’s start the week off with this Hugo award winning short story, a cautionary tale of algorithms and AI.
Better Living Through Algorithms by Naomi Kritzer — 5,610 words (about 22 minutes for the average reader)
Originally published in Clarkesworld magazine, Issue #200, May 2023