Tachyon tidbits featuring Tobias S. Buckell, Lavie Tidhar, Nicole Kornher-Stace, Marjorie Liu, and Samantha Mills

The latest reviews and mentions of Tachyon titles and authors from around the web

Publishers Weekly praises Tobias S. Buckell’s forthcoming A STRANGER IN THE CITADEL. The book can be preordered directly from Tachyon and all finer booksellers.

The message about the importance of literacy could not be more timely, and Buckell’s sure-handed plotting keep the pages flying. Readers will be hooked.

cover image of A Stranger in the Citadel by Tobias Buckell
Cover by Elizabeth Story

Corvus Strigiform on The Weightless State Between Here and There appreciates Lavie Tidhar’s forthcoming THE CIRCUMFERENCE OF THE WORLD, This, too, is available for preorder directly from Tachyon and all finer booksellers.

I loved it every step along the way, and especially when it became clear why reading it felt so dreamlike. You will have to discover that for yourself.

Cover of The Circumference of the World by Lavie Tidhar
Cover by Elizabeth Story

The Shades of Orange believes Nicole Kornher-Stace’s FLIGHT & ANCHOR is worthy of the hype.

Coverage begins around 2:20
Flight & Anchor by Nicole Kornher-Stace
Cover by Elizabeth Story

Congratulations to Marjorie Liu and Sana Takeda on their The Night Eaters Book 1: She Eats the Night winning Eisner Awards for Best Graphic Album—New and Best Painter/Multimedia Artist (interior art).

Cover by Sana Takeda

For Fantasy Magazine, Arley Sorg interviews the 2023 Nebula Award finalist just after the after awards were announced. Among their number was Samantha Mills author of the forthcoming Tachyon novel THE RISE AND FALL OF WINGED ZEMOLAI.

Your short story “Rabbit Test” [Uncanny, November-December 2022] won the Nebula Award for short fiction! CONGRATULATIONS! That is amazing. What was the initial inspiration, and how did the piece change or evolve over drafting?

SM: I learned about rabbit tests in a “Today I Learned”-type of post (“TIL that in the 1950s laboratories injected urine into rabbits to find out if someone was pregnant!!”), and I immediately put it in my idea notebook. It sat there for years. I’d prod at it once in a while but couldn’t find an actual story to go with it. And then in May 2022, a draft of the Supreme Court decision on Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization leaked, and I found myself obsessively reading articles on abortion, threats against birth control, catastrophes already taking place in healthcare. I was arming myself up for arguments and researching abortion funds with my friends. I realized I did have something to say about rabbit tests after all, and the story came together over the course of a month, evolving as I found bits of history I wanted to include.