#Carol Emshwiller
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"Sex and/or Mr. Morrison" -- Carol Emshwiller
Sex and/or Mr. Morrison by Carol Emshwiller I can set my clock by Mr. Morrison’s step upon the stairs, not that he is that accurate, but accurate enough for me. 8:30 thereabouts. (My clock runs fast anyway.) Each day he comes clumping down and I set it back ten minutes, or eight minutes or seven. I suppose I could just as well do it without him but it seems a shame to waste all that heavy…
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キャロル・エムシュウィラー、畔柳和代訳『すべての終わりの始まり』(国書刊行会 2007)奇妙奇天烈なフェミニズム短篇集。冴えない孤独な老女が不器用なりに自分らしく生きていく話が多い。夫のもとを去り、熊と一緒に冬眠する「ユーコン」など特に面白い。装幀は内容に比べておとなしすぎるかも。
#carol emshwiller#The Start of the End of It All#science fiction#magical realism#books#stories#Japanese books#Kokushokankokai
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I would love to take a class where the textbook is "the future is female: 25 classic science fiction stories by women, from pulp pioneers to ursula k le guin" edited by lisa yaszek, and you just read a story every week and discuss it. they're arranged in chronological order from 1928 to 1969 and are obviously picked not only to demonstrate each author's style but to reflect social attitudes of the era. there would really be a lot to talk about in an academic setting. but even if I can't teach that class I recommend giving it a read if you're interested in old scifi. these were the standout stories to me but you may have different faves when you read it
"the black god's kiss" cl moore, 1934. a female knight travels through a portal to a land she considers to be hell in order to find a weapon capable of defeating the man who conquered her. this is the one I posted saying "it's just like the alien from alien." the imagery is so vivid and engrossing that i can't believe it was written 90 years ago
"all the colors of the rainbow" leigh brackett, 1957. an alien husband and wife on a diplomatic mission to earth find that sundown towns don't appreciate aliens much either. liberal use of the n word in this one bc the characters are extremely racist but I found it to be a very unique example of sf/fantasy discrimination metaphors. I'd love to discuss this one in a class bc I kind of feel like it's not a white woman's story to write but I also don't think a black woman would have gotten it published in 1957? definitely an interesting one
"pelt" carol emshwiller, 1958. a hunting dog brought by her master to an alien planet to hunt exotic furs finds that the native species can communicate with her but not her master and becomes torn. since you're in the dog's point of view you never get the full picture of what happens but it's very melancholy
"car pool" rosel george brown, 1959. it's truly just like an episode of a sitcom where a group of women who run a hovercarpool for their kids let a three armed alien kid in and things go awry. the standout is the relationship between the protagonist and a rival mom who she envies bc the rival mom can pull off wearing a real boudoir slip
"another rib" john jay wells & marion zimmer bradley, 1963. stranded male exocolonists accept an experimental procedure from an alien friend that will allow them to give birth and further the human race despite their captain's intense homophobia and transphobia. interesting in its portrayal of gender and srs bc the alien brings up the fact that humans have already accomplished gender-affirming surgeries but there's also never any implication that the men will become women. they just become men capable of giving birth. however I learned from this anthology that ms bradley enabled child sexual abuse so fuck her
"when I was miss dow" sonya dorman, 1966. a shapeshifting alien from a masculine mono-gender race is made to take the form of a human woman to learn more about human settlers and resents it at first but is fundamentally changed by the experience. made me want to cry a little
"nine lives" ursula k le guin, 1969. two guys who are getting sick and tired of each other after a long mining expedition on a faraway planet are joined by ten sexy and beautiful 20somethings who are all clones of the same guy. the clones can act in unison but also keep each other company. this could be the future of the human race... or not
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"Fantasy and science fiction in their very conception offer alternatives to the reader’s present, actual world. Young people in general welcome this kind of story because in their vigour and eagerness for experience they welcome alternatives, possibilities, change. Having come to fear even the imagination of true change, many adults refuse all imaginative literature, priding themselves on seeing nothing beyond what they already know, or think they know.
Yet, as if it feared its own troubling powers, much science fiction and fantasy is timid and reactionary in its social invention, fantasy clinging to feudalism, science fiction to military and imperial hierarchy. Both usually reward their hero, whether a man or woman, only for doing outstandingly manly deeds. (I wrote this way for years myself. In The Left Hand of Darkness, my hero is genderless but his heroics are almost exclusively manly.) In science fiction particularly, one also often meets the idea I discussed above, that anyone of inferior status, if not a rebel constantly ready to seize freedom through daring and violent action, is either despicable or simply of no consequence.
In a world so morally simplified, if a slave is not Spartacus, he is nobody. This is merciless and unrealistic. Most slaves, most oppressed people, are part of a social order which, by the very terms of their oppression, they have no opportunity even to perceive as capable of being changed.
The exercise of imagination is dangerous to those who profit from the way things are because it has the power to show that the way things are is not permanent, not universal, not necessary.
Having that real though limited power to put established institutions into question, imaginative literature has also the responsibility of power. The storyteller is the truth-teller.
It is sad that so many stories that might offer a true vision settle for patriotic or religious platitude, technological miracle working, or wishful thinking, the writers not trying to imagine truth. The fashionably noir dystopia merely reverses the platitudes and uses acid instead of saccharine, while still evading engagement with human suffering and with genuine possibility. The imaginative fiction I admire presents alternatives to the status quo which not only question the ubiquity and necessity of extant institutions, but enlarge the field of social possibility and moral understanding. This may be done in as naively hopeful a tone as the first three Star Trek television series, or through such complex, sophisticated, and ambiguous constructions of thought and technique as the novels of Philip K. Dick or Carol Emshwiller; but the movement is recognizably the same – the impulse to make change imaginable.
We will not know our own injustice if we cannot imagine justice. We will not be free if we do not imagine freedom. We cannot demand that anyone try to attain justice and freedom who has not had a chance to imagine them as attainable.
I want to close and crown these inconclusive meditations with the words of a writer who never spoke anything but truth, and always spoke it quietly, Primo Levi, who lived a year in Auschwitz, and knew what injustice is.
The ascent of the privileged, not only in the Lager but in all human coexistence, is an anguishing but unfailing phenomenon: only in utopias is it absent. It is the duty of righteous men to make war on all undeserved privilege, but one must not forget that this is a war without end."
- Ursula K. Le Guin, from "A War Without End." Utopia, 2016.
#ursula k. le guin#primo levi#quote#quotations#storytelling#fantasy#science fiction#sci fi#imagination#freedom#utopia#dystopia#justice#activism#revolution#books#reading#oppression#injustice#patriarchy#privilege#capitalism
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I missed on the other ask: it probably also helped the show that the last year has made us all very familiar with "talks like a person but isn't one" systems. Even if you're not opposed to LLMs, it's pretty rare to think they're people.
I assume this is about Frieren and what I think gets lost under my calling the show fascist is that this is like... The worst version of the trope. What we've seen early at this stage is already enough to completely contradict the idea that demons are just aliens mimicking human speech to manipulate people; there's literally a scene of the demons being alone with each other and using speech to talk about their opinions and plan courses of action.
I'd be more forgiving if it felt like there was some actual creativity there, like if they didn't talk to *each other* but even in just two episodes it's really clear that demons converse for exactly the same reason people do.
Look at it this way: Suppose demons were the only race in existence; judging by what the anime shows us, they'd just, you know, act like humans. Talking to each other, organizing, building, fighting...
And the fact that they supposedly don't have parents but do have an organized social structure just raises a bunch of practical questions. Like, seriously, what *did* happen to that guy's dad? Or that kid's mom? How do demons reproduce? They clearly have a childhood where they are relatively defenseless and also an organized hierarchy, so why wouldn't they raise their own children? Even if they're incapable of love wouldn't that just make more sense from a military efficiency standpoint?
It really, really doesn't help that I've been thinking of the excellent short sci-fi story "Pelt" which is about a violent encounter between sentient predator species and a sentient prey species.
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This day in history
#20yrsago Itunes blocks you from sharing music with YOURSELF, on your own computer https://web.archive.org/web/20041009202513/http://www.raelity.org/computers/operating_systems/apple/mac_os_x/apps/itunes_single_instance.html
#20yrsago How fanfic makes kids into better writers (and copyright victims) https://www.technologyreview.com/2004/02/06/40304/why-heather-can-write/
#15yrsago Flashmob of ATM crooks scores $9 million in 49 cities https://web.archive.org/web/20090205214559/http://www.myfoxny.com/dpp/news/090202_FBI_Investigates_9_Million_ATM_Scam
#15yrsago Internet not full of pedos, the statistical edition https://www.zephoria.org/thoughts/archives/2009/02/06/doing_the_math.html
#10yrsago Turks bid farewell to the Internet in the face of brutal censorship/surveillance law https://medium.com/@ahmetasabanci/saying-goodbye-to-internet-in-turkey-33d805b98f6c
#10yrsago Middle class brands collapse, 1% brands thrive https://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/03/business/the-middle-class-is-steadily-eroding-just-ask-the-business-world.html
#10yrsago How UK spies committed illegal DoS attacks against Anonymous https://www.nbcnews.com/news/investigations/war-anonymous-british-spies-attacked-hackers-snowden-docs-show-n21361
#10yrsago Toronto’s reference library gets a makerspace https://web.archive.org/web/20140209061223/http://torontoist.com/2014/02/reference-library-unveils-3d-printers-is-cooler-than-indigo/
#10yrsago Toxic Avenger’s brilliant rant about the importance of Net Neutrality https://www.techdirt.com/2014/02/05/innovation-our-better-future-depend-preserving-net-neutrality/
#5yrsago One of pharma’s most notorious gougers is going bankrupt, but 2019 is a banner year for shkreli-grade pharmaceutical price-hikes https://arstechnica.com/science/2019/02/infamous-pharma-company-declares-bankruptcy-after-3900-price-hike/
#5yrsago Chasing down that list of potential Predpol customers reveals dozens of cities that have secretly experimented with “predictive policing” https://www.vice.com/en/article/d3m7jq/dozens-of-cities-have-secretly-experimented-with-predictive-policing-software
#5yrsago Amazon is using purchase data to sell targeted ads, which is creepy, but not because they’ve invented a mind-control ray https://memex.craphound.com/2019/02/06/amazon-is-using-purchase-data-to-sell-targeted-ads-which-is-creepy-but-not-because-theyve-invented-a-mind-control-ray/
#5yrsago The next Firefox will block all autoplayed audio, video https://hacks.mozilla.org/2019/02/firefox-66-to-block-automatically-playing-audible-video-and-audio/
#5yrsago RIP, author Carol Emshwiller https://locusmag.com/2019/02/carol-emshwiller-1921-2019/
#5yrsago Washington State sheriff used courtroom camera to zoom in on defense attorney and juror’s private notes https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/san-juan-sheriffs-use-of-courtroom-camera-to-view-jurors-notebook-lawyers-notes-sparks-outrage-and-dismissal-of-criminal-case/
#5yrsago Lawsuit says that America’s “break even” court records website shouldn’t be making 98%+ profits https://www.techdirt.com/2019/02/06/multiple-parties-including-author-law-governing-pacer-ask-court-to-stop-pacers-screwing-taxpayers/
#5yrsago Fox News blames schools teaching “fairness” for support for a tax on the super-rich https://www.reddit.com/r/LateStageCapitalism/comments/annfs6/fox_news_blames_public_support_of_wealth_tax/
#1yrago Bruce Schneier's "A Hacker's Mind" https://pluralistic.net/2023/02/06/trickster-makes-the-world/#power-play
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What could've been Animaze ..iNC during the 2010s
Talent pool (Note: any voice actor marked with * is union-only):
Steve Blum*
Mary Elizabeth McGlynn*
Crispin Freeman*
Kari Wahlgren*
Johnny Yong Bosch
Yuri Lowenthal*
Dave Wittenberg*
Roger Craig Smith*
Laura Bailey*
Travis Willingham*
Cherami Leigh
J.B. Blanc*
Sam Riegel*
Liam O'Brien*
Amy Kincaid*
Troy Baker*
Matthew Mercer
Joe Romersa*
Fleet Cooper*
Dyanne DiRosario*
Jennifer Love Hewitt*
Brian Hallisay*
Spike Spencer
Amanda Winn Lee*
Jaxon Lee*
Kyle Hebert
Ben Pronsky
Bob Buchholz
Richard Cansino
Murphy Dunne*
Carolyn Hennesy*
Jerry Gelb*
Adam Sholder
Ezra Weisz
Cristina Vee
Bryce Papenbrook
Michael Sorich
Richard Epcar
Ellyn Stern
Tony Oliver
Kirk Thornton
Lexi Ainsworth*
Aria Noelle Curzon
Grace Caroline Currey*
Michael Forest
Erik Davies
Adam Bobrow
Joshua Seth
Junie Hoang*
Kirk Baily*
Tom Fahn
Jonathan Fahn
Dorothy Elias-Fahn
Melissa Fahn
Stephen Apostolina*
René Rivera*
Deborah Sale Butler
Kevin Brief
Michael Gregory*
Riva Spier*
Cassandra Morris
Erica Mendez
Erika Harlacher
Erica Lindbeck
Marieve Herington
Kira Buckland
John Rubinstein*
Kim Matula*
Brittany Lauda
J. Grant Albrecht*
Michael McConnohie
Steve Bulen*
Dan Woren
Derek Stephen Prince
Wendee Lee
Edie Mirman
Jason C. Miller
Taliesin Jaffe*
John Snyder
Robbie Daymond
Ray Chase
Kaiji Tang
David Vincent
Christina Carlisi*
Christopher Corey Smith
Cindy Robinson
Rachel Robinson
Jessica Boone
Lauren Landa
Megan Hollingshead
Jalen K. Cassell
Doug Erholtz
Michelle Ruff
Gregory Cruz*
John Bishop*
Matt Kirkwood*
Lara Jill Miller*
Carol Stanzione
Steve Staley
Dave Mallow
Mona Marshall*
Darrel Guilbeau
Robert Martin Klein
Robert Axelrod
William Frederick Knight
Lex Lang
Sandy Fox
Joey Camen*
Randy McPherson*
Jad Mager
Richard Miro
Milton James
Anthony Pulcini
Douglas Rye
Patrick Seitz
Keith Silverstein
Jamieson Price
Skip Stellrecht*
Stoney Emshwiller*
G.K. Bowes
Alyss Henderson
Patricia Ja Lee
Peggy O'Neal
Carrie Savage
Melodee Spevack
Jennifer Alyx
Julie Ann Taylor
Sherry Lynn
Brad Venable
Christine Marie Cabanos
Greg Chun
LaGloria Scott
Steve Kramer
Melora Harte
Rebecca Forstadt*
Kyle McCarley
Mela Lee
Karen Strassman
Faye Mata
Laura Post
Kayla Carlyle*
Brina Palencia
Connor Gibbs
Brianne Siddall*
Barbara Goodson
Loy Edge
Jay Lerner
Jennie Kwan
Max Mittelman
Jessica Straus*
Alexis Tipton
Fryda Wolff
Michele Specht
J.D. Garfield
Debra Jean Rogers*
Julie Maddalena
Carrie Keranen
Tara Sands
Matthew Hustin
Cody MacKenzie
Bridget Hoffman*
Colleen O'Shaughnessey
Grant George
Jessica Gee
Jeff Nimoy*
Peter Lurie*
Brian Beacock
Paul St. Peter
Chris Jai Alex
Dan Lorge*
Ewan Chung*
Steve Cassling*
Philece Sampler
Stephanie Sheh
Sam Fontana
Ben Diskin
Juliana Donald*
Michael O'Keefe*
Christina Gallegos*
Tara Platt
Keith Anthony*
Beau Billingslea
David Lodge*
Kim Strauss
Eddie Jones*
William Bassett*
Kim Mai Guest*
Caitlin Glass
Hannah Alcorn
Ron Roggé*
Camille Chen*
Ethan Rains*
Yutaka Maseba*
Joe J. Thomas
Michael Sinterniklaas
Erin Fitzgerald
Joe Ochman
Marc Diraison
Xanthe Huynh
Brianna Knickerbocker
Dean Wein*
Michael McCarty*
#Animaze#ZRO Limit Productions#Steve Blum#Crispin Freeman#Kari Wahlgren#Laura Bailey#Travis Willingham#Sam Riegel#Liam O'Brien#Matthew Mercer#Jennifer Love Hewitt#Brian Hallisay#Spike Spencer#Troy Baker#Cristina Vee#Johnny Yong Bosch#Yuri Lowenthal#Mary Elizabeth McGlynn#Jessica Boone
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Vietnam War - Galaxy Science Fiction Magazine, June 1968
Sourced from: http://natsmusic.net/articles_galaxy_magazine_viet_nam_war.htm
Transcript Below
We the undersigned believe the United States must remain in Vietnam to fulfill its responsibilities to the people of that country.
Karen K. Anderson, Poul Anderson, Harry Bates, Lloyd Biggle Jr., J. F. Bone, Leigh Brackett, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Mario Brand, R. Bretnor, Frederic Brown, Doris Pitkin Buck, William R. Burkett Jr., Elinor Busby, F. M. Busby, John W. Campbell, Louis Charbonneau, Hal Clement, Compton Crook, Hank Davis, L. Sprague de Camp, Charles V. de Vet, William B. Ellern, Richard H. Eney, T. R. Fehrenbach, R. C. FitzPatrick, Daniel F. Galouye, Raymond Z. Gallun, Robert M. Green Jr., Frances T. Hall, Edmond Hamilton, Robert A. Heinlein, Joe L. Hensley, Paul G. Herkart, Dean C. Ing, Jay Kay Klein, David A. Kyle, R. A. Lafferty, Robert J. Leman, C. C. MacApp, Robert Mason, D. M. Melton, Norman Metcalf, P. Schuyler Miller, Sam Moskowitz, John Myers Myers, Larry Niven, Alan Nourse, Stuart Palmer, Gerald W. Page, Rachel Cosgrove Payes, Lawrence A. Perkins, Jerry E. Pournelle, Joe Poyer, E. Hoffmann Price, George W. Price, Alva Rogers, Fred Saberhagen, George O. Smith, W. E. Sprague, G. Harry Stine (Lee Correy), Dwight V. Swain, Thomas Burnett Swann, Albert Teichner, Theodore L. Thomas, Rena M. Vale, Jack Vance, Harl Vincent, Don Walsh Jr., Robert Moore Williams, Jack Williamson, Rosco E. Wright, Karl Würf.
We oppose the participation of the United States in the war in Vietnam.
Forrest J. Ackerman, Isaac Asimov, Peter S. Beagle, Jerome Bixby, James Blish, Anthony Boucher, Lyle G. Boyd, Ray Bradbury, Jonathan Brand, Stuart J. Byrne, Terry Carr, Carroll J. Clem, Ed M. Clinton, Theodore R. Cogswell, Arthur Jean Cox, Allan Danzig, Jon DeCles, Miriam Allen deFord, Samuel R. Delany, Lester del Rey, Philip K. Dick, Thomas M. Disch, Sonya Dorman, Larry Eisenberg, Harlan Ellison, Carol Emshwiller, Philip José Farmer, David E. Fisher, Ron Goulart, Joseph Green, Jim Harmon, Harry Harrison, H. H. Hollis, J. Hunter Holly, James D. Houston, Edward Jesby, Leo P. Kelley, Daniel Keyes, Virginia Kidd, Damon Knight, Allen Lang, March Laumer, Ursula K. LeGuin, Fritz Leiber, Irwin Lewis, A. M. Lightner, Robert A. W. Lowndes, Katherine MacLean, Barry Malzberg, Robert E. Margroff, Anne Marple, Ardrey Marshall, Bruce McAllister, Judith Merril, Robert P. Mills, Howard L. Morris, Kris Neville, Alexei Panshin, Emil Petaja, J. R. Pierce, Arthur Porges, Mack Reynolds, Gene Roddenberry, Joanna Russ, James Sallis, William Sambrot, Hans Stefan Santesson, J. W. Schutz, Robin Scott, Larry T. Shaw, John Shepley, T. L. Sherred, Robert Silverberg, Henry Slesar, Jerry Sohl, Norman Spinrad, Margaret St. Clair, Jacob Transue, Thurlow Weed, Kate Wilhelm, Richard Wilson, Donald A. Wollheim.
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“Fantasy and science fiction in their very conception offer alternatives to the reader’s present, actual world. Young people in general welcome this kind of story because in their vigour and eagerness for experience they welcome alternatives, possibilities, change. Having come to fear even the imagination of true change, many adults refuse all imaginative literature, priding themselves on seeing nothing beyond what they already know, or think they know...
Yet, as if it feared its own troubling powers, much science fiction and fantasy is timid and reactionary in its social invention, fantasy clinging to feudalism, science fiction to military and imperial hierarchy. Both usually reward their hero, whether a man or woman, only for doing outstandingly manly deeds...
The exercise of imagination is dangerous to those who profit from the way things are because it has the power to show that the way things are is not permanent, not universal, not necessary.
Having that real though limited power to put established institutions into question, imaginative literature has also the responsibility of power. The storyteller is the truth-teller.
It is sad that so many stories that might offer a true vision settle for patriotic or religious platitude, technological miracle working, or wishful thinking, the writers not trying to imagine truth. The fashionably noir dystopia merely reverses the platitudes and uses acid instead of saccharine, while still evading engagement with human suffering and with genuine possibility. The imaginative fiction I admire presents alternatives to the status quo which not only question the ubiquity and necessity of extant institutions, but enlarge the field of social possibility and moral understanding. This may be done in as naively hopeful a tone as the first three Star Trek television series, or through such complex, sophisticated, and ambiguous constructions of thought and technique as the novels of Philip K. Dick or Carol Emshwiller; but the movement is recognizably the same – the impulse to make change imaginable."
Ursula K. Le Guin, The Wave in the Mind : "A War Without End"
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ED EMSHWILLER
Masters of Evolution, Ace Books, D-375, January 1959
Edmund Alexander Emshwiller (February 16, 1925 – July 27, 1990) was an American visual artist notable for his science fiction illustrations and his pioneering experimental films. He usually signed his illustrations as Emsh but sometimes used Ed Emsh, Ed Emsler, Willer and others.
Born February 16, 1925, in Lansing, Michigan, He graduated from the University of Michigan in 1947, and then studied at École des Beaux Arts (1949–1950) in Paris with his wife, novelist Carol Emshwiller (née Fries), whom he married on August 30, 1949. He also studied at the Art Students League of New York (1950–1951)
From 1951 to 1979, while living in Levittown, New York, Emshwiller created covers and interior illustrations for dozens of science fiction paperbacks and magazines, notably Galaxy Science Fiction and The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. He debuted in the pulp magazines with about 50 interior illustrations and four cover paintings for the May to December 1951 issues of Galaxy, a monthly edited by H. L. Gold. In that year or 1952 he also did his first book cover for the U.S. paperback edition of Odd John (Galaxy Publishing Corp.) Because he experimented with a diversity of techniques, there is no typical Emsh cover. His painterly treatment for the August 1951 cover of Galaxy Science Fiction prefigures later work by Leo and Diane Dillon.
#Ed Emshwiller#Masters of Evolution#Ace Books#D-375#January#1959#pulp art#pulp fiction#science fiction. illustration#Edmund Alexander Emshwiller
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"But the self will know another of its own kind. The self will see its other self in another self's eyes. This can't be helped."
- The Mount, Carol Emshwiller
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New Fiction 2023
I struggled with the idea that I need to keep up with everything new, when it's evident that I don't want to. Movies are easy thanks to subscription services like A-List (and a pathological need to get out of the house), but I was consistently happy to dwell in the past for reading and video games.
So I think I'll be more chill about fiction this year. Just follow what feels right.
Previously: 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013
2023: Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec
Short Stories, Chapters, Excerpts
Jan - "Psalms" (1-100) ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Jan - "The Husband Stitch" by Carmen Maria Machado (2017)
Jan - "Inventory" by Carmen Maria Machado (2017)
Jan - "Mothers" by Carmen Maria Machado (2017)
Jan - "Especially Heinous" by Carmen Maria Machado (2017)
Jan - "Real Women Have Bodies" by Carmen Maria Machado (2017)
Jan - "Eight Bites" by Carmen Maria Machado (2017)
Jan - "The Resident" by Carmen Maria Machado (2017)
Jan - "Difficult At Parties" by Carmen Maria Machado (2017)
Jan - "The First Peer" by Dayton Ward and Kevin Dilmore (2010)
Jan - "Reservoir Ferengi" by David McIntee (2010)
Jan - "The Slow Knife" by James Swallow (2010)
Jan - "The Unhappy Ones" by Keith R.A. DeCandido (2010)
Jan - "Freedom Angst" by Britta Burdett Dennison (2010)
Jan - "Revenant" by Marc D. Giller (2010)
Jan - "Work Is Hard" by Greg Cox (2010)
Feb - "Psalms" (101-150) ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Mar - "Proverbs" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Mar - "Ecclesiastes" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Mar - "WPO" by Joanne McNeil (2022)
Mar - "Flesh" by Louis Evans (2022)
Mar - "Devolution" by Ellen Ullman (2022)
Mar - "Always Home" by Jeff Vandermeer (2022)
Apr - "Canticle of Canticles" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Apr - "Wisdom" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
May - "Ecclesiasticus" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Jun - "Isaias" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Jul - "Jeremias" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Aug - "Lamentations of Jeremias" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Aug - "The Miracle of the Lily" by Clare Winger Harris (1928)
Aug - "The Conquest of Gola" by Leslie F. Stone (1931)
Aug - "The Black God's Kiss" by C.L. Moore (1934)
Aug - "Space Episode" by Leslie Perri (1941)
Aug - "That Only a Mother" by Judith Merril (1948)
Aug - "In Hiding" by Wilmar H. Shiras (1948)
Aug - "Contagion" by Katherine MacLean (1950)
Aug - "The Inhabited Men" by Margaret St. Clair (1951)
Aug - "Ararat" by Zenna Henderson (1952)
Aug - "All Cats Are Gray" by Andrew North (1953)
Aug - "Created He Them" by Alice Eleanor Jones (1955)
Aug - "Mr. Sakrison’s Halt" by Mildred Clingerman (1956)
Aug - "All the Colors of the Rainbow" by Leigh Brackett (1957)
Aug - "Pelt" by Carol Emshwiller (1958)
Aug - "Car Pool" by Rosel George Brown (1959)
Aug - "For Sale, Reasonable" by Elizabeth Mann Borgese (1959)
Aug - "Birth of a Gardener" by Doris Pitkin Buck (1961)
Aug - "The Tunnel Ahead" by Alice Glaser (1961)
Aug - "The New You" by Kit Reed (1962)
Aug - "Another Rib" by John Jay Wells & Marion Zimmer Bradley (1963)
Aug - "When I Was Miss Dow" by Sonya Dorman (1966)
Aug - "Baby, You Were Great" by Kate Wilhelm (1967)
Aug - "The Barbarian" by Joanna Russ (1968)
Aug - "The Last Flight Of Dr. Ain" by James Tiptree, Jr. (1969)
Aug - "Nine Lives" by Ursula K. Le Guin (1969)
Sep - "Baruch" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Oct - "Snatched from the Brink" by Mary E. Penn (1878)
Oct - "The Canal" by Everil Worrell (1927)
Oct - "The Lost Performance of the High Priestess of the Temple of Horror" by Carmen Maria Machado (2020)
Oct - "The Time Remaining" by Attila Veres & trans. Luca Karafiáth (2019)
Oct - "CUE: Change" by Chesya Burke (2011)
Oct - "Last Call for the Sons of Shock" by David J. Schow (1994)
Oct - "The Real Right Thing" by Henry James (1899)
Oct - "The Haunted House" by M.A. Bird (1865)
Oct - "The Island of Regrets" by Elizabeth Walter (1965)
Oct - "The Stolen Body" by H.G. Wells (1903)
Oct - "The White Priest" by Hélène Gingold (1893)
Oct - "The Man Who Went Too Far" by E.F. Benson (1912)
Oct - "Mater Tenebrarum" by Pilar Pedraza & trans. James D. Jenkins (2000)
Oct - "Menopause" by Flore Hazoumé & trans. James D. Jenkins (1994)
Oct - "Señor Ligotti" by Bernardo Esquinca & trans. (2020)
Oct - "Shambleau" by C.L. Moore (1933)
Oct - "The Pit and the Pendulum" by Edgar Allan Poe (1850)
Oct - "The Village Spectre" by Gianna G. Maniego (2002)
Oct - "The Fog Horn" by Ray Bradbury (1951)
Oct - "The Lady of the House of Love" by Angela Carter (1979)
Oct - "The Woman's Ghost Story" by Algernon Blackwood (1907)
Oct - "Black Bargain" by Robert Bloch (1942)
Oct - "Vastarien" by Thomas Ligotti (1987)
Oct - "The Doll" by Daphne du Maurier (1937)
Oct - "The Transferred Ghost" by Frank Stockton (1882)
Oct - "The Shadowy Third" by Ellen Glasgow (1923)
Oct - "The Daemon Lover" by Shirley Jackson (1949)
Oct - "The Interval" by Vincent O'Sullivan (1918)
Oct - "The Phantom Cyclist" by Ruth Ainsworth (1971)
Oct - "Couching at the Door" by D.K. Broster (1942)
Oct - "Bloodchild" by Octavia Butler (1984)
Dec - "Ezekiel" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Dec - "Daniel" ed. Richard Challoner (1752)
Audio Shorts
Jan - "The Briefcase" by Rebecca Makkai, performed by Victor Garber for NPR's Selected Shorts (2009, 2023)
Jan - "Paradise" by Yxta Maya Murray, performed by Tanis Parenteau for NPR's Selected Shorts (2020, 2023)
Oct - Tales from the Crypt Presents: Dead Easy by A.L. Katz & Gil Adler, performed by Sean Astin, Jake Busey, Tia Carrere, Brett Cullen, John Kassir (1995, 2022)
Novels & Novellas
Jan - Honor in the Night by Scott Pearson (2010)
Feb - Abyss by David Weddle & Jeffrey Lang (2001)
Mar - Demons of Air and Darkness by Keith R.A. DeCandido (2001)
Mar - Coraline by Neil Gaiman (2002)
Apr - Horn and Ivory by Keith R. A. DeCandido (2001)
Apr - Return to HorrorLand by R.L. Stine (1999)
May - We Deserve Monuments by Jas Hammonds (2022)
Aug - Twilight by David R. George III (2002)
Aug - Are You Terrified Yet? by R.L. Stine (1998)
Sep - Creature Teacher by R.L. Stine (1998)
Sep - Invasion of the Body Squeezers - Part 1 by R.L. Stine (1998)
Sep - Invasion of the Body Squeezers - Part 2 by R.L. Stine (1998)
Sep - I'm Your Evil Twin! by R.L. Stine (1998)
Sep - Revenge R Us by R.L. Stine (1998)
Sep - Fright Camp by R.L. Stine (1998)
Sep - Headless Halloween by R.L. Stine (1998)
Sep - Attack of the Graveyard Ghouls by R.L. Stine (1998)
Sep - Brain Juice by R.L. Stine (1998)
Dec - Revenant by Alex White (2021)
Dec - Silver Nitrate by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (2023)
Dec - The Men by Sandra Newman (2023)
Dec - Aftermath by Christopher L. Bennett (2003)
Dec - Jekyll and Heidi by R.L. Stine (1999)
Gamebooks
Jan - Trapped in Bat Wing Hall by R.L. Stine (1995)
Jul - The Abominable Snowman by R. A. Montgomery (1982)
Aug - Tick Tock, You're Dead! by R.L. Stine (1995)
Sep - The Deadly Experiments of Dr. Eeek by R.L. Stine (1996)
Sep - Night in Werewolf Woods by R.L. Stine (1996)
Sep - Beware of the Purple Peanut Butter by R.L. Stine (1996)
Plays
Jan - A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare, presented by Rice University Department of Visual and Dramatic Arts (1595, 2013)
Poems
Jan - "Comet as Paperboy" by Samantha Blysse Haviland (2022)
Jan - "The Art of Negotiation" by Meghan Privitello (2016)
Apr - "A Boat" by Richard Brautigan (1968)
May - "Idaho" by Dobby Gibson (2005)
Comic Shorts & Single Issues
Jan - "Forest Spirits" by Secondlina (2022)
Jan - "Forest Spirits 2" by Secondlina (2022)
Jan - "With Sympathy" by Oglaf Comics (2017)
Jan - "it went like this" by chaumas-deactivated20230115 (2023)
Feb - "The Hole in the Wall" by Angela Hsieh (2022)
Mar - "It hurt, but i don't regret it" by miggs perez (2023)
Mar - "Heaven, Heaven, Angel, Angel" by NoneToon (2023)
Mar - "A poem" by oddlyunadventurous (2023)
Apr - "Halt" by spiralshells (2023)
Apr - "Broomistega & Thrinaxodon" by Erin Roseberry (2023)
Jun - "A young couple have a strange encounter on a dark country road" by Iguanadon't (2016)
Jul - "My Local Gas Station" by Ink (2018)
Jul - The Adventures of Mighty Max - "Mighty Max and the Grand Slam" by Robert Hudnut, Gary Hartle, Brett Koth, David C. Weiss, and Phil Roman (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Trapped by Arachnoid" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Liquidates the Ice Alien" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Lashes Lizard" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Traps Rattus" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Outwits Cyclops" by Bluebird Toys (1993)
Aug - "Mighty Max Tangles With the Ape King" by Bluebird Toys (1993)
Aug - "Mighty Max Slays the Doom Dragon" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Grapples with Battle Cat" by Bluebird Toys (1993)
Aug - "Mighty Max Squishes Fly" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Blows Up Dino Lab" by Bluebird Toys (1993)
Aug - "Mighty Max Stings Scorpion" by Bluebird Toys (1993)
Aug - "Mighty Max Crushes the Hand" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Escapes from Skull Dungeon" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Conquers the Palace of Poison" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Sinks Nautilus" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Caught by the Man-Eater" by Bluebird Toys (1993)
Aug - "Mighty Max Bytes Cyberskull" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Terminates Wolfship 7" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Survives Corpus" by Bluebird Toys (1993)
Aug - "Mighty Max Against Robot Invader" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Zaps Beetlebrow" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Crushes Talon" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Out-Freaks Freako" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Rams Hydron" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Versus Kronosaur" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Challenges Lava Beast" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Tangles With Lockjaw" by Bluebird Toys (1993)
Aug - "Mighty Max Defeats Vamp Biter" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Fights Nuke Ranger" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Pulverizes Sea Squirm" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Battles Skull Warrior" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Hammers Ax Man" by Bluebird Toys (1993)
Aug - "Mighty Max Hounds Werewolf" by Bluebird Toys (1993)
Aug - "Mighty Max Neutralises Zomboid" by Bluebird Toys (1992)
Aug - "Mighty Max Defeats Battle Conqueror" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Head to Head With Hydra" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Melts Lava Beast" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Strikes Fang" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Shuts Down Cybot" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Shatters Gargoyle" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "Mighty Max Assaults Skull Master" by Bluebird Toys (1994)
Aug - "La-Mulana" by KC Green (2023)
Aug - "Mental Health Marge 2 Da Rescue" by ossian (2019)
Sep - "Hotline Miami" by KC Green (2023)
Sep - "I was told by my doctor that this'll completely compensate my human meat diet" by scribblingchimp (2023)
Oct - "Birds of a Feather" by Stephanie Phillips, Maan House, Giorgio Spalleta, Justin Birch, Chris Sanchez (2021)
Oct - "The Origin of Vampirella" by Budd Lewis & Jose Gonzalez (1981)
Oct - "Do You Know… the Beast-Man?" by Richard Howell, Colleen Doran, Kevin Cunningham (1992)
Oct - "Good Ol' Fashioned Vanilla" by W. Maxwell Prince, Chris O’Halloran, Martín Morazzo, Good Old Neon (2018)
Oct - "For Better or Worse?" by Richard Corben (2016)
Oct - "Werewolf!" by Frank Frazetta (1964)
Oct - "Chickadee!" by Aya Rothwell (2016)
Oct - "The Evil Dead" (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3) by Richard Floyd-Walker (1986-1987)
Oct - "Famine's Shadow" by Rachel Deering & Christine Larsen (2014)
Oct - "A Pretty Place" by Emily Carroll (2023)
Oct - "The Thing from the Sea" by Wally Wood & Joe Orlando (1951)
Oct - "The Living Ghost" by Frank Belknap Long & Fred Guardineer (1948)
Oct - "Essence of Life" by Gail Simone, Tula Lotay, Jared K. Fletcher (2013)
Oct - "Hag of the Blood Basket!" by Al Hewetson & Sean Todd (1971)
Oct - "The Fisherman" by Franco, Tressina Bowling, Wes Abbott, Sara Richard (2022)
Oct - "Dental Plan" by Joy San (2019)
Oct - "Frankenstein y el Hombre Lobo" by Unknown (1946)
Oct - "Man's World" by Keith Giffen, Mary Sangiovanni, Bilquis Evely, Mat Lopes, Taylor Esposito (2017)
Oct - "Shadow of Death" by William M. Gaines, Al Feldstein, Graham Ingels (1953)
Oct - "Smoke and Cedar" by Abby Howard & Alina Pete (2016)
Oct - "I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream" by Harlan Ellison & John Byrne (1994-1995)
Oct - "A Dog and His Boy" by Evan Dorkin, Sarah Dyer, Jill Thompson, Jason Arthur (2006)
Oct - "The Horror Beneath" by Leah Moore, John Reppion, Timothy Green II, Michelle Madsen, Nate Piekos (2006)
Oct - "Shadows on the Tomb" by Joe Certa (1952)
Oct - "The Muck Monster" by Bernie Wrightson (1975)
Oct - "The Duel of the Monsters" by Archie Goodwin & Angelo Torres (1966)
Oct - "The Willowdale Handcar or The Return of the Black Doll" by Edward Gorey (1962)
Oct - "Inside You" by Valerie D'Orazio & David James Cole (2014)
Oct - "Soylent Teen" by Jordan Morris, Liana Kangas, Ellie Wright, Jack Morelli (2023)
Oct - "The Gris-Gris" by Jim Keegan & Ruth Keegan (2004)
Oct - "Fair Ground" by Jo Duffy, Mike Manley, Jackson Guice, James Fry, Kevin Cunningham (1992)
Dec - "> THE JESTER" by Margaut Shorjian (2023)
Graphic Novels & Collections
Jan - Simpsons Comics Colossal Compendium - Volume One (2013)
Mar - Star Trek Deep Space Nine: N-Vector (2000)
Betas & Demos
Jan - "Full Void Demo" dev. OutOfTheBit (2023)
Video & Electronic Games
Jan - Thunderbirds dev. Saffire (2004)
Feb - Men in Black: The Game dev. Gigawatt Studios & The Collective (1998)
Feb - The Game of Life dev. Mass Media & The Collective (1998)
Mar - Hack 'n' Slash dev. Double Fine Productions (2014)
Mar - God of War dev. Santa Monica Studio (2018)
Mar - Buffy the Vampire Slayer dev. The Collective (2002)
Apr - Indiana Jones and the Emperor's Tomb dev. The Collective (2003)
Apr - Bartman: Avenger of Evil dev. Acclaim Entertainment (1991)
Apr - The X-Files: Resist or Serve dev. Black Ops Entertainment & The Collective (2004)
May - Bart Simpson's Cupcake Crisis dev. Acclaim (1990)
May - Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith dev. The Collective (2005)
May - Marc Ecko's Getting Up: Contents Under Pressure dev. The Collective (2006)
May - The Adventures of Mouth Man dev. Retrocade Media (2023)
Jun - Spacebase DF-9 dev. Double Fine Productions (2014)
Jul - Mighty Max dev. Tiger Electronics (1994)
Jul - The Adventures of Mighty Max dev. WJS Design (1995)
Oct - Haunted House dev. Atari (1982)
Oct - Castlevania dev. Konami (1987)
Oct - Clock Tower dev. Human Entertainment (1995)
Oct - D dev. Warp (1995)
Oct - Friday the 13th dev. Atlus (1989)
Oct - Silent Hill 3 dev. Konami (2003)
Oct - Five Nights at Freddy’s dev. Scott Cawthon (2014)
Dec - The Simpsons: Bart vs. Homersaurus dev. Tiger Electronics (1994)
Short Films
Jan - "bugs" dir. k. pakiz (2023)
Jan - "enter initials" dir. k. pakiz (2023)
Feb - "An Ostrich Told Me the World Is Fake and I Think I Believe It" dir. Lachlan Pendragon (2022)
Feb - "The Flying Sailor" dir. Amanda Forbis & Wendy Tilby (2022)
Feb - "Ice Merchants" dir. João Gonzalez (2022)
Feb - "The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse" dir. Peter Baynton & Charlie Mackesy (2022)
Feb - "My Year of Dicks" dir. Sara Gunnarsdóttir (2022)
Feb - "Ivalu" dir. Anders Walter & Pipaluk K. Jørgensen (2022)
Feb - "Night Ride (Nattrikken)" dir. Eirik Tveiten (2020)
Feb - "Le Pupille" dir. Alice Rohrwacher (2022)
Feb - "The Red Suitcase" dir. Cyrus Neshvad (2022)
Feb - "An Irish Goodbye" dir. Tom Berkeley & Ross White (2022)
Apr - "The Greatest Living Show" dir. Toby Fox & Itoki Hana (2023)
Jun - "Wolf in sheep's clothing" dir. Yea An (2023)
Jun - "War of Colors" dir. Emir Kumova (2022)
Jun - "Double King" dir. Felix Colgrave (2017)
Jun - "How Finding Nemo Should Have Ended" dir. HISHE (2016)
Jul - "What It Feels Like to Live as an Immortal?" dir. LazyOwl Studio (2022)
Sep - "Carl's Date" dir. Bob Peterson (2023)
Movies Jan-Jun
Jan - Avatar: The Way of Water dir. James Cameron (2022)
Jan - Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance with Somebody dir. Kasi Lemmons (2022)
Jan - Thunderbirds dir. Jonathan Frakes (2004)
Jan - M3GAN dir. Gerard Johnstone (2023)
Jan - Corsage dir. Marie Kreutzer (2022)
Jan - Broker dir. Hirokazu Kore-eda (2022)
Jan - Skinamarink dir. Kyle Edward Ball (2022)
Jan - Plane dir. Jean-François Richet (2023)
Jan - Missing dir. Will Merrick & Nick Johnson (2023)
Jan - That Time I Got Reincarnated As a Slime the Movie: Scarlet Bond dir. Yasuhito Kikuchi (2023)
Jan - A Man Called Otto dir. Marc Forster (2023)
Jan - Puss In Boots: The Last Wish dir. Joel Crawford (2022)
Jan - Women Talking dir. Sarah Polley (2022)
Feb - Groundhog Day dir. Harold Ramis (1993)
Feb - Infinity Pool dir. Brandon Cronenberg (2023)
Feb - 80 for Brady dir. Kyle Marvin (2023)
Feb - Magic Mike dir. Steven Soderbergh (2012)
Feb - Living dir. Oliver Hermanus (2022)
Feb - Magic Mike XXL dir. Gregory Jacobs (2015)
Feb - She Came from the Woods dir. Erik Bloomquist (2022)
Feb - Magic Mike's Last Dance dir. Steven Soderbergh (2023)
Feb - Knock at the Cabin dir. M. Night Shyamalan (2023)
Feb - Sword Art Online the Movie -Progressive- Scherzo of Deep Night dir. Ayako Kono (2023)
Feb - Consecration dir. Christopher Smith (2023)
Feb - Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey dir. Rhys Waterfield (2023)
Feb - Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania dir. Peyton Reed (2023)
Feb - Johnny Mnemonic dir. Robert Longo (1995)
Feb - Virtuosity dir. Brett Leonard (1995)
Feb - Jesus Revolution dir. Jon Erwin & Brent McCorkle (2023)
Feb - Cocaine Bear dir. Elizabeth Banks (2023)
Feb - Gattaca dir. Andrew Niccol (1997)
Feb - Strange Days dir. Kathryn Bigelow (1995)
Feb - Kissed dir. Lynne Stopkewich (1996)
Feb - Richard III dir. Richard Loncraine (1995)
Feb - Eye for an Eye dir. John Schlesinger (1996)
Mar - Creed III dir. Michael B. Jordan (2023)
Mar - Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre dir. Guy Ritchie (2023)
Mar - RRR dir. S. S. Rajamouli (2022)
Mar - The Lawnmower Man dir. Brett Leonard (1992)
Mar - Scream VI dir. Matt Bettinelli-Olpin & Tyler Gillett (2023)
Mar - 65 dir. Scott Beck & Bryan Woods (2023)
Mar - Shazam! Fury of the Gods dir. David F. Sandberg (2023)
Apr - A Good Person dir. Zach Braff (2023)
Apr - Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves dir. Jonathan Goldstein & John Francis Daley (2023)
Apr - The Super Mario Bros. Movie dir. Aaron Horvath & Michael Jelenic (2023)
Apr - Air dir. Ben Affleck (2023)
Apr - John Wick: Chapter 4 dir. Chad Stahelski (2023)
Apr - Suzume dir. Makoto Shinkai (2023)
Apr - Mafia Mamma dir. Catherine Hardwicke (2023)
Apr - Renfield dir. Chris McKay (2023)
Apr - The Pope's Exorcist dir. Julius Avery (2023)
Apr - Beau Is Afraid dir. Ari Aster (2023)
May - Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 dir. James Gunn (2023)
May - Polite Society dir. Nida Manzoor (2023)
May - Born to Fly dir. Liu Xiaoshi (2023)
May - Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret dir. Kelly Fremon Craig (2023)
May - Fool's Paradise dir. Charlie Day (2023)
May - Hypnotic dir. Robert Rodriguez (2023)
May - Evil Dead Rise dir. Lee Cronin (2023)
May - Master Gardener dir. Paul Schrader (2023)
May - Sisu dir. Jalmari Helander (2023)
May - Fast X dir. Louis Leterrier (2023)
May - The Wrath of Becky dir. Matt Angel & Suzanne Coote (2023)
May - Kandahar dir. Ric Roman Waugh (2023)
Jun - The Hangover dir. Todd Phillips (2009)
Jun - The George McKenna Story dir. Eric Laneuville (1986)
Jun - Last Action Hero dir. John McTiernan (1993)
Jun - We Have a Ghost dir. Christopher Landon (2023)
Jun - The Mother dir. Niki Caro (2023)
Jun - The Little Mermaid dir. Rob Marshall (2023)
Jun - Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse dir. Joaquim Dos Santos, Kemp Powers, Justin K. Thompson (2023)
Jun - The Boogeyman dir. Rob Savage (2023)
Jun - The Roundup: No Way Out dir. Lee Sang-yong (2023)
Jun - Chevalier dir. Stephen Williams (2023)
Jun - Transformers: Rise of the Beasts dir. Steven Caple Jr. (2023)
Jun - Sanctuary dir. Zachary Wigon (2023)
Jun - A Thousand and One dir. A.V. Rockwell (2023)
Jun - The Blackening dir. Tim Story (2023)
Jun - No Hard Feelings dir. Gene Stupnitsky (2023)
Jun - Past Lives dir. Celine Song (2023)
Jun - The Flash dir. Andy Muschietti (2023)
Jun - Asteroid City dir. Wes Anderson (2023)
Jun - Adipurush dir. Om Raut (2023)
Jun - God Is a Bullet dir. Nick Cassavetes (2023)
Jun - 1920: Horrors of the Heart dir. Krishna Bhatt (2023)
Jun - The Childe dir. Park Hoon-jung (2023)
Jun - Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny dir. James Mangold (2023)
Movies Jul-Dec
Jul - Metropolis dir. Rintaro (2001)
Jul - Insidious: The Red Door dir. Patrick Wilson (2023)
Jul - Joy Ride dir. Adele Lim (2023)
Jul - Lost In the Stars dir. Cui Rui & Liu Xiang (2023)
Jul - Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One dir. Christopher McQuarrie (2023)
Jul - The Miracle Club dir. Thaddeus O'Sullivan (2023)
Jul - Shadows dir. Glenn Chan (2023)
Jul - Barbie dir. Greta Gerwig (2023)
Jul - Oppenheimer dir. Christopher Nolan (2023)
Jul - Haunted Mansion dir. Justin Simien (2023)
Jul - Talk to Me dir. Danny Philippou & Michael Philippou (2023)
Aug - Theater Camp dir. Molly Gordon & Nick Lieberman (2023)
Aug - Never Say Never dir. Baoqiang Wang (2023)
Aug - Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem dir. Jeff Rowe (2023)
Aug - Meg 2: The Trench dir. Ben Wheatley (2023)
Aug - Ransomed dir. Kim Seong-hun (2023)
Aug - The Last Voyage of the Demeter dir. André Øvredal (2023)
Aug - Jules dir. Marc Turtletaub (2023)
Aug - Strays dir. Josh Greenbaum (2023)
Aug - Blue Beetle dir. Angel Manuel Soto (2023)
Aug - Gran Turismo dir. Neill Blomkamp (2023)
Aug - birth/rebirth dir. Laura Moss (2023)
Aug - Landscape With Invisible Hand dir. Cory Finley (2023)
Aug - Porco Rosso dir. Hayao Miyazaki (1992)
Aug - The Wind Rises dir. Hayao Miyazaki (2013)
Aug - Retribution dir. Nimród Antal (2023)
Aug - To Live and Die in L.A. dir. William Friedkin (1985)
Sep - The Equalizer 3 dir. Antoine Fuqua (2023)
Sep - Bottoms dir. Emma Seligman (2023)
Sep - Elemental dir. Peter Sohn (2023)
Sep - They Live dir. John Carpenter (1988)
Sep - Jawan dir. Atlee (2023)
Sep - Christine dir. John Carpenter (1983)
Sep - The LEGO Movie dir. Phil Lord & Christopher Miller (2014)
Sep - Outlaw Johnny Black dir. Michael Jai White (2023)
Sep - Satanic Hispanics dir. Alejandro Brugués , Mike Mendez, Gigi Saul Guerrero, Eduardo Sánchez, Demián Rugna (2023)
Sep - Prey dir. Dan Trachtenberg (2022)
Sep - Tales from the Crypt Presents: Demon Knight dir. Ernest Dickerson (1995)
Sep - Tales from the Crypt Presents: Bordello of Blood dir. Gilbert Adler (1996)
Sep - Tales from the Crypt Presents: Ritual dir. Avi Nesher (2002)
Sep - Vault of Horror dir. Freddie Francis (1973)
Sep - Tales from the Crypt dir. Freddie Francis (1972)
Sep - The Origin of Evil dir. Sébastien Marnier (2023)
Sep - The Expendables 4 dir. Scott Waugh (2023)
Sep - The Creator dir. Gareth Edwards (2023)
Oct - It Lives Inside dir. Bishal Dutta (2023)
Oct - The Company of Wolves dir. Neil Jordan (1984)
Oct - Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare dir. Rachel Talalay (1991)
Oct - Honeymoon dir. Leigh Janiak (2014)
Oct - Organ dir. Kei Fujiwara (1996)
Oct - The Bride of Frankenstein dir. James Whale (1935)
Oct - The Royal Hotel dir. Kitty Green (2023)
Oct - House of 1000 Corpses dir. Rob Zombie (2003)
Oct - The Nun II dir. Michael Chaves (2023)
Oct - The Godsend dir. Gabrielle Beaumont (1980)
Oct - Hatching dir. Hanna Bergholm (2022)
Oct - The Velvet Vampire dir. Stephanie Rothman (1971)
Oct - Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter dir. Joseph Zito (1984)
Oct - A Haunting in Venice dir. Kenneth Branagh (2023)
Oct - Piggy dir. Carlota Pereda (2022)
Oct - A Night to Dismember (The Lost Version) dir. Doris Wishman (1979)
Oct - The Blob dir. Irvin Yeaworth (1958)
Oct - Embrace of the Vampire dir. Anne Goursaud (1995)
Oct - Onyx the Fortuitous and the Talisman of Souls dir. Andrew Bowser (2023)
Oct - Exposed to Danger dir. Yang Chia-yun (Karen Yang) (1982)
Oct - Saw X dir. Kevin Greutert (2023)
Oct - The Birds dir. Alfred Hitchcock (1963)
Oct - Slumber Party Massacre II dir. Deborah Brock (1987)
Oct - Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island dir. Jim Stenstrum (1998)
Oct - The Being dir. Jackie Kong (1983)
Oct - Kuso dir. Steve (2017)
Oct - Visible Secret dir. Ann Hui (2001)
Oct - The Exorcist: Believer dir. David Gordon Green (2023)
Oct - The Love Witch dir. Anna Biller (2016)
Oct - Bones dir. Ernest R. Dickerson (2001)
Oct - Bedevil dir. Tracey Moffatt (1993)
Nov - A Million Miles Away dir. Alejandra Marquez Abella (2023)
Nov - Anatomy of a Fall dir. Justine Triet (2023)
Nov - Killers of the Flower Moon dir. Martin Scorsese (2023)
Nov- Five Nights at Freddy's dir. Gil Kenan (2023)
Nov - The Marsh King's Daughter dir. Neil Burger (2023)
Nov - It's a Wonderful Knife dir. Tyler MacIntyre (2023)
Nov - The Marvels dir. Nia DaCosta (2023)
Nov - Freelance dir. Pierre Morel (2023)
Nov - The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes dir. Francis Lawrence (2023)
Nov - Next Goal Wins dir. Taika Waititi (2023)
Nov - The Holdovers dir. Alexander Payne (2023)
Nov - Priscilla dir. Sofia Coppola (2023)
Nov - Thanksgiving dir. Eli Roth (2023)
Nov - Napoleon dir. Ridley Scott (2023)
Nov - The Persian Version dir. Maryam Keshavarz (2023)
Nov - Wish dir. Chris Buck & Fawn Veerasunthorn (2023)
Dec - Dream Scenario dir. Kristoffer Borgli (2023)
Dec - Godzilla Minus One dir. Takashi Yamazaki (2023)
Dec - The Boy and the Heron dir. Hayao Miyazaki (2023)
Dec - The Abyss dir. James Cameron (1989)
Dec - Eileen dir. William Oldroyd (2023)
Dec - A Christmas Story dir. Bob Clark (1983)
Dec - Wonka dir. Paul King (2023)
Dec - Monster dir. Hirokazu Kore-eda (2023)
Dec - Leave the World Behind dir. Sam Esmail (2023)
Dec - The Polar Express dir. Robert Zemeckis (2004)
Dec - The Muppet Christmas Carol dir. Brian Henson (1992)
Dec - Velvet Buzzsaw dir. Dan Gilroy (2019)
Episodes
Jan - Thunderbirds - "Trapped In The Sky" (1965)
May - Well ABRIDGE Me, Princess! - "Well, Excuuuuse Me, Princess and the Frog" (2023)
Jun - The Simpsons - "My Mother the Car Jacker" (2003)
Jun - The Simpsons - "The President Wore Pearls" (2003)
Jun - Fox's Peter Pan & the Pirates - "The Coldest Cut of All" (1990)
Oct - Regular Show - "Terror Tales of the Park" I-VI (2011-2016)
Oct - The Simpsons - "Treehouse of Horror Presents: Not It" (2022)
Dec - The 100 - "Perverse Instantiation – Part One" (2016)
Dec - The 100 - "Perverse Instantiation – Part Two" (2016)
Dec - The Crown - "Ipatiev House" (2022)
Dec - The Crown - "No Woman's Land" (2022)
Dec - The Outer Limits - "The Galaxy Being" (1963)
Dec - Night Gallery - "Pilot" (1969)
Dec - Babylon 5 - "The Gathering" (1993)
Series
Jan - The Outer Limits - Seasons 1-3 (1995-1997)
Feb - The Outer Limits - Seasons 4-6 (1998-2000)
Mar - The Outer Limits - Season 7 (2001-2002)
Apr - Star Trek Discovery - Season 4 (2021)
Apr - Moonbeam City (2015)
Apr - Star Trek Picard - Seasons 2-3 (2022-2023)
May - Tales from the Crypt - Seasons 1-2 (1989-1990)
May - Star Trek Lower Decks - Seasons 2-3 (2021-2022)
May - Star Trek Prodigy - Season 1 (2021)
Jun - Star Trek Strange New Worlds - Season 1 (2022)
Jun - Tales from the Crypt - Seasons 3-4 (1991-1992)
Aug - Tales from the Crypt - Seasons 5-6 (1993-1995)
Sep - Tales from the Crypt - Season 7 (1996)
Sep - Tales from the Cryptkeeper - Season 1 (1993)
Sep - Star Trek Strange New Worlds - Season 2 (2023)
Oct - Tales from the Cryptkeeper - Seasons 2 & 3 (1994 & 1999)
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Ed Emshwiller provided the cover for The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction for May 1961. Inside, his wife, author Carol Emshwiller returns with the lead story of the issue, the sublime “Adapted”.
“It can be hard to resist the incessant mould of conformity, even when blending in means losing oneself. Emshwiller’s protagonist loses the battle, but, perhaps, not all hope. Four stars,” enthuses Gideon Marcus of the tale http://galacticjourney.org/april-26-1961-dessert-for-last-may-1961-fantasy-and-science-fiction/
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Witches, crimes, mutants, shape-shifting horses, feuilletonic digressions etc. | Blog about some recent reading
Witches, crimes, mutants, shape-shifting horses, feuilletonic digressions etc. | Blog about some recent reading
I read an excellent trio of novels to close out the summer: Carol Emshwiller’s Mister Boots, Fernanda Melchor’s Hurricane Season (translated by Sophie Hughes), and Tatyana Tolstaya’s The Slynx (translated by Jane Gambrell). In between, I read most of Anecdotes by Heinrich von Kleist (translated by Matthew Spencer), described by publisher Sublunary Editions as “short fiction and feuilletonic…
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#Blog about#Carol Emshwiller#Fernanda Melchor#Heinrich von Kleist#Hurricane Season#Literature in translation#Microfiction#Mister Boots#Tatyana Tolstaya#The Slynx
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The Mount by Carol Emshwiller, cover art by Tony Sahara, printed in 2005.
This book was recommended to me by my sister, its a really cool idea about the roles prey and predator animals.
#book covers#scifi book cover#scifi#ya fiction#carol emshwiller#tony sahara#the mount#must read if you sympathise with horses#dystopia#dystopian fiction
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First Lines: Carol Emshwiller - The Mount
We're not against you, we're for.
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