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The thrilling new young adult novel

by Charlie Jane Anders

 
 
Image: Victories Greater Than Death cover art by Razaras
 
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About The City in the Middle of the Night

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In The City in the Middle of the Night, a young girl is banished into permanent darkness, but she survives by befriending the creatures who live there.

January is a tidally locked world, with a permanent day side and night side, and the human colonists live in the thin strip of twilight between the two extremes. Only one person has ever gone into the night and lived: Sophie, a shy girl from the dark side of town.

Sophie’s bond with the native inhabitants of January may be the one thing that can save the entire human race. But she just wants to save her best friend Bianca, who’s hell-bent on launching a revolution.

Sophie and Bianca team up with a group of smugglers, the Resourceful Couriers, to cross the Sea of Murder and travel across their world. But one of the Resourceful Couriers, a girl named Mouth, has a secret agenda of her own that could get everyone killed.

Read an excerpt from the book here!

What people are saying about City in the Middle of the Night:

“Anders’s worldbuilding is intricate, embracing much of what makes a grand adventure: smugglers, revolutionaries, pirates, camaraderie, personal sacrifice, wondrous discovery, and the struggle to find light in the darkness. This breathlessly exciting and thought-provoking tale will capture readers’ imaginations.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“Anders contains multitudes; it’s always a fascinating and worthwhile surprise to see what she comes up with next.” — Kirkus (starred review)

“An even stronger novel than Anders’ Nebula Award–winning All the Birds in the Sky; a tale that can stand beside such enduring works as Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Left Hand of Darkness, Frank Herbert’s Dune, and Dan Simmons’ Hyperion.” — Booklist (starred review)

“Anders weaves an intricate tale of colonialism and evolution on both physical and social levels.” — Library Journal (starred review)

“One of America’s most inventive writers has done it again: City In the Middle of the Night is a breathtaking work of imagination and storytelling, set in a world of originality, intelligence and empathy.  Each page holds wonders, making the case for Anders as this generation’s Le Guin.” — Andrew Sean Greer, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Less.

“I'm astounded by Charlie Jane Anders' imaginative powers and the scope of her storytelling. Again and again, I was struck by the richness of this world and the people in it. A stunning novel.” Edan Lepucki, author of Woman No. 17.

The City in the Middle of the Night is a wildly inventive, inventively radical, and radically subtle mad rush of a novel.” — Audrey Niffenegger, author of The Time Traveler’s Wife.

“The City In The Middle of the Night reads like a classic from another timeline; it's the kind of pure, high-concept, far-future science fiction that presses all my buttons. This book has notes of Ursula K. LeGuin and Philip Pullman.” — Robin Sloan, author of Sourdough.

“A tale that unfolds with precision, presenting wholly original ideas, new and beautiful life forms, and chillingly extrapolated and corrupt societies. I highly recommend [it].” — Anthony Rapp, Star Trek: Discovery

The City In The Middle of the Night does everything right. The world is so strange and so familiar. The characters are beautiful and ugly and flawed and perfect. The action keeps you on the edge of your seat. Charlie Jane Anders has imagined a future for all of us and does not shy away or sugar coat what that means. It is a tender, quiet, introspective, brash and loud tale of revolution and love. The journey you go on is so vast that you lose track of time and come out a changed person at the end. At once more human and more alien.” — Daveed Diggs

Read what people said about All the Birds in the Sky here.

 

About all the birds in the sky…

All the Birds in the Sky is the story of a relationship between a witch named Patricia and a mad scientist named Laurence.

Patricia has magical powers, from an early age. When she tries to rescue a small bird with a broken wing, she discovers she can understand what the bird is saying—and she can talk to other creatures in the forest, as well. But becoming a fully-fledged witch is no easy process, and Patricia’s powers aren’t at all reliable. Once Patricia is a grown-up, she’s mastered her powers—but now she has to deal with the other witches, who worry that Patricia will break the one and only rule of magic.

Laurence is an engineering, math, and computer genius, who builds a time machine when he’s still a pretty young boy. As he grows up, Laurence builds a supercomputer in his bedroom closet. And when he’s a fully grown adult, Laurence joins a secret organization and devotes himself to the problem of Saving the World. But Laurence finds that Saving the World isn’t as easy as it sounds, and he may have to be more than an engineering genius to pull it off.

The relationship between Laurence and Patricia is at the heart of the book, and it’s all about being different. And about two very different ways of seeing the world. They meet up as kids, and they struggle to survive the horrors of middle school – everything from mean kids to a school guidance counselor with a deadly secret. And then 10 years later, they meet again, after Patricia has graduated from a magical school, and Laurence has become a genius engineer and “wunderkind.”

And then, Patricia and Laurence face the  ultimate challenge: How to make sense of life, sex and the messiness of adulthood. (And it doesn’t help that they might be at the center of a conflict that could destroy the entire planet.) It’s a book about friendship, love, misunderstandings, and the power of whiskey and hot chocolate.

What People Have Said:

“In All the Birds in the Sky, Charlie Jane Anders darts and soars, with dazzling aplomb, among the hypotheticals of science fiction, the counterfactuals of fantasy, and the bittersweet mundanities of contemporary American life, throwing lightning bolts of literary style that shimmer with enchantment or electrons. She tackles profound, complicated questions, vast and insignificant as the fate of the planet, tiny and crucial as the vagaries of friendship, rocketing the reader through a pocket-sized epic of identity whose sharply-drawn protagonists come to feel like the reader’s best friends. The very short list of novels that dare to traffic as freely in the uncanny and wondrous as in big ideas, and to create an entire, consistent, myth-ridden alternate world that is still unmistakably our own, all while breaking the reader’s heart into the bargain—I think of masterpieces like The Lathe of Heaven; Cloud AtlasLittle, Big—has just been extended by one.” — Michael Chabon (Telegraph RoadThe Yiddish Policemen’s Union)

“The characters leap off the page… The result is a weird and charming read.” — The Guardian

“Charlie Jane Anders has entwined strands of science and fantasy, both as genres and as ways of experiencing life, into a luminous novel that reveals the exhilarating necessity of each.” — John Hodgman (The Areas of My Expertise)

All the Birds in the Sky reads like an instant classic… Deep, dark, funny, and wonderful!” — Indie Next Pick for February 2016. (Sara Hinckley, Hudson Booksellers, Marietta, GA)

“Thoughtful and hip and fantasy and sci-fi all wrapped up. A+” — Felicia Day

Into each generation of science fiction/fantasydom a master absurdist must fall, and it’s quite possible that with ALL THE BIRDS IN THE SKY, Charlie Jane Anders has established herself as the one for the Millennials…  It’s complex, and scary, and madcap… The result is as hopeful as it is hilarious, and highly recommended.” — N.K. Jemisin, New York Times Book Review

“What a magnificent novel—a glorious synthesis of magic and technology, joy and sorrow, romance and wisdom. Unmissable.” — Lev Grossman (The Magicians)

“Anders’ knock-your-socks-off blend of science and magic will be a strong contender for science fiction and fantasy awards, appealing to not only genre fans but also those looking for great literary reads.” — Booklist (Starred Review)

“A fairy tale and an adventure rolled into one, All the Birds in the Sky is a captivating novel that shows how science and magic can be two sides of the same coin.” — Nancy Hightower, Washington Post

“Charlie Jane Anders’ brilliant, cross-genre novel All the Birds in the Sky has the hallmarks of an instant classic. It’s a beautifully written, funny, tremendously moving tale… Like [William] Gibson, Anders weaves a thrilling, seat-of-the-pants narrative with a compelling subtext.” — Elizabeth Hand, Los Angeles Times.

“Anyone suffering from midwinter blues should read Charlie Jane Anders’s between-categories fantasy, “All the Birds in the Sky.” The scenario is (almost) Harry Potter, the tone is (quite like) Kurt Vonnegut, the effect is entirely original… Charlie Anders is a new voice, witty, charming, thoughtful and sometimes mordant.“ — Tom Shippey, Wall Street Journal

“Two crazy kids, one gifted in science, the other in magic, meet as children, part and meet again over many years.  Will they find love? Will they save the world?  Or will they destroy it and everyone in it?  Read Anders lively, whacky, sexy, scary, weird and wonderful book to find the answers.” — Karen Joy Fowler (We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves)

“Warm, funny, sardonic — the best debut novel I’ve read in ages.” – Charles Stross (Neptune’s Brood)

“Reminiscent of the best of Jo Walton and Nina Kiriki Hoffman.” — Kirkus Reviews (Starred Review)

“At turns darkly funny and deeply melancholy, this is a polished gem of a novel from the Hugo Award–winning (for the story “Six Months, Three Days”) editor in chief of the website io9.com… Readers will follow Patricia and Laurence through their growing pains, bad decisions, and tentative love.” — Library Journal (Starred Review)

“Imagine that Diana Wynne Jones, Douglas Coupland and Neil Gaiman walk into a bar and through some weird fusion of magic and science have a baby. That offspring is Charlie Jane Anders’ lyrical debut novel All The Birds In The Sky… a brave, genre-bending debut that, as satisfying as it is, perhaps hints at even more greatness to come.” — David Barnett, The Independent

“With All the Birds in the Sky, Anders has given us a fresh set of literary signposts — and a new bundle of emotional metaphors — for the 21st century, replacing the so many of the tired old ones. Oh, and she’s gently overturned genre fiction along the way.” — Jason Heller, NPR

“Whimsical and precise, romantic and wickedly witty, this is the great American fantasy novel with knobs on… Anders has been compared to David Mitchell, but she’s snappier than him - toss Louis Sachar’s narrative brio and Douglas Coupland’s deadpan panache into a cauldron of chaos magic and you’re nearer the mark.” — Jamie Buxton, The Daily Mail

“All the Birds in the Sky takes two very distinct genres and blends them together seamlessly. Lovers of science fiction and fantasy will be deeply drawn into this world, which hangs in the balance between a couple of extraordinary young people.” – Veronica Belmont, Sword & Laser podcast

“Everything you could ask for in a debut novel – a fresh look at science fiction’s most cherished memes, ruthlessly shredded and lovingly reassembled.” - Cory Doctorow (Little Brother)

“This book is a beta from an indie making magic spell apps. It’s an interactive guide to artisanal potions. This book is the first person you know with a crazy realist 3D tattoo. This book is a hipster and a nerd and when you read it you’ll know what I mean.” - Maureen McHugh (After the Apocalypse)

“Fucking brilliant. Fully of crazy wisdom. Like nothing else I’ve ever read.” — Ramez Naam (Nexus)

“Charlie Jane Anders, part visionary, part romantic, one hundred percent gifted storyteller has written a gem of a novel in “All The Birds in the Sky.” A love story for our age and the next, and maybe the one after that.” — Tom Barbash(Stay Up With Me)

All the Birds in the Sky is a love story that melds Gaiman-esque magic with Gibson’s near-future angst.” — Scott Sigler

“A friendship between two adolescent misfits is the catalyst for an apocalyptic reckoning in Anders’s clever and wonderfully weird novel… Fans of genre fiction will be delighted by Patricia and Laurence’s story, and Anders’s smart, matter-of-fact prose will appeal to a mainstream audience as well.” — Publishers Weekly

“All the Birds in the Sky is one of the most surprising novels I’ve read this year, and for the most part one of the most delightful. Anders manages to make all of these risks pay off… Anders’s approach to writing about childhood echoes that of Daniel Pinkwater.” — Gary K. Wolfe, writing in Locus

“Tech culture’s strange relationship with nature takes centre stage in All the Birds in the Sky, a vivid, genre-blending novel from a writer who is clearly one to watch.” — Rowland Manthorpe, Wired

It’s every bit as imaginative, witty, and moving as you’d hope… an entertaining and audacious melding of science, magic, and just plain real life that feels perfectly right for our time.” — Isaac Fitzgerald, Buzzfeed Books newsletter

“All the Birds in the Sky is a perfect synthesis of both sides of her writing life: a deeply felt story of love, magic, science, growing up an outsider, and living in apocalyptic times, bubbling over with a deep knowledge of genre history and geek culture.” — Barnes & Noble Sci-Fi Blog

“Anders brings so many cool ideas to this story, and if there’s one thing you can say about All the Birds in the Sky, it’s that it’s completely unpredictable… Anders’ prose seems simple and straightforward, but put all those simple and straightforward sentences together and you have a wonderfully quirky style that reminded me a lot of Kelly Link’s. ” — Books, Bones & Buffy

“Every so often a novel comes along that begs to be discussed among friends, argued over coffee, and read until the spine breaks. All the Birds in the Sky is such a book. It’s a gorgeous coming-of-age story about magic and science, the apocalypse, and love.” — Aidan Moherwriting in Barnes & Noble Sci-Fi Blog

“Thrilling, moving and fantastically well written, All the Birds in the Sky is a book that revels in its own geekiness, and transcends it to create an immensely satisfying tale about people, the planet, life, witches, robots – don’t walk to the bookshops for this one, RUN!” — The Bookbag

“And that’s what’s fresh and vibrant about All the Birds in the Sky. Its standard genre tropes are well-chosen tools for doing a story that’s about growing up, realizing who you are in the world, and then, far more importantly, realizing that the entire narrative of growing up and realizing who you are in the world is complete and utter bullshit and that the world is a terrifying and confusing place comprised entirely of people who are trying desperately to fool each other into thinking they aren’t total fuckups. The magic/science opposition is there to be a binary opposition, with all the useful truth and false dichotomies implied.” — Philip Sandifer

“If there’s any justice in the world, this book will be the next The Night Circus – it made me feel that same joy while reading and it carries with it the same authorial joy and delight at the magic of the world (whether that magic manifests as magic or tech.)… What a way to kick off my year in reading.” — Raging Biblioholism

It’s a messy, rambling, heartfelt, wild and woolly narrative, with delights that arrive at the rate of multiple times a page. If 2016 gives us five more books that provide this much fun, while still tackling the big questions, it will be an exceptional genre year.” — Adam-Troy Castro, Sci Fi Magazine

An exploration of the stories we tell ourselves about why we act the way we do… highly absorbing and enjoyable - 4 stars.” — SFX Magazine

All the Birds in the Sky… might have suffered under the weight of high expectations if it didn’t so easily soar above them…. All the Birds in the Sky is a triumph.” — Shelf Awareness

Both characters’ failings are instantly recognisable as those of young adults going out into the world for the first time and discovering that their actions have consequences beyond themselves. Because of this, and because the characters recognise and learn from their mistakes, Patricia and Laurence always remain sympathetic.” — Fantasy Faction

Anders approaches her characters with intense sentiment, whether that be love or fear, but without ever becoming sentimental. I got the sense that she really enjoyed writing these characters, as she pushed them through trial after trial (social, professional, and mystical), and that in turn made me love her characters. All the Birds in the Sky is, above all else, a character-driven drama about ties that bind.” — John Saavedra, Den of Geek

Anders has created an utterly convincing and affecting central friendship, with all its highs and lows, flaws and triumphs… This is a wonderful read.” — Jonathan Hatfull, SciFiNow (5 Stars)

It’s a riotous garden of a book, full of ideas and a fun sense of letting things go to see what happens. All the Birds In The Sky takes on heavy themes like fate and choice and environmental collapse, but makes it feel more like it’s dancing with them than wrestling.” — Samantha Holloway, New York Journal of Books

I’m not being overly dramatic when I say that All the Birds in the Sky is one of the best novels I’ve read in months. It mixes magic and science, coming-of-age and truly growing up, talking cats and time machines, absurdity and philosophy, and love and fear in a stunning tale of a witch and a tech genius.” — Adrian Liang, Omnivoracious

Anders adeptly twines magic, surrealism, technological innovation and machinery into a quirky story that, at its base, is about searching for common ground in a world of differences.” — BookPage

“I liked how All the Birds in the Sky surprised me… It was well worth my anticipation, and the sort of book that I think I can read numerous times and interpret it different each time. Anders is an incredibly clever writer, and her book is so incredibly human and genre bending at the same time, I couldn’t help but be amazed.” — Bookworm Blues

“I’m already a big fan of blurred lines, genre-bending novels and this one blew me away and was every bit as unique as I had hoped it would be. For a debut novel, I really think this is something special, and think it would also make an amazing movie. Fingers crossed it gets the accolades it deserves.” — Bookshelf Butterfly

“All the Birds in the Sky took me on a wonderful journey.” — Books, Life and Everything

“This is a wonderful novel… Anders has created two lead characters the reader can believe in.” — Clandestine Critic

“This book convinced me love still exists in 2016.” — Tropedo

“An emotionally and ethically complex science fantasy.” — Annabel’s House of Books

“Do me a favour and give this one a read… It kept me thinking about it long after I turned the final pages.” — Tesscatiful

“This geeky, spiritual love story is strong enough to keep listeners riveted, and [Alyssa] Bresnahan’s performance is the icing on a very tasty cake.” — Audiofile Magazine

“When wizards meet scientists who have created time machines, one is left with no option but to expect wonders of the best kinds.” —The New Indian Express

“Those of you reeling at the thought of reading any sci-fi beyond The Martian, take heart: This apocalyptic tale is a sly take on modern love and the need to figure out our planet’s future.” — San Francisco Magazine (including pie-chart!)

“Heartfelt, ambitious and dynamic. Fantastic stuff.” — James Lovegrove,  Financial Times

“A delightfully disruptive novel… relevant and powerful.” — The Mary Sue

“One of the most intriguing new novels of the year, partially because it defies definition… Think of it as magical realism for the digital age.” — Baltimore County Public Library

“This is by far one of the best debut novels in the genre in years… A bright new author, destined to do well.” — Andrew Musk, Starburst Magazine

“The craziest thing about Charlie Jane Anders’ book is how it remains so intimate and accessible despite genre jumping… All that magic and science only highlights how special it is to find that someone whose companionship feels like it could defy tragedy.” — Cesar R. Bustamante, Jr., New York Daily News

“Readers will undoubtedly hear echoes of Kurt VonnegutUrsula Le GuinWilliam GibsonPhilip K. DickJ.K. RowlingLev Grossman and a host of other possible influences in “All the Birds in the Sky.” But the novel never feels derivative, achieving a unique narrative alchemy that makes familiar conceits sparkle anew… The novel is clearly something special, already a contender as one of 2016’s better books.” — San Francisco Chronicle

“Anders writes gorgeous, exciting prose, and the moral and narrative complexity she’s set up in All the Birds in the Sky carries all the way through its ambitious, heartbreaking, hopeful ending. This book has been tremendously well received, and will most likely earn itself a place on the shelf among all its venerable influencers as a new addition to the canon.” — Los Angeles Review of Books

“Anders… writes lean, judicious prose that’s cinematic enough in its cuts and imagery but doesn’t forget that some of us prefer reading a story over any other form of ingesting narrative.” — Jim Higgins, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

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All the Birds in the Sky may be the best sci-fi novel of the year… This is a really, really good book, and you should go buy it now.” — Clay Kallam, San Jose Mercury News 

about charlie jane

Photo credit: Sarah Deragon/Portraits to the People.  Download headshots for promotional use here.

Photo credit: Sarah Deragon/Portraits to the People. Download headshots for promotional use here.

Short Bio, third person:

Charlie Jane Anders' latest novel is The City in the Middle of the Night. She's also the author of All the Birds in the Sky, which won the Nebula, Crawford and Locus awards, and Choir Boy, which won a Lambda Literary Award. Plus a novella called Rock Manning Goes For Broke and a short story collection called Six Months, Three Days, Five Others. Her short fiction has appeared in Tor.com, Boston ReviewTin HouseConjunctions, the Magazine of Fantasy and Science FictionWired Magazine, Slate, Asimov's Science Fiction, Lightspeed, ZYZZYVA, Catamaran Literary Review, McSweeney's Internet Tendency and tons of anthologies. Her story "Six Months, Three Days" won a Hugo Award, and her story "Don't Press Charges And I Won't Sue" won a Theodore Sturgeon Award.

Charlie Jane also organizes the monthly Writers With Drinks reading series, and co-hosts the podcast Our Opinions Are Correct with Annalee Newitz.

Long Bio, First Person:

I'm the author of All the Birds in the Sky, and the forthcoming The City in the Middle of the Night. Plus a short story collection called Six Months, Three Days, Five Others, and a novella called Rock Manning Goes For Broke.

I’m probably the only person to have become a fictional character in a Star Trek novel and in one of Armistead Maupin’s Tales of the City books.

I used to write for a site called io9.com, and now I co-host a podcast with io9 founder Annalee Newitz called Our Opinions Are Correct.

I won the Emperor Norton Award, for “extraordinary invention and creativity unhindered by the constraints of paltry reason.” I've also won a Hugo Award, a Nebula Award, a William H. Crawford Award, a Theodore Sturgeon Award, a Locus Award and a Lambda Literary Award.

I have published a ton of short fiction – way over 100 short stories at this point. I’ve stopped counting. My stories have appeared in Wired Magazine, Tin House, Conjunctions, the Boston Review, Tor.com, Lightspeed Magazine, McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine, ZYZZYVA, Strange Horizons, Catamaran Literary Reader, Apex Magazine, Uncanny Magazine, 3 AM Magazine, Flurb.net, Monkey Bicycle, Pindeldyboz, Instant City, Broken Pencil, and in tons and tons of anthologies.

I organize Writers With Drinks, which is a monthly reading series here in San Francisco that mashes up a ton of different genres. Every month, I make up weird fictional bios for the readers and performers, and nobody’s sued yet. Readers/performers at Writers With Drinks have included the aforementioned Armistead Maupin, plus Mary Gaitskill, Amy Tan, Rick Moody, Jonathan Lethem, Dorothy Allison, W. Kamau Bell, Luis Alberto Urrea, Ruth Ozeki, Ishmael Reed, Karen Joy Fowler, Maureen McHugh and just countless others. The SF Chronicle did a really nice article about Writers With Drinks.

Back in 2007, Annalee Newitz and I put out a book of first-person stories by female geeks called She’s Such a Geek: Women Write About Science, Technology and Other Nerdy Stuff. There was a lot of resistance to doing this book, because nobody believed there was a market for writing about female geeks. Also, Annalee and I put out a print magazine called other, which was about pop culture, politics and general weirdness, aimed at people who don’t fit into other categories. To raise money for other magazine, we put on events like a Ballerina Pie Fight – which is just what it sounds like – and a sexy show in a hair salon where people took off their clothes while getting their hair cut.

I used to live in a Buddhist nunnery, when I was a teenager. I love to do karaoke. I eat way too much spicy food. I hug trees and pat stone lions for luck. I talk to myself way too much when I’m working on a story.

Read Some Stories

 

“The Visitmothers” (forthcoming in Bikes In Space #7: The Great Trans-Universal Bike Ride, January 2021) —> Watch me reading this story!

“The Turnaround,” published in Alta Online

“I’ll Have You Know,” published in MIT Technology Review

“This Is Why We Can’t Have Nasty Things,” published in ZYZZYVA, Winter 2019

“The Bookstore at the End of America,” published in A People’s Future of the United States, ed. Victor LaValle and John Joseph Adams

“The Farm,” published in Wired Magazine’s Future of Work Issue

“The Minnesota Diet,” published in Slate’s Future Tense

“A Temporary Embarrassment in Spacetime: A Kango and Sharon Adventure,” published in Cosmic Powers, ed. John Joseph Adams (reprinted in Lightspeed Magazine)

“Cake Baby: A Kango and Sharon Adventure,” published in Lightspeed Magazine

“Don’t Press Charges and I Won’t Sue,” published in Boston Review’s Global Dystopia special issue

“Trapped in the Bathroom!” published in Seat14C, the xPrize anthology, ed., Kathryn Cramer

“Stochastic Fancy,” featured in Wired Magazine’s first Fiction Issue

Margot and Rosalind, Tor.com

“Clover,” Tor.com

“As Good As New”, Tor.com

“Six Months, Three Days,” Tor.com

“The Cartography of Sudden Death”, Tor.com

“Intestate,” Tor.com

“The Fermi Paradox Is Our Business Model,” Tor.com

“Rager in Space,” published in Bridging Infinity, ed. Jonathan Strahan

“Because Change Was the Ocean And We Lived By Her Mercy,” published in Drowned Worlds, ed. Jonathan Strahan, reprinted in Lightspeed Magazine

“The Super Ultra Duchess of Fedora Forest,” in The Starlit Wood: New Fairy Tales, ed. Navah Wolfe and Dominik Parisien

“Captain Roger in Heaven,” Catamaran Literary Reader, Summer 2016

“Reliable People,” Conjunctions online

“Ghost Champagne,” Uncanny Magazine

Rat Catcher’s Yellows”, in Press Start to Play, ed. John Joseph Adams and Daniel H. Wilsonreprinted at Kotaku

“Palm Strike’s Last Case,” The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction

The Time Travel Club,” Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine, reprinted in Lightspeed (Listen to a Podcast version!)

“The Unfathomable Sisterhood of Ick”, Lightspeed Magazine (reprinted in Tor.com)

“Love Might Be Too Strong a Word”, Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet (reprinted in Lightspeed Magazine)

“The Skunk,” Tin House

“Dirty Work,” Matter

“Break! Break! Break!”, in The End is Near, reprinted in Lightspeed Magazine

“Rock Manning Can’t Hear You,” in The End is Now, ed. John Joseph Adams and Hugh Howey

“The Last Movie Ever Made,” in The End Has Come, ed. John Joseph Adams and Hugh Howey

“The Master Conjurer”, Lightspeed Magazine

The Day It All Ended,” in Hieroglyph: Stories & Visions For a Better Future, ed. Kathryn Cramer and Ed Finn, reprinted in Slate.com

“Horatius and Clodia”, Strange Horizons

“Complicated and Stupid”, Strange Horizons

“Source Decay,” Strange Horizons

“Not To Mention Jack,” Strange Horizons

“Victimless Crimes,” Apex Magazine

“Fairy Werewolf vs. Vampire Zombie”, Flurb.net.

“Henry’s Penis”, Flurb.net

“The History of the Internet”, Flurb.net

“The Last Young Person Alive Writes a Memoir,” Flurb.net

“One Door Closes,” Flurb.net

“Power Couple (or, Love Never Sleeps)” in Paraspheres, reprinted in Lightspeed

“A Serial Killer Explains the Distinctions Between Literary Terms,” McSweeney’s Internet Tendency

“Can I Just Point Out How Not Racist I’m Being Right Now?,“ MonkeyBicycle

“Just Imagine Stan Lee Creating John Updike’s Rabbit, Run!,” MonkeyBicycle

“Suicide Drive,” Transcriptase

“How I Went Back to the Closet,” Blithe House Quarterly

“Cutting a Figure,” GUD #0

“Uppercasing,” in Fucking Daphne, ed. Daphne Gottlieb

Transfixed, Helpless and Out of Control,” in Suspect Thoughts Magazine

Anxiety Branson, Social Security Hustler,” in The Urban Bizarre, ed. Nick Mamatas, reprinted in Flurb