November 2016 Clarkesworld Now Available

November 2016 Clarkesworld Now Available

clarkesworld-122-smallI checked Tangent Online this morning to get their thoughts on the current issue of Clarkesworld, but their review isn’t up yet. Phooey. Fortunately, Charles Payseur at Quick Sip Reviews posted an enthusiastic review this week. Here’s his overview:

It’s another packed month at Clarkesworld with six original stories, including a rather charming novelette in translation. And it’s another month that is entirely science fiction, with a splash of science-fantasy thrown in for flavor. These are tales that show visions of the future, conflicts playing out for the soul of humanity and for the fate of planets. Many of the stories take their focus off of Earth to show what humanity is capable of, the way that it can move from place to place, leaving a trail of destruction behind it. There’s hope, though, too, and the stories also show the power that humanity can hold to create and to change and to love….

Yeah, Charles knows how to whet your appetite. I’m especially curious about that “charming novelette in translation,” which turns out to be “Western Heaven” by Chen Hongyu, translated by Andy Dudak. Here’s what he says (in part).

Aww. This is a rather adorable adventure story about a robot artist, Wu Kong, on an Earth still deeply tainted from humanity, who wants to see where humans went, the planet that they fled to in order to escape the destruction they had wrought, leaving the robots behind, abandoned. Wu Kong gathers up a small band of robots to accompany him and together they work to find where humanity went and answer the questions burning within them. What are humans like? What is the meaning of work? Why were robots created? It’s a story that moves along with a rather chipper feel, this great adventure that the robots are going on. It almost feels like an old animated film to me, fun and with robots with distinct styles and voices… An excellent read!

Here he is on “Afrofuturist 419” by Nnedi Okorafor, just because I love his one-line story description:

Well this is a very fun, funny, and creepy story about a Nigerian astronaut left in space for 14 years and finally coming home because of a viral scam letter… It’s another short work but it’s an excellent blend of audio and text, tension and mystery, horror and humor. Go read it!

Read Charles’ complete review of the issue here.

The November Clarkesworld, issue #122, is packed with new fiction by Nin Harris, Nelly Geraldine García-Rosas, Samantha Murray, Bo Balder, Chen Hongyu, and Nnedi Okorafor, and reprints by Ian McDonald and Paul McAuley. The cover, “Kasai,” is by Joseph Biwald.

Here’s the complete Table of Contents.

What The Stories Steal” by Nin Harris
Where Water Joins” by Nelly Geraldine García-Rosas
Of Sight, of Mind, of Heart” by Samantha Murray
Follow the White Line” by Bo Balder
Western Heaven” by Chen Hongyu
Afrofuturist 419” by Nnedi Okorafor
An Eligible Boy” by Ian McDonald (from Fast Forward 2, 2008)
Reef” by Paul McAuley (from Skylife: Space Habitats in Story and Science, 2000)

The non-fiction is:

Kubrick to Scott: Relevancy and Realism in Cinematic Science Fiction by Mark Cole
Bioengineered Athletes and True Stories: A Conversation with Lauren Beukes by Chris Urie
Another Word: On Saying No by Sarah Pinsker
Editor’s Desk: Your Mission by Neil Clarke

There are two podcasts (so far), but check back before the end of the month, as more may be posted.

What The Stories Steal by Nin Harris, read by Kate Baker
Where Water Joins by Nelly Geraldine García-Rosas, read by Kate Baker

We last covered Clarkesworld with Issue 121.

Clarkesworld is edited by Neil Clarke and Sean Wallace, and published by Wyrm Publishing. The contents are available for free online; individual issues can be purchased for $3.99, and monthly subscriptions are $2.99/month. A 6-month sub is $17.94, and the annual price is $35.88. Learn more and order individual issues at the magazine’s website.

See the complete issue here.

Our November Magazine Rack is here. See all of our recent fantasy magazine coverage here.

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