Ahoy, fellow readers! Welcome to July’s Questing in Shorts, where I round up another month in short fiction reading and tell you all about the things I enjoyed (or sometimes didn’t). This month, I’m filling short fiction notebook number 2, which is this beautiful purple number with a whippet on the cover:
Notebook number 2 is a little beaten up from coming to my
brother’s wedding (it also has an "items to pick up from the house” list written in the
back) and unlike last month, I didn’t manage to fill an entire book in a few
intense days of short fiction. But I’m over halfway through filling it, and the
magazine folder is looking less intimidating than it has in the past, so that’s
all good.
Besides the notebook, the other news is that I’m once again
a judge for the British Fantasy Awards this year, and this time I’m judging in
the Magazines and Periodicals category! Most of the finalists involve short
fiction in some form and there’s a mix of venues I’m familiar with and those that
are new to me, so I’m really looking forward to exploring what all of them have
to offer.
Fantasy Magazine
Let’s kick off with a new-to-me publication! Fantasy
Magazine was kind enough to send me their July issue, with a quartet of stories
whose unifying theme seems to be “a bit spooky”. Lulu Khadim’s “A Softness of
the Heart” is a sweet ghost story about Louise, a girl who lives with one aunt
and is advised by the ghost of another. I love a cosy matter-of-fact ghost
story and this one delivers a family story with just enough interpersonal prickles
to make its resolution satisfying. “There Will Be A Question and Answer Period
After Your Inevitable Demise” by Marika Bailey reimagines the afterlife of an
archetypal hero, putting the classical portrait of masculine prowess on a
conference call where he must hear from the “monstrous” women who suffered as a
result of his deeds.
My favourite story of the issue is “I Would”, by Benjamin C.
Kinney, a great piece of secondary world fantasy from the perspective of a seer
imprisoned by a bandit queen. As the seer navigates possible futures with two
visiting women, who themselves are trying to escape her captor, she has to work
out what is possible and what she – as someone used to thinking of herself as
powerless – needs to do to make it happen (and maybe to end up kissing one of
them at the end). The diverging future paths are a great device, one which really
captures the feeling of someone trapped and desperately seeking their only path
towards freedom.
FIYAH
Issue 19 of FIYAH is "Sound and Color", and within that theme lies five quite different, vibrant stories. I almost wish I’d covered this one last month because then I could have remarked upon how excited I was to come across “Lungs” by Lily Watson so soon after reading “Concerto for Winds and Resistance” by Cara Masten DiGirolamo, which I covered in June's roundup. Where DiGirolamo’s piece uses an orchestra to tell a broader story (and drops the curtain as soon as the first “real” note is played), Watson’s really focuses on bringing to life the magic of collective music, its string group overcoming the challenge of the piece before them (and their own hierarchies) to bring a God to life. Evocative stuff.
This issue also has "Meditations on Sun-Ra’s Bassim" by Yah
Yah Scholfield: I loved Scholfield’s last story with FIYAH and this one is just
as excellent, a one-sided epistolatory narrative from a space traveller to her
sister back on the planet where they grew up. Even though we only get one
sister’s voice, the story evokes such a rich family bond between its two leads,
full of snarky affection and yearning for connection both across physical distance
and the experiential gap of their very different lives. The story’s journey
goes super well with the other two – significantly more tense – journeys in
this issue: “Morning”, by Diane Russell, features a girl and the clone of her
sister sent on a hopeless mission in a failing space colony, with all the pain
points that suggests, and Where the Sky Becomes Milk by Jamie McGhee is a backwards
story of a boy trying to find his way home through a difficult sequence of
locations, the purpose of his journey unfolding as we get closer to its
beginning. And to round off the issue, L.A. Knight’s story offers a great speculative
take on disability, work and escapism, with a disabled jobseeker who fails to
find work that will appropriately accommodate them - until approached by the
supernatural entity responsible for creating portals to other worlds.
Podcastle
Not only did I read some stories with my eyeballs this
month, but I also listened to two of them via the magic of the podcast! Both "Three For Hers" by Filip Hajdar Drnovšek Zorko and "Pull" by Leah Ning are
original to Podcastle, and both offered very different listening experiences.
The latter is a quietly tragic slice of life story about an old man caring for
his ill, superpowered wife (I’m pretty sure she is supposed to be a siren?) who
can “pull” people around her into doing things and also into dreamscapes and memories
– a dangerous thing to happen when implied dementia is taking away the shape of
those memories. Three for Hers is a highly atmospheric fairytale-like story,
about a woman in an occupied land who goes to work for a vicious, abusive Margrave
who insists that nobody around him show emotions. Vida’s experiences in the
Margrave’s services, and her quest for revenge, all come to a very satisfying
conclusion. As you’d expect, the narration is excellent too.
Other Highlights
Two longer stories from other publications really grabbed my
attention. The first is Kuemo of the Masks by Naomi Libicki, in Giganotosaurus.
A troupe of players are captured by bandits and pushed to put on a show, using
the special, magical masks that the protagonist’s mother had left her for just
such a dangerous occasion. Of course, neither the masks – which represent archetypal
deity figures whose stories are told in the plays – nor the bandits are who
they seem, and everything takes a real turn once the story ends up in the underworld.
The narrative voice – and the implied story-within-a-story structure, which we
only get clarity on at the end – are both great in this one.
In Beneath Ceaseless Skies, The Witness Bruska Lai by Aaron Perry (issue 333) grabbed and held my attention through a dense, high-context mystery in a world where all dead and future royalty live in a single palace, designed so they can keep separate but simultaneous spaces through the different ages. Perry not only sets up a very weird story setting in a straightforward, reasonable way, but also creates a mystery – that of a missing Princess – that only makes sense with the context of that worldbuilding. It’s brain bendy, but it works brilliantly, and I loved the imagery of the complex, colour-coded palace and its supposedly genius inhabitants.
Two stories in Uncanny Magazine Issue 40 stood out for me: "Unseelie Brothers, Ltd." By Fran Wilde, which has outstanding worldbuilding and some very imaginative sartorial creations all in the context of a fae dress shop whose dresses are beloved by high society regardless of price; and "Heart Shine" by Shveta Thakarar, whose overlooked protagonist gets a firefly prince to remind her of her own worth. Both hit me directly in the feels and have some wonderful character relationships to watch out for.