Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and as promised, we’re going to talk about the finalists for the Hugo Award novella category this week! I’ve also got some links for you to check out. It’s finally starting to feel like spring out here–though I still know better than to plant anything I don’t want to have flash frozen until we’re into May. But soon–soon!–I’m looking forward to putting flowers outside my bedroom window. I hope that you have had a similarly nice-weathered week, and have a good weekend ahead of you. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Tuesday!
Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: NDN Collective and Jane’s Due Process
News and Views
New original story from Stephen Graham Jones! “Men, Women, and Chainsaws”
Folk-opera take on sci-fi novel comes to town, after a long gestation (Parable of the Sower comes to Strathmore Music Center)
Janelle MonĂ¡e Writes for the Marginalized in New Science Fiction Collection The Memory Librarian
In the new Wakanda cookbook, Black Panther food lore comes to life
Love, Death + Robots Volume 3 Trailer Reveals Giant People, Alien Menaces, and Bad-Mouthed Robots
The Art of Spear: Rovina Cai’s Illustrations for Nicola Griffith’s Spear
J. Michael Straczynski shares a chapter he cut from his bio: The Great Bible Battle
Europa’s similarity to Greenland hints that Jupiter moon could harbor life
On Book Riot
Badass Female Heroines in YA Fantasy
The Trailer for Thor: Love and Thunder Has Just Dropped
Enter to win a copy of Shinji Takahashi and the Mark of Coatl by Julie Kagawa
This month you can enter to win $250 at Barnes and Noble, a year of Kindle Unlimited, a Kindle Paperwhite, and $100 at Bookshop.org.
Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!
Free Association Friday: Hugo Award Novellas
As promised last week, here’s a closer look at this year’s finalists for the Hugo Awards novella category! A lot of fun options on this one, though I will note… the list isn’t quite as diverse as we normally aim for.
I love each and every one of these books… I’m surprised some of them are considered short enough to be novellas.
Across the Green Grass Fields by Seanan McGuire
Another wayward child finds her way to a magical doorway that takes her to a land of centaurs, kelpies, and unicorns–a land where she’s expected to be a hero, though heroism comes in many forms. And is her path to heroism ordained, necessary, or even right?
Elder Race by Adrian Tchaikovsky
The fourth daughter of a queen tries to save her people from a demon by asking for help from the Elder sorcerer who has always watched over her people from a massive tower. But the tower isn’t quite a tower, and the sorcerer isn’t actually a sorcerer–he’s an anthropologist, and a junior one at that–and he’s forbidden from interfering with the people he’s supposed to be observing. He’s also fairly certain that this demon is no demon at all.
Fireheart Tiger by Aliette de Bodard
Princess Thanh spent most of her childhood as a hostage in the kingdom of Ephteria, which hasn’t moved to colonize her homeland… though it’s only a matter of time. While there, she had her first romance–with the daughter of Ephteria’s ruler–and survived a devastating fire that destroyed much of the royal palace. Now back home, she must navigate between that first love, her conflicted relationship with her disapproving mother, and her loyalty to her home country–and herself.
The Past is Red by Catherynne M. Valente
The world has drowned, left hot and terrible by the fossil-fuel guzzlers of the past. There is now just floating patches of refuse on the water that humans call home, one of which is Garbagetown. Tetley is one resident of Garbagetown, its secretly most beloved resident, and she’s about to find out a terrible secret–and make a new friend.
A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers
Centuries ago, the robots used as mindless workers in Panga became self-aware and walked out into the wilderness, never to be seen again. Until one day, a tea monk having a crisis of purpose meets one of the robots who has returned. The robot has a very specific mission: to find out the answer to the question, “What do people need?”
A Spindle Splintered by Alix E. Harrow
Zinnia’s twenty-first birthday is rapidly approaching, and it’s going to be her last. While no one understands the nature of the medical condition a strange industrial accident left her with, no one in her situation has ever lived to see their twenty-second birthday. When her best friend decides to throw her a Sleeping Beauty-themed party, Zinnia pricks her finger and finds herself falling through worlds, where she meets another sleeping beauty who also needs to escape her unlucky fate.
See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.