SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy

SciFi and Fantasy

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God of War Series Finds Its Kratos in Ryan Hurst
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God of War Series Finds Its Kratos in Ryan Hurst

News God of War God of War Series Finds Its Kratos in Ryan Hurst Hurst starred in Sons of Anarchy and voiced Thor in God of War Ragnarök By Vanessa Armstrong | Published on January 14, 2026 Credit: Justin Lubin/Prime Video Comment 0 Share New Share Credit: Justin Lubin/Prime Video The adaptation of the popular God of War video game is finally moving forward. We’ve heard little from the production after the project gained Ronald D. Moore as showrunner in late 2024, but Amazon MGM Studios is clearly fully backing the production, recently giving the show a two-season order. Today, we also got some critical casting news: Ryan Hurst, whose credits include Sons of Anarchy, a role in Christopher Nolan’s upcoming film, The Odyssey, and voicing Thor in the video game, God of War Ragnarök, will star as Kratos. Kratos is the protagonist of the series, as his character description makes clear: Kratos is Spartan by birth, and a god by nature. Raised in a martial culture, he rose to command armies in service of his homeland until one day he made a fateful deal with Ares, the Greek God of War, and lost his soul in exchange for being victorious in battle. Over the course of ten wildly successful games, Kratos vanquished mortals, creatures and gods alike. In the process, he became an iconic character in pop culture, known for his stoic nature, unchallenged combat skills, and tragic past. In God of War, the live-action series, his story will closely follow the path of the last two games as he deals with something new: his ten-year-old son Atreus. This father and son dynamic began a whole new chapter in the legendary series and will be the heartbeat of the new show. Indeed, it looks like the series will be Kratos (Hurst) trying to teach his son to be a god, and his son teaching him how to be a better human. The show is in pre-production in Vancouver, though with casting already being announced, odds are good they’ll start shooting soon if they haven’t already. The first two episodes will be directed by Frederick E.O. Toye (Shōgun, The Boys, Fallout)—further proof that Amazon MGM is betting big on this production. No news yet, however, on when it will premiere on Prime Video. [end-mark] The post <i>God of War</i> Series Finds Its Kratos in Ryan Hurst appeared first on Reactor.

This Is Not a Test Trailer Nails “The Breakfast Club Meets 28 Days Later” Vibe
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This Is Not a Test Trailer Nails “The Breakfast Club Meets 28 Days Later” Vibe

News This Is Not a Test This Is Not a Test Trailer Nails “The Breakfast Club Meets 28 Days Later” Vibe The movie is an adaptation of Courtney Summers’ novel of the same name By Vanessa Armstrong | Published on January 14, 2026 Credit: IFC Comment 0 Share New Share Credit: IFC When we first heard the news a year ago that Courtney Summers’ 2012 young adult novel was getting an adaptation, the film was introduced as “The Breakfast Club meets 28 Weeks Later.” Today, we have a trailer for the movie, and for this trailer at least, that description stands true. The clip starts with a bunch of teenagers drinking in a high school gym and playing “Never Have I Ever.” It’s the standard stuff at first: Who has cheated on a test? Who had sex in the boys’ bathroom? And then… needle scratch (just in my brain, not in the trailer); one kid says, “Never have I ever survived a zombie invasion.” Here’s the official synopsis, which gives those who haven’t read Summers’ novel some more context: Sloane and a small group of her classmates take cover in their high school to escape their suddenly apocalyptic hometown. As danger relentlessly pounds on the doors, Sloane begins to see the world through the eyes of people who actually want to live and takes matters into her own hands. We only have today’s trailer to go on, but the film adapted by writer-director Adam MacDonald (Pyewacket, Out Come the Wolves) looks like a decent addition to the zombie movie genre. For book fans, there will also be a special edition of Summers’ This Is Not a Test hitting bookshelves for your reading enjoyment. The movie premieres in theaters on February 20, 2026, and stars Olivia Holt (Heart Eyes), Froy Gutierrez (I Love LA), Luke MacFarlane (Bros), Corteon Moore (From), Chloe Avakian (Devil in Disguise: John Wayne Gacy), and Carson MacCormac (Clown in a Cornfield). Check out the trailer below. [end-mark] The post <i>This Is Not a Test</i> Trailer Nails “<i>The Breakfast Club</i> Meets <i>28 Days Later</i>” Vibe appeared first on Reactor.

Read an Excerpt From Pedro the Vast by Simón Lopez Trujillo
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Read an Excerpt From Pedro the Vast by Simón Lopez Trujillo

Excerpts post-apocalyptic science fiction Read an Excerpt From Pedro the Vast by Simón Lopez Trujillo Humanity has encroached a step too far into the natural world, and a deadly fungus mounts its own resistance… By Simón López Trujillo | Published on January 14, 2026 Comment 0 Share New Share We’re thrilled to share an excerpt from Pedro the Vast, a literary post-apocalyptic SF novel by Simón Lopez Trujillo (translated by Robin Myers), available now from Algonquin Books. In the disorienting, devastatingly tense world of López Trujillo, a eucalyptus farm worker named Pedro starts coughing. Several of his coworkers die of a strange fungal disease, which has jumped to humans for the first time, but Pedro, miraculously, awakes. His survival fascinates a foreign mycologist, as well as a local priest, who dubs his mysterious mutterings to be the words of a prophet. Meanwhile Pedro’s kids are left to fend for themselves: the young Cata, whose creepy art projects are getting harder and harder to decipher, and Patricio, who wasn’t ready to be thrust into the role of father. Their competing efforts to reckon with Pedro’s condition eventually meet in a horrifying climax that readers will never forget. “The mushroom Ganoderma lucidum is a naturally wood-degrading saprotrophic basidiomycete, but it demonstrates a series of highly useful pharmacological effects. This, given the scarcity of the species in natural environments, has fostered the artificial cultivation of its fruiting bodies in specialized greenhouses by means of trunks or sawdust in bags and plastic bottles. The mushroom is characterized by its reddish, generally kidney-shaped cap, supported by a svelte foot in a slightly tortuous position. Its mycelium feeds on the dead wood of broad-leafed trees and contains a high concentration of triterpenes and polysaccharides, both prized pharmacological components. Useful properties against hepatitis and hypertension in triterpenes have been documented; so have anti-tumoral effects in polysaccharides. The latter have sparked considerable research interest in the Ganoderma genus among contemporary medical mycologists, as well as in the commercialization of its derivations in the alternative oncological therapy market.” Giovanna spoke with the steady cadence of an experienced lecturer. The fifty-seat auditorium was full, and the slide sequence marked the pulse of her presentation. This was one of the keynote addresses Giovanna would deliver throughout the year at universities across the country, a means of compensating the state for the fellowship she’d received to study abroad. She hated these activities: They reactivated her fear of standing at the blackboard in elementary school. Her adult academic work had forced her to get used to it, but it still felt clumsy and tedious, and she operated on autopilot, just fulfilling her duty. At least academia allowed her to visit Concepción once in a while. She could see family, friends. Mechanically answer colleagues’ questions about her research for the book she was writing. Insist to her parents that she was fine on her own. That she’d gone on some dates, but nothing serious. English guys are boring, Mom. All they do is drink and talk about their work. “Therapeutic uses of this mushroom can be traced back thousands of years in classical Chinese medicine, which called it Lingzhi and employed it primarily to alleviate fatigue, asthma, and liver disorders.” She observed the audience’s faces as she spoke. Somewhere along the way, she’d learned to separate speech from thought, like someone who begins to disassociate the actions of their hands in learning to juggle. She quickly scanned some of the professors sitting in the first row. Middle-aged men with similar signs of degradation: baldness, paunches, facial creases, pinched expressions, shabby dress, poor hygiene, bad breath. One of their ilk had recently published a review that ridiculed her dissertation. She also focused on a student in the third row. Her blond side-shaved hair was drawn back with a bow, and she studied Giovanna intently, legs crossed, taking notes. Giovanna’s presentation concluded with an emphasis on how science, confronting an uncertain future, finds fertile ground in researching the fungus kingdom and its prodigious properties. She showed a sequence of slides on the use of mushrooms as fuel, plastic-degrading products, selective pest control, antidepressants, anticarcinogens, and producers of the most powerful antibacterial enzymes on record. Buy the Book Pedro the Vast Simón Lopez Trujillo Buy Book Pedro the Vast Simón Lopez Trujillo Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleiBooksIndieBoundTarget Half an hour later, Giovanna found herself in conversation by the refreshment table with a group of biology students. As if trying to mask her reticence, the note-taking girl now looked her right in the eye as Giovanna spoke. “The truth is, we know very little about fungi. Their life cycles are strange, and although they don’t look it, they’re more like us than like bacteria or the plant kingdom. Invasive, authoritarian creatures. Extremely intelligent. Let’s take Entomophthora muscae, for example, a parasitic fungus that infects the housefly. Contagion occurs when the fungal spores land and germinate on top of it, penetrating its exoskeleton. According to the research, the first thing the fungus does is advance into the fly’s brain and seize control of its movements. It settles in the neural area in charge of the feet and wings, forcing it to alight on some nearby surface and climb to its highest point. Eventually, the fungus drops the fly. Its wings don’t react. The insect hits the ground, paralyzed. Then the hyphae of the fungus start to digest its innards, and the fly dies. Tiny cracks open in its body and sporangia sprout: countless tiny spore-sacs ready to embark in search of new flies.” * * * They nestled toward the left. Rain streamed silently outside. If you paid attention, it was there, present. If you talked, you couldn’t hear it anymore. Giovanna curled her body closer to Andrea’s, pressed a hand to her chest, and asked her, innocent: “Is it possible to put a person under a microscope?” “How?” “Like a whole person. Can you imagine seeing all their cells moving around at the same time?” For a few seconds, neither said a word. Giovanna closed her eyes. Heard the rain. On a different night, she’d once confessed to someone that she felt, in moments like these, her thoughts slipping right out of her. She loved that. It was one of her favorite things. “I don’t know. Maybe a big enough lens could do it,” Andrea said. “Really?” “I don’t get it. What’s your point?” They spoke slowly, skin warm under their T-shirts. Giovanna brushed a hand across Andrea’s forehead. She opened and closed her eyes with every sound. Talking meant being awake. Soon, they’d sleep. There was no rush. They could say everything more easily, unguarded. She focused on her own pulse and the rain eased the weight of thinking. “There’s something I want to know,” Giovanna said. “What?” “What can you feel?” “Now?” “Yeah.” “The rain. Your voice behind me.” “What else?” “Heat in my stomach. Your hand on my chest. The edge of your knee against my thigh. Your nose at my neck. Your breathing.” “What else?” Giovanna said, unfolding her body above her. “Why do you ask?” “There’s something I want to know.” Their words spread like moss between them. “What?” Giovanna turned toward her and pulled her close. “If you can feel your own skin.” * * * “Yes?” “Giovanna Oddó?” “Speaking.” “I’m sorry to be calling so late, but it’s urgent. This is Dr. Martín Moreno.” The voice on the other end sounded as if it were underwater. Giovanna rubbed her eyes to hear better. “Could you come first thing to the Provincial Hospital of Curanilahue?” Giovanna set three alarms on her cell phone and went back to sleep. She drove to Curanilahue in the pre-dawn blue. The deserted highway helped her conjure hypotheses for the case. She remembered visiting another hospital to examine a baby girl with candidiasis so severe that her body was covered in red blotches and her tongue had gone white. How did they find me? she wondered, trying to recall whether her number appeared on any of the articles she’d published online. Then she passed two trucks ablaze. They looked like pachyderm corpses on the shoulder of the highway. When she reached the modest hospital, she found Dr. Moreno waiting outside, smoking and fidgeting. He greeted her and asked her to accompany him into a lab room. The young doctor occasionally passed a hand over his head, as if to make sure his hair was still in place, using the other to click files on an old computer. They took ages to open. “Here it is. This is what I need to show you,” he said at last, resolute, as an image slipped down the screen like a curtain. Giovanna, not understanding why they’d made her drive an hour and a half just to look at a file they could have emailed, leaned closer to the screen and focused in utter silence for several minutes. “Is this person alive?” she asked. “He was in a coma for over a month. The other infected individuals all died last week. We’ll go up to see him shortly.” Unable to sleep that night, Giovanna opened her laptop. She propped a couple of cushions and straightened her back. She decided to analyze Dr. Moreno’s information using more advanced software, hoping she’d get drowsy as the data rendered. But once the visualization was ready, the nagging voice in her head only grew louder. Giovanna stared intently at the white markings, perplexed by how they could organize themselves in such a way. Thinking there must be a file error, she executed the operation again while making herself a cup of tea. The scene was identical when she returned. Nothing was in its right place. What was supposed to be one thing seemed to respond to another. For a moment, she thought of texting Andrea, but she deleted the message before sending it. Captivated, she spent a couple hours analyzing the data. When it was very late, she set her alarm, switched off the light, and swallowed a sleeping pill. Excerpted from Pedro the Vast, copyright © 2026 by Simón Lopez Trujillo. The post Read an Excerpt From <i>Pedro the Vast</i> by Simón Lopez Trujillo appeared first on Reactor.

Back to the Land, Like It Or Not: Hiron Ennes’ “Our Best Selves”
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Back to the Land, Like It Or Not: Hiron Ennes’ “Our Best Selves”

Books Reading the Weird Back to the Land, Like It Or Not: Hiron Ennes’ “Our Best Selves” All this family needs is time, rain, sunlight, and soil… By Ruthanna Emrys, Anne M. Pillsworth | Published on January 14, 2026 Comment 0 Share New Share Welcome back to Reading the Weird, in which we get girl cooties all over weird fiction, cosmic horror, and Lovecraftiana—from its historical roots through its most recent branches. This week, we cover Hiron Ennes’ “Our Best Selves,” first published in the Fall 2024 issue of Weird Horror and collected in The Best Weird Fiction of the Year Vol 1. Spoilers ahead! The family—Mum and Dad, Sister and Brother—arrive in a cab at their new home deep in the woods. The house is “a squat trapezium of stone, fissured like the trunk of a tree.” Its “cracked slab of a roof slumps under centuries of vines, piebald with moss.” The furniture inside is carved from the same crumbling stone as the walls. Mum is thrilled with the place. Dad’s smile fades as he takes in the scale of work to be done on this “fixer-upper.” Sister slips through a wall fissure to join Mum in the garden. Berries, apple trees, and wild tubers already grow there, and Mum is planning vegetable plots. The canopy is thin enough to let in sunlight, but Sister knows that “even the shady bits will be wrapped around [Mum’s] green thumb soon enough.” A sapling with strange undulating leaves grows by the house. Even Mum can’t identify it, but the way it’s greeting Sister clearly marks it as hers. Nevertheless, Mum and Dad claim the sapling-view bedroom, since Sister and Brother can’t stop squabbling over who gets the bed nearest the young tree. The siblings aren’t their “best selves” when they squabble, and they must always strive to be their best selves. Before Dad tackles other fixes, he must repair the roof—the rains are coming. Sister and Brother try to gather its missing pieces, but even the smaller ones are too heavy. Sister suggests that giants must have made their home as a doll house. When they return, the family will become their dolls, and they’ll put Brother in a dress and snap off his limbs. Mum yells not to lie to her brother. Liars aren’t being their best selves! Dad wants Mum to get rid of their cat, which makes her wheeze and break out in hives. He worries enough about her “condition” without the allergy symptoms. Mum refuses, denying allergy and “condition” alike. She wanders her sprouting garden, praying for the rain Dad dreads. Every woman in the family has a single daughter, through whom its genius for horticulture and herbalism descends unbroken. Mum has passed much of her knowledge on to Sister, but in addition to the sapling, Sister can’t identify the plant that’s begun to crawl onto her bed. Mum can’t come see it, because she’s curled up sick in bed with the cat, bleeding on her blankets. Sister has to make her a tea of leaves and red pills, the one medicine Mum hasn’t weaned herself off. It smells like rot, and Sister’s afraid that she may have to take it someday. Dad’s problem is how much weight he’s losing in their self-isolation. His skin is sagging scarily! He kills something he identifies as a boar, though it could be something else, and butchers it on the porch. Mum tells him he should wait for the garden to mature and has the kids recite a litany of the only necessities: Time, rain, sunlight, and soil. The roof’s fixed before the rains, but then collapses again, bit by bit. Summer pollen coats the house outside and in. Mum’s bedridden again. She blames the pollen, Dad the cat. He tells Sister he’d like to go back to town, but she doesn’t miss their old house, the school, the hospital, their car. Mum has decided: One’s best self should need nothing but time, rain, sun and soil. The cat dies. Mum accuses Dad of killing it and tears apart the house looking for a poison she doesn’t find. Sister’s sapling grows apace. She can hear its roots as they spread to the cat’s grave, then the gardens. Mum calls it a “sentinel.” Post-cat, she’s doing better and has returned to her many chores. One night, as she and Sister are making paper, a massive wedge of roof falls on Brother, breaking his right arm. Against Mum’s protests that she can heal him, and Brother’s pleas that he doesn’t want to leave, Dad carries him outside and starts on foot to the distant hospital. Three days later, they return with just three arms between them. Dad says they never got to town. He had to doctor Brother himself by twisting his right arm off at the shoulder, like a snapped branch. He buried the arm in the woods. Brother confirms Dad’s story, proudly. He’d like to dig up his arm, but Mum says “You should never unearth what you’ve already planted.” Peace returns. Mum admits the cat was a problem. Sister watches her tree spread its branches over the house and feels its roots growing under the floor. Brother’s remaining arm lengthens to compensate for the lost one, and his stub puts out fresh growth: two stocky new arms.  With autumn comes an amazingly bountiful harvest. The whole family works hard to gather, prepare, and preserve the vegetable wealth. Brother begins to grow another arm from the elbow of one of the two new ones. When the garden is stripped to bare soil, Mum moves from plot to plot, feeding the soil with her blood. Winter is bliss. Dad’s sagging skin, trimmed from his body and cured, provides tarps and hangings, warm bedding, book covers, even a front door with his navel for a knob. Brother can stretch his long left arm through the house to fetch items or play pranks. Because that arm’s too long to reach his mouth and the others too tangled together, Mum feeds Brother by hand. Sister’s tree spreads branches through her window, curls roots up through the floor. Though it grows less mobile, it seems content to bathe in light filtered through curtains of paternal hide. Sister mostly sits idle, arms splayed to the lengthening daylight. Weeks pass without the family feeling hunger or boredom. They want for nothing. They need nothing except time, rain, sun and soil. * * * What’s Cyclopean: There’s something inherently cyclopean about a marble house fallen in as a “squat trapezium.” Windowsills are trimmed in obsidian. Weirdbuilding: This is definitely not Lovecraft’s obsession with tainted inheritance, but something about “how to select for traits that help our lineages grow into their best selves” rhymes. Madness Takes Its Toll: Mom’s conviction that a hospital would “keep” Brother, or “put him down,” and that Dad killed the cat, seems like paranoia. But in this world, perhaps it isn’t. Buy the Book The Best Weird Fiction of the Year curated by Michael Kelly Buy Book The Best Weird Fiction of the Year curated by Michael Kelly Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleIndieBoundTarget Ruthanna’s Commentary There’s something about the more surreal end of weird fiction: the draping clocks and flooded cathedrals of story, where consistency comes from the logic of emotion alone rather than worldbuilding. Hallucinatory, often familial, like the maternally-driven transformations in Jamaica Kinkaid’s “My Mother.” I appreciate the form, but need to take it in small doses. It makes me queasy, and then I start thinking about my belly, and then Dad’s belly, and then aaaaaaahhhhhhhh. It took me a while to figure out that “Our Best Selves” would be entirely in this mode; I first wondered whether the family was secretly made of wood or only wanted to be, whether they were contemporary back-to-nature extremists or post-apocalyptic survivors, whether “town” was a true horror or an imagined one. The answers, of course, are “yes.” This is cottagecore “back to the land” romanticism taken to extremes of body horror, and the wonder-and-glory-forever of discarding animalistic imperfection in favor of plantlike virtue. Mum’s bodily fluids become nourishing, ever-flowing tree sap. Dad’s belly (aaaaaahhhhhh) becomes harvestable, a carry-bag for vegetables and a fibrous harvest for paper-making. Brother’s arm is pruned and branches like a fruit tree. This is the future that anti-vaxxers want. Though many of them would probably like to keep cars and money, even while “weaning” themselves and their children from modern medicines and schools with pesky (pesty-y?) ideas about reality, and becoming entirely self-sufficient except for tax breaks. “Her best self would never need anything but sun and soil and rain and time,” and in the story’s dream logic that conviction doesn’t kill any humans, though it transforms the cat from a beloved pet to a “pest” earning its demise. Except that the beds are marked by “slabs like tombstones.” In real-world logic, the family would all be dead of starvation and infection. Of salves for crushed arms. Exposure in the woods, trying desperately to carry a broken child to the land of antibiotics and sterile surgeries. It is as corpses, after all, that we feed ever-growing trees, and need nothing that plants don’t need. And the house is… what? An abandoned graveyard. A giants’ dollhouse. The ruins of human ambition, the impossibility of building a sidewalk that dandelions won’t crack. The absurdity of self-denial, sleeping on stone beds and boasting about the starry view through the cracks. One of those dubious “experience” lodgings that show up on Airbnb: don’t you want to stay in this tent in a tree, a broken-down bus, a ruin in the woods? A haunted house. What would someone find now, I wonder, if they came out to claim the fixer-upper? There might not even be bones—just an old garden ready for resurrection. And trees, swift-growing and strange, that the newcomers can call their own. Anne’s Commentary Why do I find this story so unnerving? So a nice little family moves off the grid and into the woods to find “their best selves.” It’s a counter-cultural impulse that goes much farther back than “hippies,” “tree-huggers,” and “granola-crunchers.” Industrialization and urbanization were already nerve-chafing to many by the 1800s, giving rise to Transcendentalism in America, the Arts and Crafts movement in Britain, and Lebensreform in Germany. Think of Thoreau at Walden Pond, bent on “liv[ing] deep and suck[ing] out all the marrow of life.” He “went to the woods because [he] wanted to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life.” A return to nature both practical and spiritual, self-reliance, all those high-minded ideals! But unlike Ennes’ family, Thoreau didn’t move into a house with history and in dire need of repairs. He built his own cabin as simply as possible, with largely salvaged and second-hand materials, but the structure only had to last the two years of his “experiment” in roughing it; besides, he was close enough to Concord to make frequent visits for shopping and socializing. The “Our Best Selves” family (the OBS family, henceforth) are really roughing it. An honest realtor would have described their new house not as a fixer-upper but as a tear-down and start the hell over. It soon becomes clear that Mum’s was the will behind this move. Dad apparently has never seen the house in person before. Maybe Mum hasn’t either. Maybe she saw it online, a For-Sale-As-Is-By-Desperate-Owner. Or maybe no purchase was necessary, because the land and dwelling were a bequest from Mum’s side of the family. The side where marriages always produce only one daughter, making its family tree “a thin, straight line” down which horticultural and herbalist wisdom streams “unbroken and perfectly linear.” Does this imply that Mum’s green thumb is a magical legacy? That’s my inference, anyhow. I also infer that Mum’s “condition” is part of her genetic inheritance, linked to her horticultural talent. Her cat allergy is a separate problem, though animal intimacy might be inimical to her essentially vegetal nature, hence the wheezing and hives. The “condition,” which Mum regards not as pathology but (for her) a normal function, causes bleeding, pain, varying levels of prostration. Sister worries that one day she’ll need to take the pill-laced tea Mum takes when bleeding. “One day” could be Sister’s menarche, the start of menstruation that signals reproductive capability, possible fertility. Diverse cultures have viewed menstrual blood as a powerful potentiator of soil fertility, including the Navajo and Cherokee tribes of North America, the Kogi people of Colombia, and the Beng people of Cote d’Ivoire. In modern Western culture, some practice “earth bleeding” or “menstrual gardening,” in which menstrual blood is returned to the earth, not only to use its nutrients as fertilizer but also to express a connection with natural cycles. Mum subscribes to this practice after the harvest, when she lies bleeding in each emptied plot to replenish the depleted soil. And she grins while doing it and tells the family “We’ve done it, we’ve finally done it.” That is, they’ve successfully completed the first cycle of their new way of living. The females in the family are fulfilling their genetic/magical destinies. Brother, though male, has a sufficient share of Mum’s genes to regenerate his lost arm as branching limbs, while his remaining arm grows long and limber, like the vines that stubbornly cling to and overrun the house. Dad’s another story. Lacking matrilineal genes, he retains his animal nature and might even be considered the livestock of this “farm.” His contribution to harvest is his actual skin, the excess drooping hide that hangs from his abdomen; scraped free of fat and properly cured, it makes a versatile leather for home furnishing. Could it be that with time, Dad will become more like the oddly hairless and long-necked boar he hunted out in their woods? The OBS family’s lifestyle change is radical in its isolation and absolute reliance on self and the land. What makes it unnervingly weird for those of us who remain, will we or nil we, members of Kingdom Animalia, is how Kingdom Plantae retakes the stone house in the woods and hybridizes its three susceptible residents. I’ve developed an enduring notion that the “sapling” with which Sister’s so taken is akin to Dendrocnide moroides, the dreaded gympie-gympie of Australia, which can be considered venomous due to the way its hollow hairs actively inject neurotoxins upon contact. The pain the venom causes is so excruciating that the gympie-gympie is also known as the “suicide plant,” since suicide may well seem a better alternative than suffering a sensation of simultaneous electrocution and burning that could persist for months. Sure, Sister can brush against its “fine green hairs” with impunity, but she’s special, like Mum. I would so not touch that thing. Next week, Mar remains unresigned to her apocalyptic destiny in Chapters 26-28 of Lucy Snyder’s Sister, Maiden, Monster.[end-mark] The post Back to the Land, Like It Or Not: Hiron Ennes’ “Our Best Selves” appeared first on Reactor.

Theodora Goss’s Excellent Letters From an Imaginary Country Explores Genre, Gender Politics, and Identity
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Theodora Goss’s Excellent Letters From an Imaginary Country Explores Genre, Gender Politics, and Identity

Books book reviews Theodora Goss’s Excellent Letters From an Imaginary Country Explores Genre, Gender Politics, and Identity Alexis Ong reviews a “thoroughly inspiring, beautifully written corpus on the possibilities and politics of place.” By Alexis Ong | Published on January 14, 2026 Comment 0 Share New Share The finest moments of Theodora Goss’s excellent Letters From An Imaginary Country are, for me, the stories that channel some of Borges’ most significant ideas into fresh works for a new century. But my favorite in this collection, which now lives in a place of honor in my head, is “Child-Empress of Mars,” which shows how a skilled prose stylist can have fun with pastiche and politics while lowkey committing the world’s most readable murder. It’s a delightful little inversion of the Barsoom series by (celebrated eugenicist) Edgar Rice Burroughs: A curious alien civilization celebrates the arrival of a Hero, secretly orchestrates his whole journey like a madcap version of The Truman Show, and immortalizes his deeds in art and poetry. It’s compact, clever, and deliciously funny, and shows Goss working, almost effortlessly, on a higher plane of short storycraft. Goss is probably best known for her Extraordinary Adventures of the Athena Club novels, a series based on reimagined classic 19th century literature, history, and horror through a feminist lens; this is my first time reading her work. There are several Athena-related tales in this collection, chronicling the lives of women whose fathers (or husbands) are household names: Frankenstein, Jekyll, Hyde, and so on.  For all my love of period literature and historical mysteries, this type of straightforward gendered reinvention has generally never appealed to me for many reasons, especially when the aesthetics and marketability of girl power and girlbossing have become profoundly lazy indicators of cultural relevance and substance (Enola Holmes, for instance, feels like decent fare for a YA audience, and only a YA audience). For a thoughtful adult, the shock value of “what if this man character… was… a woman?!” (or some such variation) simply does not land now in the same way it would if my heaving bosom was still encased in whalebone. Buy the Book Letters from an Imaginary Country Theodora Goss Buy Book Letters from an Imaginary Country Theodora Goss Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleiBooksIndieBoundTarget Goss’s approach to all of this is much more substantive than most, takes greater care to explore gender politics without oversimplification, and does an understated examination of legacy and trauma carried by the women connected to the aforementioned men. “The Secret Diary of Mina Harker” focuses on a young academic who gets a copy of the titular diary; it turns out, of course, that there was much more to the real Mina Harker than her role in Bram Stoker’s book. It’s a well-textured, engaging read, fortified by the savvy academic’s secret weapon: really good footnotes. It is not surprising that Goss, armed with four degrees including a JD and a doctorate, is ace at footnotes; for a reader on the fence, their tone and execution give the story a powerfully charismatic edge (in her notes, Goss says that the footnotes were unintentional!). What I really want to highlight are Goss’ works that draw directly from Borges’ landmark short story “Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius.” In truest Tlönian form, “Cimmeria: From the Journal of Imaginary Anthropology,” follows a small group of American academics who create a fictional country that gradually becomes real; the Borges hypothesis is openly referenced among Cimmeria’s creators as the country inserts itself into the fabric of their reality. The narrator marries a Cimmerian royal with a twin—a concept that Cimmerians understand as one soul in two bodies—and takes them both back to America, with consequences. It’s dense, layered, and packed with conflict over identity, authenticity, and diaspora politics in a way that leaves the brain humming long after the story is over. It’s also a striking companion to the more grounded diaspora-related stories in the collection, namely “Dora/Dóra: An Autobiography,” in which a girl from Soviet-era Hungary immigrates to the US, only to find out that a version of herself remains growing up in Hungary.  “Dora/Dóra: An Autobiography” feels like the most personal read of the lot (also in the running is “Letters From an Imaginary Country,” whose epistolary form feels imbued with the kind of existential despair and bleak matter-of-factness that one finds in exhausted, tenured academic communications), and while set against the dual backdrop of Hungary/America, carries a universal thread for anyone who has been split from their roots and transplanted into strange new soil. Jo Walton says as much in her introduction, but the simplicity of Goss’s approach to the idea of diaspora identities—as if no one has really, fully explored, why not two of them?—makes it all the more striking; Walton says the impact of this story haunts her, and now it haunts me. “Pellargonia: A Letter to the Journal of Imaginary Anthropology,” is the charming sibling to “Cimmeria…” and comes from the point of view of high school friends who create a country named Pellargonia. It’s a close second for my favorite in the collection, brimming with earnestness and young neuroses that leap off the page—the perfect distillation of all that excited, sardonic back-and-forth that dominates so much of teenage camaraderie under fire. It took a second to get into the rhythm of the piece, with Goss making liberal use of interjections to get that manic energetic texture going, but by the end I’m champing at the bit to see this made into a 1990s-era adventure blockbuster about these kids dealing with the consequences of their now-very-real creation (I realized in pondering similar vibes that I started thinking of Jumanji—the original Robin Williams one—and you know what? Jumanji was a great movie).  If fairy tales are Theodora Goss’ bread and butter, she’s taken those basic universal ingredients and made them into one-of-a-kind rétes (Hungarian strudel-type pastries that pop up in the footnotes; the sweet cheese ones sound divine). This one’s for the Borges sickos and deconstructionists who also appreciate the roots of fairy tales in anthropology, for people who delight in seeing a weirder side of their favorite literary greats (“Pug” is for the Jane Austen lovers out there). In particular, her exploration of mirroring and doubling is so impactful precisely because of its elegance and simplicity; an offshoot of this is how the doubling and reflecting (mainly in “Cimmeria,” and some of “Dora/Dóra”) also includes some truly novel, engaging explorations of postcolonial psychology. All this to say is that Letters from an Imaginary Country is an analytical treasure trove that I’m going to take my time unpacking, because my god, it’s so rich. What Goss has here is a thoroughly inspiring, beautifully-written corpus on the possibilities and politics of place, and I’m looking forward to reading more of her work. [end-mark] Letters from an Imaginary Country is published by Tachyon Publications.Read an excerpt. The post Theodora Goss’s Excellent <i>Letters From an Imaginary Country</i> Explores Genre, Gender Politics, and Identity appeared first on Reactor.