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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for January 31: Mexicanx SFF

Happy… is it already Friday? Really? Are we sailing out literary ship through a time warp or something? What is time, even? Yes, it’s Alex, and I’m discombobulated, but there’s at least some news and some books!

Let’s celebrate the first month of 2020 with Genevieve Valentine’s first Red Carpet Rundown for the year, which is the Golden Globes. (If you like reading that, check out her meltdown over camp for the 2019 Met Gala. Also, she writes books, like Dream Houses.)

News and Views

This interview with author Andrzej Sapkowski (author of The Witcher) is amazing and basically I have never before felt so spiritually connected to another human being.

A really great interview with Tochi Onyebuchi about Riot Baby.

P. Djeli Clark has announced a new book: Ring Shout. I am in awe of the cover.

Jeannette Ng wrote another awesome essay! On Identity, Performing Marginalisations and the Limitations of OwnVoices; or “Why I can’t just repeat my uncle’s favourite joke about eating dogs” (reminder: Jeannette’s book you should check out is Under the Pendulum Sun.)

C.L. Polk wrote a fictional history of the bicycles we see in Witchmark.

Kylo Ren returns to Undercover Boss.

Build-a-Bear has a Porg! A PORG!

On Book Riot

Quiz: Which Psy-Changeling Race Do You Belong To?

Free Association Friday: Mexicanx SFF

For no reason in particular (Y I K E S), let’s shine a spotlight on the work of Mexicanx science fiction and fantasy writers! The work ranges from the sublimely beautiful to the hilariously pulpy. But to start, there are a few short story writers to start you off:

Now, onto the books!

gods of jade and shadowGods of Jade and Shadow by Silvia Morena-Garcia – A young woman in the jazz age dreams of escaping a life of domestic drudgery until she accidentally frees the Mayan god of death, who wants her help getting his throne back from his greedy brother. If she fails, that will mean her own death. If she succeeds, all of her dreams will come true.

Lords of the Earth by David Bowles – When the stratovolcano Popocatepetl erupts, something much worse than a deadly pyroclastic flow come out of it: a massive, reptilian monster. The kaiju soon starts attacking Mexico City and more volcanoes start threatening to erupt–and disgorge who knows what other monsters. It’s up to a disabled physicist and an indigenous anthropologist to first get over their long-held personal feud and then find the blend of science and myth that will save Mexico.

Loba by Verónica Murguía Lores – “El rey Lobo gobierna con mano de hierro en Moriana, un país que basa su prosperidad en la esclavitud y la guerra. Angustiado por una maldición según la cual jamás podrá tener un hijo varón, Lobo desatiende a sus dos hijas, en especial a Soledad, la primogénita, que no logra el cariño de su padre por más que lo intenta entrenándose en cacerías y combates simulados. Cuando la noticia de una amenaza terrible -un dragón- llega a la corte, Soledad acepta la responsabilidad de partir a los confines del reino para ver cuánto hay de verdad en los rumores. Esa búsqueda la llevará a conocer la amistad, el amor, la magia y, en última instancia, la esencia de sí misma.”

High Aztech by Ernest Hogan – Tenochtitlán, formerly known as Mexico City, is a smoggy wonder of stainless steel pyramids. Poet Xolotl runs for his life through the metropolis, pursued by a cult he ticked off with a scathing comic book, mobsters, terrorists and… garbage collectors? But his problems are far worse than his lampooning pen writing checks the rest of him can’t cash. He’s carrying a technological virus capable of downloading religious beliefs into the human brain, and everyone would love to get their hands on it, no matter how much of his blood ends up spilled in the process.

The Nymphos of Rocky Flats by Mario Acevedo – “Felix Gomez went to Iraq a soldier. He came back a vampire.” In a novel full of shear, pulpy, urban fantasy detective goodness–with very little sex involved, despite the title–Felix Gomez storms the scene. A strict “vegetarian” vampire, he uses his supernatural powers (hampered by his diet) to investigate the strange happenings at the nuclear weapons facility of Rocky Flats.

Spirits of the Ordinary: A Tale of Casas Grandes by Kathleen Alcala – The Carabajal family has many secrets: their Jewish faith, the alchemy practiced by the family patriarch, the clairvoyant talents of the otherwise silent matriarch. Momentus events are coming to their lives, centered on the ancient cliff dwellings of Cases Grandes.


See you, space pirates. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. 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.

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for January 28

Happy new release day, shipmates! Here we are again, about to plunge into the teeming bookstores and come back, lighter in the wallet but richer in some really aweome books. It’s Alex, with some news and a few new releases you might want to check out.

Also, I come bearing the gospel of Picard; I somehow managed to not cry through the entire first episodes, but I am on tenterhooks waiting for the second. If you have access to the CBS streaming service, make sure to catch up on the Short Treks (they’re all in their own section now) because there are some really cute ones. When you get to The Trouble With Edward (warning: I spent the entire time almost howling with horrified laughter), do yourself a favor and make sure to watch ALL the way to the end.

Fun thing for the week: this is an absolutely amazing Twitter thread that reminds me Qualityland for reasons you will easily divine.

New Releases

Highfire by Eoin Colfer – The great and terrifying Wyvern, Lord Highfire of the Highfire Eyrie, once struck fear into the hearts of humans everywhere. Now, disguised as a human you can just call “Vern,” he would rather sit on his recliner and drink vodka while he watches Flashdance for the nth time. His peaceful existence of complete dissipation is interrupted by a canny young man called Squib who has just witnessed a murder and the corrupt cop who tries to blow him up with a grenade launcher. Squib’s a clever young man and cuts a deal with “Vern” — he’ll bring the dragon all the vodka he wants and listen to him talk about his favorite movie, in exchange for protection.

Seven Deadly Shadows by Courtney Alameda and Valynne E. Maetani – Bullied by her classmates and ignored by her parents, Kira only has one thing going for her, and it might be more of a curse than a blessing: she can see the yokai that travel the streets of Kyoto. When she learns that the demon king will rise during the next blood moon to hunt down an ancient relic that he will use to end the world, she knows she must seek the help of seven powerful death gods if she wants the world to have a fighting chance.

Buzz Kill by David Sosnowski – Two hackers–one the daughter of an online therapist to Silicon Valley’s best and “squirreliest,” and the other a White Hat who has been chatting with her dad after begin given the opportunity to go legit–meet online and conceive a bouncing baby AI named BUZZ.

Cast in Wisdom by Michelle Sagara – The sentient Towers of the city of Elantra guard the world against the encroaching Shadow. Between the towers exists a border zone where magic works differently and the geography changes from one day to the next. When a Shadow escapes the reach of the towers, Kaylin and her dragon companion must figure out how and why; if the Shadows can reach the heart of Elantra, the city will be devoured.

 

News and Views

Jeannette Ng hits it out of the park with another excellent essay: Confessions of a Hate Reader, or Bad Writing Habits I Picked up from Bad Criticism

My new favorite Twitter account ever: Science Diagrams That Look Like Shitposts

New short story from Maria Dahvana Headley: The Girlfriend’s Guide to Gods

Adam Driver did another round of Undercover Boss on SNL.

Big Data and The Centenal Cycle by Malka Older

Still on the fence about seeing Color Out of Space. And worth asking: Can you tell an HP Lovecraft story while rejecting his hatred?

Rudy Rucker discusses Agency with William Gibson

It’s definitely not unusual for Star Trek to be very political, but the Daily Beast argues that Picard might be the most political show currently out there.

Relevant to my interests and perhaps yours: The first cookies have been baked in space.

On Book Riot

19 Door-Opening Quotes from The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E. Harrow

What Is Speculative Fiction?

5 Reasons Why You Should Be Reading Seanan McGuire


See you, space pirates. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. 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.

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for January 24

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s been one heck of a week, but we got through it with the power of books, among other wonderful things. It’s Alex with some news and some slightly (okay, more than slightly) murder-y books to take you into the weekend.

Thing that made me happy cry today so I had to share: Just watch this clip of Patrick Stewart and Whoopi Goldberg on The View.

News and Views

A beautiful profile of N.K. Jemisin in The New Yorker.

Preeti Chhiber has written an adorable Star Wars picture book that’ll come out October 6. You can check out some of the super cute pictures from it here.

At Young People Read Old SFF, The White Pony by Jane Rice.

The Witcher is getting an animated film in addition to a second season. Also, if you’ve been chomping at the bit for the soundtrack, it’s coming. You can already Toss a Coin to Your Witcher right now.

Oh good. We’re getting at least one more season of Jodie Whittaker as the Doctor.

Christopher Tolkien the cartographer.

The protagonist of The Hunger Games prequel The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes has been revealed. I am… not excited, to be honest.

Can’t wait to read the novel about this: Federal officials seized Alan Turing’s missing-since-1984 doctorate and knighthood medal when someone offered to “loan” them to the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Sarcos is making fully mobile and strong industrial exoskeletons, so we’re on track to fight aliens Ripley-style.

Known class traitor Mr. Peanut is finally getting the fate he deserves.

This will come as no surprise to anyone who’s ever owned a cat, but our little feline pals will happily nom us when we’re gone–and it has been scientifically determined which bits of us they’ll find tastiest. Bless their evil, adorable little hearts.

On Book Riot

This week’s SFF Yeah! is about historical sci-fi and fantasy.

5 YA Sci-Fi and Fantasy Novels That Tackle Climate Change

Free Association Friday

Happy… 31st anniversary of Ted Bundy being given the chair? A little yikes, a little grim, but it’s a good prompt for looking at SFF that blends with the (mostly murder) mystery.

Servant of the Underworld by Aliette de Bodard – You might think that a priestess showing up covered in blood in the Aztec Empire, which runs on human sacrifice, would not be a big deal. But you’d be wrong, and Acatl, High Priest of the Dead, is called on to investigate this little problem. That turns into a much deeper, bigger problem than anyone could have expected, involving politics and magic. This is the start of a series of Aztec noir mysteries.

The Killing Moon by N.K. Jemisin – In Gujaareh, priests of the dream-goddess harvest magic from sleepers that dream and use it to heal, keep the peace… and kill if necessary. But someone begins to murder the dreamers of Gujaareh, and the Gatherer Ehiru finds himself called on to not only protect a woman he was sent to kill, but unwind the dark cause of these deaths.

cover of Six Wakes by Mur LaffertySix Wakes by Mur Lafferty – It’s still murder, even if it’s a clone. Maria wakesand her six crew mates wake up in blood-streaked clone vats on a spaceship with no memories of how they died… which is bad, actually, since that means there something worse than a simple mass murder going on. Each of the seven crew members has a secret, and each of them could very well be the killer…

The Ark by Patrick S. Tomlinson – On a generation ship that’s within spitting distance of its destination, being the Chief of Police is basically a symbolic role for former sports hero Bryan Benson because there isn’t any crime. Until a crew member goes missing, and then Bryan has to solve a locked room mystery… where the room is an impossibly massive spaceship.

The Last Policeman by Ben H. Winters – Detective Hank Palace has decided to investigate the apparent suicide of a depressed man as a potential homicide… despite the planet-killing asteroid that’s bearing down on Earth, promising to end all life in six months.

The Imaginary Corpse by Tyler Hayes – Ideas that people love a lot become Real… but where do they go when the people who had them no longer need them? They live in the Imagination, a strange and at times Toon-Town-esque place where they all try to make a new life. One of these Ideas is Tippy the Triceratops, who is filled with Detective Stuff… and his Stuff gets a workout when someone in Imagination decides that murder is a great idea, too.

Honorable Mention: Jade City by Fonda Lee – It’s not so much a murder mystery, where a good person wants to solve the crime and stop the bad person–rather it’s that close cousin, the crime novel. This book is basically about the mafia in magical not-China–and there is a murder that happens. Plus it’s fun as heck.


See you, space pirates. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. 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.

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for January 21

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex with some new releases for you and news, including some even-further-in-the-future releases that I am totally freaking out about.

My favorite thing of the week so far is this cartoon, because this is exactly what it’s like to do science.

New Releases

Agency by William Gibson – Verity takes on a job to test a new app, a digital assistant that operates in a pair of ordinary-looking glasses. She discovers an AI named Eunice, who has a face, a fragmented past, and a worryingly good grasp of combat strategy. A century in the future and in a different timeline, Verity and Eunice are the current “project” of a woman who can look into alternate pasts and nudge them in the direction she wishes.

Remembrance by Rita Woods – Separated out across two centuries, the lives of three Black women (two of whom are enslaved and seeking the road to freedom) are intertwined by the mysterious power that each possesses. If you liked Kindred by Octavia Butler, you don’t want to miss this one.

Given by Nandi Taylor – Yenni, a warrior princess of the Yirba, seeks the cure for her father’s mysterious illness, traveling alone to the Empire of Cresh. Unfortunately, no one warned her about the dragons there… let alone that a particularly arrogant one would try to claim her as his destined mate.

Riot Baby by Tochi Onyebuchi – Ella has a Thing, one that lets her see events that haven’t happened yet, make herself invisible, and more, fueled in part by her helpless anger at the foundation-deep racism her family and her city constantly face. When her brother Kev, who was born in the middle of a riot, is incarcerated, she must decide what to do with this power of hers that can destroy cities.

Ashlords by Scott Reintgen – Phoenix horses are magical creatures made of ash and alchemy, a gift to the Ashlords by their gods. Over the centuries, their cultural orbit around the phoenix horses has created a multi-day, high stakes event: The Races. This year, three of the eleven riders competing are riding for even higher stakes than grievous bodily harm and glory–who will win?

A Queen in Hiding by Sarah Kozloff – Can’t really get more concise than what the publisher had to say: “Orphaned, exiled and hunted, Cerulia, Princess of Weirandale, must master the magic that is her birthright, become a ruthless guerilla fighter, and transform into the queen she is destined to be. But to do it she must win the favor of the spirits who play in mortal affairs, assemble an unlikely group of rebels, and wrest the throne from a corrupt aristocracy whose rot has spread throughout her kingdom.”

News and Views

Wanna read a short story about a cat fighting demons? For He Can Creep

We’re going to be getting a “vengeful Desi, f/f epic fantasy” from Tasha Suri and I AM SO EXCITED. (Tasha wrote Empire of Sand.)

Suyi Davis Okungbowa will be writing a fantasy series inspired by Wes African empires. I AM ALSO EXCITED FOR THIS!  (Suyi wrote David Mogo, Godhunter.)

The Watch has released some stills and some fans are pretty concerned. To be honest, I’m willing to roll with a lot, but where they seem to be going with Sybil is getting a big NOPESPIDER.GIF from me.

Elon Musk apparently would love to make some horrible scifi futures for the not-rich (including the one I wrote; company towns are bad, y’all) actually real. Tobias S. Buckell also has a good point about the squirmy way we talk about going to space. Silvia Moreno-Garcia also wrote a very relevant book: Prime Meridian.

Christopher Tolkien passed away at the age of 95.

Aw, PICARDilly Circus!

Life debts in fiction.

Australian firefighters saved the world’s only groves of Wollemi Pines, a plant species that has outlived the dinosaurs and was thought to be extinct until 1994.

Physicists have confirmed the fastest way to load passengers on an airplane.

A draft genome of the giant squid has been published.


See you, space pirates. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. 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.

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for January 17: The Weather Outside is Frightful

Happy Friday, shipmates! We made it, no matter how bruised and battered after one heck of a week. It’s Alex, ready for some serious escape and some good books–as well as news and discussion that’s more to the fun side this week. Let’s do this.

I am absolutely obsessed with this TikTok and it’s made me laugh so much.

News and Views

Author Iori Kusano did an adorable Twitter thread about her (mis)adventures over the last couple of weeks as a shrine maiden.

Brandon O’Brien wrote a barn burner of an essay about masculinity and Joker.

Food Network Challenge did an episode with Pokémon cakes and look I don’t care if this isn’t even really adjacent to science fiction books, it’s my newsletter and I love everything about this.

Thanks to the Netflix series, The Witcher books are getting a huge reprint.

You can read an excerpt from C.L. Polk’s Stormsong. And, you know, pre-order it.

The nominees for the 2020 Philip K. Dick Award were announced. Some solid books to check out.

Amazon has announced its cast for The Power.

On Book Riot

How Reading Sir Terry Pratchett Helped Me Through My Depression

5 Comics and Graphic Novels to Read if You Love The Expanse

Free Association Friday: Winter Books

In honor of northwest Washington and coastal British Columbia getting hit with a snowstorm they don’t really have the infrastructure to deal with, let’s go for some books with snow and cold and generally crummy weather. The sort of books you want to read while you’re curled up somewhere nice and warm, preferably witih a hot chocolate or other warm beverage of your choice.

The Gaslight Dogs by Karin Lowachee – A nomadic tribe in the arctic faces the invasion and colonization of an Empire. A young spiritwalker is captured and thrown by circumstance into the orbit of a captain in the invading army…and she can teach him a forbidden skill that will make him an outcast and perhaps save both of their peoples. The cold just seeps out of this dense and beautifully written book.

Ajjiit: Dark Dreams of the Ancient Arctic by Rachel Qitsualik-Tinsley and Sean Qitsualik-Tinsley – Is a collection of dark fantasy stories with roots deep in Inuit stories and shamanism.

spinning silverSpinning Silver by Naomi Novik is a fairy tale retelling–an amalgam of several fairy tales, perhaps–about a moneylender’s daughter in a land where winter is encroaching ever earlier and more deeply to the point that it’s nearly endless now, thanks to icy fae creatures. After her reputation for being able to turn silver into gold, if with the mathematics of interest rather than magic, reaches the ears of the fae king, she’s spirited away into danger that she could never imagine and finds the fate of two kingdoms in her hands.

The Bear and the Nightingale by Katherine Arden – This book starts off the Winternight Trilogy and also has its roots deep in eastern European fairy tales. Vasilisa grows up at the edge of the wintery Russian wilderness and grows up on traditional stories. Then she meets one of the monsters of those stories, the winter demon Frost.

Blackfish City by Sam J. Miller – Set in the global climate change post-apocalypse, the titular city floats in Arctic waters, battered by waves and cold winds as one of the remaining livable places on Earth. The city is already unraveling as wealth inequality and corruption create an ever-larger gap between the haves and have-nots… and then a new, terrifying plague begins to burn through the city. And then a mysterious woman arrives, riding on a killer whale, a polar bear by her side.

The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin – The book takes place on an icebound planet of snow and glaciers named Winter, populated by a people who know how to survive well in that environment. In addition to liking the cold, the people of Winter are genderfluid and have no sexual prejudice. The human ambassador who visits them has a long journey to get over his own prejudices.


See you, space pirates. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. 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.

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for January 14

Happy Tuesday and I hope you’re ready for some new releases! It’s Alex, coming in fast on the delivery barge, and I’ve got some news besides. A bunch of fun interview stuff this week, for some reason.

In non-SFF news, this thread on cat coat genetics gave me some serious galaxy brain. Sort of related: what happens when you give a clouded leopard a Christmas tree.

New Releases

Burn the Dark by S.A. Hunt – A viral YouTube fiction series about a witch hunter is, unbeknownst to the millions who follow it, nonfiction. The creator of the series, Robin, is out for revenge on a coven of rural witches that wronged her mother long ago.

The Vanished Birds by Simon Jimenez – Nia is the captain of a spaceship, adrift in time because she ages more slowly than any family or friends she’s ever had thanks to relativistic travel. She meets a mysterious, scarred boy who communicates only by playing music on a wooden flute and decides to welcome him into her crew–and family. But there are dangerous forces who want the boy for his gifts…

A Longer Fall by Charlaine Harris – Lizbeth Rose is hired onto a crew to protect a crate that’s going the last place on Earth she wants to be: Dixie. But what should have been a cake walk turns deadly quickly, with the rest of the crew massacred and the crate stolen. Lizbeth has no choice but to go undercover and call in old favors if she wants to finish the job.

The End of the Ocean by Maja Lunde, translated by Diane Oatley – In 2019, a seventy-year-old woman sets sail on a dangerous voyage, haunted by memories of her past. Twenty-two years later, a man and his daughter flee from a southern Europe that has been ravaged by drought and wars… and find a sailboat miles away from the nearest body of water.

A Beginning at the End by Mike Chen – In a post-plague world that has disintegrated into self-governing cities and wasteland gangs, a former pop star tries to create a new identity for herself so she can escape her domineering father. Her fate becomes intertwined with that of an event planner who just wants a fresh start and a father trying to keep custody of his daughter–and then a new outbreak of the plague begins.

Dark and Deepest Red by Anna-Marie McLemore – In the summer of 1518, a mysterious sickness sweeps through Strasbourg, causing women ill with a burning fever to dance in the streets–some until they fall over, dead. A young woman and her family fall under suspicion of witchcraft. Five hundred years later, another young woman encounters a pair of red shoes that force her to dance uncontrollably. Her only chance of survival is solving a mystery that’s lain dormant for five centuries.

News and Views

SL Huang wrote this heart-rending thread about her short story As the Last I May Know. Both are worth your time to read.

A profile of Maurice Broaddus, author of Pimp My Airship.

The Guardian interview with William Gibson: “I was losing a sense of how weird the real world was.”

Tor.com made a cool graphic that shows where a bunch of fantasy second worlds sit on the axes Seanan McGuire created for her Wayward Children series.

Sir Ian McKellen has shared his production blogs from The Lord of the Rings.

A fun interview with William Jackson Harper, in which he uses Chidi to analyze Josh (the character he played in Midsommar).

Filed under “Video gamers are good, actually.”

I am extremely excited about the new Birds of Prey trailer.

I enjoy a good take-down perhaps far more than I should, especially when it involves something helmed by Steven Moffat: On the Profound Awfulness of Netflix’s Dracula

I’ve been not mentioning the continuing meltdown at Romance Writers of America because it’s not really our lane at this newsletter, but Hugo-nominated writer and Space Raptor Butt Invasion king Chuck Tingle got dragged into it by the now-ex-President, and he made a beautiful thing.

On Book Riot

15 Science Fiction Short Stories to Take You Out of This World

7 Amazing Illustrated Editions of Neil Gaiman’s Novels

5 Comics and Graphic Novels to Read if You Enjoyed The Witcher

See you, space pirates. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. 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.

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for January 10

Happy Friday, space pirates! It’s Alex with some Friday news and some cool books you might want to check out. I will say, the best news I got all week is that Rian Johnson is already working on a sequel to Knives Out. And I am amused and, to be honest, a little puzzled by the trend of people seeing Cats while high out of their gourds. That’s sure a thing.

I know I normally try to keep things light in the intro, but if you’ll indulge me in being serious for a moment: everything I hear about the fires in Australia is breaking my heart. A couple of small ways we can help from half a world away are: Victoria Zoos’ Bushfire Emergency Wildlife Fund and Fire Relief Fund for First Nations Communities. Longer term, there’s Seed, an organization that supports Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people fighting for climate justice.

News and Views

Essay of the week and an absolute barn burner: Asimov’s Empire, Asimov’s Wall (There are still notably awards named after Asimov.)

Locus has a report from the Chengdu International Science Fiction Conference.

Dune is going to be a set of graphic novels.

In “[Some] Star Wars fans are good, actually“: Over 3300 donors have raised over $70,000 for Adam Driver’s charity.

A lovely post at Tor.com about the works of Silvia Moreno-Garcia. (All of them are good and you should read them.)

Some short fiction recommendations from December, courtesy of Alex Brown at Tor.com. Or for an expansive list of short fiction recommendations that cover the whole year, Charles Payseur at Quick Sip Reviews has you covered.

Three Bill Williamson short stories by Harry Turtledove for your reading pleasure.

You can read the first chapter of Sarah Gailey’s Upright Women Wanted. (Full disclosure: We have the same agent.)

Any week I can link you to PNAS is a good week. Here’s a cool paper about a massive impact crater found in Laos, buried under a volcanic field. SyFy does a good layman’s summary of it if you prefer. It’s no Chicxulub, but it still would have been a bad day if you were in the neighborhood.

One more geology nerd thing: this interactive globe lets you see how a city’s location has changed over millions of years.

On Book Riot

15 of the Best LGBTQ Science Fiction Books

20 Must-Read 2020 SFF Books

In this week’s SFF Yeah! podcast we’re talking SFF with a dash of romance.

Free Association Friday: SFF Written by Muslim Authors

For absolutely no reason whatsoever, how about we talk about a few books by Muslim authors?

We Hunt the Flame by Hafsah Faizal – Set in a fantasy ancient Arabia, a girl who disguises herself as a boy hunts to feed her people, and a Prince assassinates the enemies of his father. They’re both legends in their own right, whether they want to be or not, and they’re on a collision course as they both seek the same magical artifact.

Throne of the Crescent Moon by Saladin Ahmed – The Crescent Moon Kingdoms are already boiling over with intrigue and conflict, the home to epic power struggles and magical beings. Add to that mix a series of supernatural murders that may be part of a plot to overthrow the throne, and the entire world may just tear itself down to the foundations.

The Bird King by G. Willow Wilson – A historical fantasy set in the last emirate of Musliim Spain, about a concubine and her friend the palace mapmaker, who has the magical gift to make maps of places he’s never seen–a gift viewed as dark sorcery by the rising Christian Spanish monarchy. With their lives and freedom at stake, the two friends have an impossible journey to make outside of the palace walls they’ve always known.

Palestine+100 – A short story anthology filled with the works of 12 Palestinian authors, imagining the not-so-far future of 2048 in ways that range from superheroes to sci-fi noir.

City of Brass by S.A. Chakraborty – I absolutely adore this book, which is about a con woman with a mysterious past and a djinn warrior who is the sort of arrogant yet weirdly loveable a-hole you want to shake by the hair, briefly set against the backdrop of the Ottoman empire before they depart the human world for that of the daeva. Then it’s politics and magic and would the two of you just kiss already oh no there’s also a handsome and well-intentioned prince who is so gosh darn nice that everyones manipulating him and did I mention that he’s hot too oh noooooooo.


See you, space pirates. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. 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.

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Swords and Spaceships for January 7: New Year, New Releases

Happy First Round of New Releases for the New Year! That’s a holiday, right? Well, it is now. I’m Alex, and I’ve got six new books (among the many releasing today!) to check out, as well as some news in the queue. And yes, it really is just the first week of the new year.

There’s been a thing on Twitter this last week with people summarizing books using the Reddit AITA (Am I the Asshole?) format, and I have just been laughing so hard. The Mary Sue collected some of the best tweets.

New Releases

Lady Hotspur by Tessa Gratton – For those of us who have ever read Shakespeare’s Henry IV part 1 and 2 and wished there were more women. The Lady Knights, whose motto is “Strike Fast, Love Hard, Live Forever,” have a war of succession on their hands, and Lady Hotspur Persy will decide the fate of the kingdom by what side she chooses.

The Black Cathedral by Marcial Gala, translated by Anna Kushner – A preacher moves his family to Cienfuegos, and receives a vision: he must build a temple greater than any other in Cuba and turn the city into the new Jerusalem. Those who grow up in the shadow of the rising cathedral are marked by violence, cruelty, and selfishness–and they have stories to tell.

Woven in Moonlight by Isabel Ibañez – The usurper Atoc has killed or driven all but one of the Illustrian royal family from La Ciudad. Now he demands the hand of the survivor, Condesa, in marriage. But she sends her decoy Ximena to the wedding in her place–and Ximena is defined both by her ability to weave thread from moonlight and her all-consuming thirst for revenge.

Come Tumbling Down by Seanan McGuire – Jack has taken the body of her sister to the Moors, a place where death definitely isn’t permanent or necessarily a problem. When she returns to the School for Wayward Children, it’s clear something has gone disturbingly wrong in a way only a mad scientist can manage–and she desperately needs her friends’ help.

Shadowshaper Legacy by Daniel José Older – Sierra, now separated from the other Shadowshapers, those with the magical ability to infuse ancestral spirits into works of art. Now she must harness the Deck of Worlds and her own power if she’s to save them all from the impending war between the houses… just when an old deal that Sierra’s ancestors made with Death is coming home to roost.

Qualityland by Marc Uwe-Kling – Welcome to Qualityland, the best country on Earth, where every aspect of a person’s life is determined by algorithms, including those that deliver products from TheShop to your doorstep before you even order them. The algorithms know best. Then a machine scrapper who can’t bring himself to actually scrap anything rebels by trying to return an item he knows he doesn’t want, shaking the very foundations of society.

News and Views

Hugo Nominations have opened for this year.

Every genre movie Netflix has announced for this year.

If you need a refresher before you leap into Come Tumbling Down, Seanan McGuire has recapped the series for you.

How Tolkien and The Lord of the Rings changed publishing forever.

The only other thing I’m going to say about The Rise of Skywalker is that I love John Boyega and I would wrestle a bear for him.

The Lost Diaries of General Hux

Cat Rambo has an amazing, massive essay that is well worth reading: The New Rude Masters of Fantasy & Science Fiction — and Romance

If you’ve ever wondered why writers spend so much time talking about money and how we never get any of it, here’s one of the reasons why.

This is fascinating on several levels: Academic paper in comic form explores ethics of treating torturer with PTSD

(Warning for annoying auto-play video) This headline is amazing: Mass. Palm Reader Stole Over $70,000 From Client in Exorcism Scheme, Police Say

On Book Riot

Roughing It in Science Fiction and Fantasy

Read Harder 2020: A Sci-Fi/Fantasy Novella

Take This Lord of the Rings Quiz to Find Your Next Fantasy Read


See you in the new year, space pirates. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. 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.

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for January 3: New Year’s Resolutions

Happy new year, shipmates! We did it, we survived 2019 and escaped that weird, often times terrible (if not necessarily personally so) monstrosity of a year and even decade. Here’s Captain Alex to tell you that the good news is, there are a lot of awesome books coming at us in 2020, so we’re going to have a good start to the new decade.

Here’s some news and book-related silliness to give 2020 a good start–and I do want to say thank you all for reading this newsletter. I wasn’t sure how well I’d do it or how long I’d be able to when I took it over in 2019, but I’ve really enjoyed squealing about books with y’all. Let’s keep doing it in the roaring 2020s!

By the way, this is the best thing I’ve seen on Twitter all week. I am #TeamMom all the way.

News and Views

The 2019 Darth Vader Parenthood Award for Outstandingly Horrible Fictional Parents

A really interesting essay that academically examines the problematic roots of cyberpunk (by someone who loves cyberpunk): Techno-Orientalism in Science Fiction

The cover has been revealed for Matt Wallace’s new book, Savage Legion. (Matt and I share an agent.)

How Tolkien wrote the One Ring as its own character.

The science fiction that became science fact in 2019.

From the Department of Vampire Affairs: DNA Analysis Revelaed the Identity of 19th Century “Connecticut Vampire”

Tor.com has republished a Peter S. Beagle short story to enjoy to start off the year: The Story of Kao Yu

5 book covers from the 1970s that actually represent the story

If you’re interested in some deep genre wonkery, you should definitely check out Jason Sanford’s assessment of the state of genre magazines going into 2020.

Also wonky and interesting: Fandom Went Mainstream in the 2010s–for Better and Worse

The title says it all: How Kepler Invented Science Fiction and Defended His Mother in a Witchcraft Trial While Revolutionizing Our Understanding of the Universe

On Book Riot

Magic, Myths, and Assassins: 6 Latinx Fantasy Novels You Can’t Miss

16 of the Best Standalone SFF Novels from 2019

Quiz: What Should You Read Before THE RISE OF SKYWALKER?

In 2020, I resolve to…

New year, new goals, right? Time for some resolutions. If you’re not sure what goals to set for yourself, you can take an example from books. Like these!

…end corporate fascism: The Light Brigade by Kameron Hurley.

…become the world’s greatest detective: Steel Crow Saga by Paul Krueger

…kill a god: The Warrior Moon by K. Arsenault Rivera

…choose which children’s book series will determine the very shape of reality: Middlegame by Seanan McGuire

…become the next ruler and wreak my vengeance: Queen of the Conquered by Kacen Callender

…make enough money for my goddamn rent: David Mogo, Godhunter by Suyi Davies Okungbowa

…find the last dragon: The Bone Ships by R.J. Barker

…end daylight savings time: Nine Fox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee

…keep everything shipshape and sparkly clean: Terminal Alliance by Jim C. Hines

…take care of that vermin problem we’ve been ignoring for months: Thrawn: Treason by Timothy Zahn

to be taught…boldly go where no one has gone before: To Be Taught, If Fortunate by Becky Chambers

…finally confess my secret crush: Witchmark by C.L. Polk

…rescue the coal miners from the Goblin King: Desdemona and the Deep by C. Cooney

…become an astronaut and fight sexism: The Fated Sky by Mary Robinette Kowal


See you in the new year, space pirates. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. 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.

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Swords and Spaceships

Swords and Spaceships for December 24: A Celebration of Small Press and Indie

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! We’ve almost powered through the home stretch of this year. Just a few more days (and an obstacle course composed mostly of cookies and fudge if your life is like mine) stands between us and a bright new year of new books! It’s Alex, with one last book celebration for the year, and just a little news on the side.

If you need an absolutely delightful Twitter thread for your day, here’s one of scientists explaining what they do in all-too-plain terms.

Also, there will not be a newsletter coming to you next Friday (December 27th) or Tuesday (December 31st), so I’ll see you in 2020!

14 Small Press and Indie Books From 2019

Of Dawn and Embers by Kyoko M – This is the third book of a series about conservation, dragons, and bad people cloning dragons. The first book is Of Cinder and Bone.

Retaking Elysium by M. Darusha Wehm – Jules Morales takes a trip out to Mars, a planet “caught between capitalist exploitation and human exploration” intending to just make a buck, maybe have an adventure. They get more than they bargained for.

The Demon Door by Kim Alexander – This is a whole four book series, and I love Kim’s quick summary: “Two worlds, a hot depressed hero, a fierce and passionate heroine, his mother, her sister(s), his best friend, his best friend’s boyfriend, a bunch of evil wizards, a snotty little girl who is also a wizard, and a whole lot of poor decision making!”

Five Minutes at Hotel Stormcove edited by E.D.E. Bell is anthology of flash and short fiction and contains stories like this gorgeous one by Jasre’ Ellis: By the Light of the New Moon

The Evolved Ones: Awakening by Natasha Oliver – Humanity seems more curious than afraid of the Evolved Ones among them, with scientists trying to discern why some humans are developing abilities while others do not. For humans, it’s exciting. For the Evolved Ones, it’s hide or disappear.

The Trans Space Octopus Congregation by Bogi Takács – A collection of LGBTQ SFF stories that go from space opera to a bit of body horror.

Strangers by V.S. Holmes – the third book of a trilogy about lesbian archaeologists in space. The first book is Travelers.

By Dark by T. Thorn Coyle – Part of the Witches of Portland series, which is paranormal urban fantasy with a little bit of romance in it, set in (yup) Portland. Book one is By Earth.

Trinity Sight by Jennifer Givhan – An anthroplogist pregnant with twins wakes up to find herself in a terrifying wasteland, a post-apocalyptic New Mexico. As volcanoes erupt and long-dead monsters wake, she must reclaim the heritage she once denied if she’s to have a hope of saving herself or her children.

Salvage by R.J. Theodore – Floating island nations, aliens, gods, and airships. Book one is Flotsam.

Double Edged by Jessie Kwak – When your arch nemesis dies, it’s incredibly rude of them to leave one last puzzle sitting on your doorstep. When it’s a puzzle that could stop a civil war or maybe just kill everyone, that’s even ruder.

The Hammer Falls by Travis Heermann – A gene modified pit fighter has to save the woman he loves–before his heart, damaged by too manny injuries and resurrections, gives out.

Caleuche by Jonathan Ward – The last ship of refugees to escape a world ruined by self-replicating killing machines is the Caleuche. Those on board are frightened, traumatized, and face a new fight for their lives as they try to survive.

The Best Vegan Science Fiction and Fantasy Stories of 2018 edited by B. Morris Allen – Metaphorosis has several anthologies out this year, but this one caught my eye because of the concept. Vegan SFF stories are ones that involve no meat, no hunting, no leather, no use of animals for things such as horseback riding, etc.

News and Views

After thinking about it, I’m not linking to any The Rise of Skywalker news for this week, since I know there are a hideous amount of spoilers floating around out there.

2010-2019: A Decade of Change in Science Fiction and Fantasy

An art exhibit that brings together Star Wars and Southwestern Indigenous artists: The Force is With Our People

The Pen Ten did an interview with Amal El-Mohtar, and you must read it. Amal is half the team that brought you This Is How You Lose the Time War, and you should also check out The Honey Month.

How genre is inspiring Season 18 of Project Runway.

Hulu will not be adapting Anne Rice’s vampire novels after all.

This is an interesting one from the Mary Sue – all of the bestselling books this decade have had female leads.

Looking for Leia is now streaming on SYFY.

A really chewy piece here for us SFF fans: The Decade Fandom Went Corporate

On Book Riot

6 Book Recommendations for Douglas Adams fans

15 of the Best Night Circus quotes from Morgenstern’s Classic

JK Rowling no. JK Rowling why. (CW: Transphobia)

19 Magical Books Like The Night Circus

See you in the new year, space pirates. You can find all of the books recommended in this newsletter on a handy Goodreads shelf. 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.