Nick Mamatas
Tachyon tidbits featuring Nancy Springer, Lisa Goldstein, Lavie Tidhar, Ellen Datlow, and Nick Mamatas
Rick Klaw blog central station, Ellen Datlow, howling frog books, ivory apples, lavie tidhar, lisa goldstein, nancy springer, Nick Mamatas, noa manheim, omni, review, sean patrick hazlett, the oddling prince, the tel aviv review of books, way too fantasy, weird world war iii 0
The latest reviews and mentions of Tachyon titles and authors from around the web.
Naancy Springer
Photo by Bob O’LaryLisa Goldstein
Photo by Doug AshermanLavie Tidhar Ellen Datlow Nick Mamatas
Photo by Tristian Crane
WAY TOO FANTASY borrows a review rating system from Novels & Waffles when praising Enola Holmes creator Nancy Springer’s THE ODDLING PRINCE.
I generally try to avoid books that make me feel blue because as an emotional reader I get so deep in my feelings that it’s hard to pull myself out again. I don’t want to be weeping around my house randomly for weeks after finishing a book (true story–this has happened with books and movies before). That being said, no book quite touched me and made me a weepy mess like Nancy Springer’s THE ODDLING PRINCE. It didn’t make me depressed at the end, but I really got caught up in my feelings with that one.
Design by Elizabeth Story
HOWLING FROG BOOKS enjoys Lisa Goldstein’s IVORY APPLES.
It’s an excellently-written novel, and I did enjoy it; it’s no wonder it won an award! It was also a little bit of a shock. But I suppose that is salutary now and then. If you like fantasy — especially the modern varieties — well, then you’ve probably already read and loved IVORY APPLES. But if you haven’t, grab a copy!
Noa Manheim in the article “A Prophet without Honor” for THE TEL AVIV REVIEW OF BOOKS explores why Lavie Tidar is so under appreciated in his native Israel.
Jewish and Israeli subjects do come up in his books. There are stories which take place in Haifa, and demonstrate, according to Ehud Maimon’s article “Haifa Haifa – City with a Future”: “The power of books and bookstores to shape the city’s reality and the stories’ heroes perception of reality; the sanctity of the city (with an emphasis on sun and fire rituals); the eternity of the city, the port and the mountain range on which it sits; the mixing of times and places (which in part comes from the same eternity) that is expressed through the establishment of the city in different timelines; and in the mixing of the mythological and the realistic.” There are books dealing with Sephardic poetry (Solve Mysteries with Mercy); and the Central Station story cycle, in which the future is saturated with miracles, aliens, robots, frequent space flights, and genetically engineered children alongside the descendants of the migrant workers who populate Tel Aviv today. Tidhar also deals with the Jewish fate. He presented his agent with the idea behind A Man Lies Dreaming as “Adolf Hitler – private detective.” The novel’s historical sections take place in Auschwitz, and its alternative history in London, where Adolf, or “Wolf”, as locals call him, tries—despite his hatred of Jews—to solve a complicated case for the wealthy Isabella Rubenstein. “What I try to do is come at big topics from a skewed angle,” Tidhar tells Adaf. “The Holocaust as pulp. Israel and Palestine viewed through alternative history. Terrorism as a detective novel.” The thought-provoking result compels the reader to accept Hitler’s character as the protagonist of the plot, to examine how a change in perspective, a shift in time, can force us to re-examine basic assumption and step completely out of our comfort zone. To rewrite our historical memory backwards.
But these are some of the reasons why in his country of birth, of all places, Tidhar’s work is seldom published. Over the years, Tidhar has written short stories in Hebrew—mainly before his international career took off—and even wrote two novels in his mother tongue, But until now, only two of the nine novels he has written in English, CENTRAL STATION and A Man Lies Dreaming, have been published in Hebrew, and only one of them by a major publisher— Keter, who do not focus on SF & F. Of the 40 short stories published in Hebrew, in publications devoted to SF & F, only around half have been translated.
Tidhar himself is well aware of his complicated relationship with his audience, especially in Hebrew. As he tells Adaf: “I have a very ambivalent relationship with my hypothetical readership. Who, in God’s name, am I writing for? I abandoned Hebrew for English, very consciously…Parts of my life are completely alien to non-Israelis. But parts of my thinking are completely alien to Israelis, too.” At the end of the day, Tidhar says, like James Joyce ,“I need to be an exile in order to write about home.”
For MYTHAXIS REVIEW, Daniel Scott White interviews Ellen Datlow.
DSW: Omni magazine opened the doors in 1978. How did you make the transition from mainstream to working there?
ED: I started working at Omni in the fall of 1979 as Associate Fiction Editor and took over as Fiction Editor in the fall of 1981. I was an editorial assistant at various book publishers intermittently for about 3 years before landing at Holt, Rinehart and Winston, where I stayed for three years. I then worked at Crown for a few months.
While at Holt, I started doing freelance reading for The SF Book Club, the Book of the Month Club, Dell and Ace Books, and Twentieth Century Fox.
At Holt, I had done some editorial work for Don Hutter (who was not my boss), the Executive editor at Holt, who acquired and edited some sf and sf related books. After I left Crown, Don mentioned a new magazine called Omni that was just starting up and suggested I call the Editor—Frank Kendig—who had written a nf book for Holt. I did, and the magazine was in flux at the time—Kendig was out and Ben Bova, who had been brought in from Analog to edit Omni’s fiction, was about to be promoted to the Editorship (although I didn’t know this at the time). I basically nagged my way into the job, as Ben had a secretary but no assistant. Assistants generally read the slush and do the drudge work of publishing. When Ben was promoted, the magazine brought in Robert Sheckley as Fiction Editor and I was hired full time as Associate Fiction Editor. When Bob left to write full time again, I was made Fiction Editor, which I was for 17 years.
At THROUGH A GLASS DARKLY, editor Sean Patrick Hazlett interviews Nick Mamatas in conjugation with Mamatas’ story “Bleak Night at Bad Rock” appearing in Harris’ new anthology Weird World War III.
Tell me about a time you almost died.
Years ago, while living in Jersey City, we wanted to grill some food in the concrete backyard because the power and gas were out. We were also out of lighter fluid, so I grabbed a cigarette lighter and a big rock and was about to smash the former open with the latter when my girlfriend at the time walked outside and said, “Don’t do that. The lighter will explode and you will die.” And so I didn’t, and I didn’t.
If you could live anywhere in the world, where would it be?
The Manhattan in the parallel universe where Giuliani and Bloomberg didn’t ruin it.
If you could live in any time period, when would it be? Why?
Three weeks from now, when I’ll be all caught up. At least I’ve been telling myself I’ll be all caught up in three weeks for the past thirty years, so…
Tachyon tidbits featuring Cory Doctorow, Nick Mamatas, Joe R. Lansdale, Peter Watts, and Daryl Gregory
Rick Klaw blog a rose is a rose is a rose!, a short walk down a dark street, before we blog, canadian sf/f hall of fame, Canvention, cory doctorow, daryl gregory, hap and leonard, interview, Joe R. Lansdale, kali krew, Nick Mamatas, Peter Watts, pluralistic, sci-fi & scary, shilpa garg, the freeze frame revolution, the people's republic of everything, we are all completely fine 0
The latest reviews and mentions of Tachyon titles and authors from around the web.
Cory Doctorow
Photo by Jonathan Worth, Creative Commons Attribution 3.0Nick Mamatas
Photo by Tristian CraneJoe R. Lansdale
Photo by Karen LansdalePeter Watts Daryl Gregory
On his PLURALISTIC blog, Cory Doctorow announces his induction into the Canadian SF/F hall of fame.
I just got an email asking if I could be free on August 15 for Canvention, the annual Canadian national science fiction convention, because I am being inducted into the Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association’s Hall of Fame.
Needless to say, my answer was a very enthusiastic yes.
CSFFA administers Canada’s Aurora Awards and the Hall of Fame, a juried prize that I am unbelievably stonked to be receiving.
https://www.whenwordscollide.org/canvention.php
This year’s Canvention is
a) Online
and
b) Free
BEFORE WE BLOG interviews Nick Mamatas.
You’ve written a lot about the importance of short fiction, and your love for it. If you were trying to hook people unfamiliar with your work with some of your short fiction, what would you recommend?
I’d recommend my recent collection THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING, which collects the “best” (I guess!) of my last decade of short work.
In addition to your fiction, you’ve written a lot of writing advice—some at LitReactor, some collected in your book Starve Better, and elsewhere. I appreciate that your advice is never the overly reductive advice found elsewhere. You also run plenty of creative writing classes. What do you enjoy about this? What are the concepts you hope the students learn?
Ultimately, I’m a formalist, and so I have a knack for seeing structures that undergird plots and themes. I’m not a very commercial writer, but I have good commercial instincts as an editor, and so I teach as an editor. I’m very prescriptive. Cut those first three pages! Make sure your protagonist is always doing something and not just being pushed around by the universe! Learn that words have connotations as well as denotations! People almost never scream dialogue, but they may shout it. Those words are not synonymous. Stop typing BANG! when a gun goes off in your story, and stop writing sentences about eyes doing things, e.g., “His eyes hopped around the ballroom, looking for the punch bowl.” That sort of thing.
I want my students to learn that the ego is always the enemy, whether it says “I’m great!” or “I’m awful!” Many people sign up for creative writing classes out of a need to be punished. It’s bizarre. Just stay home. I also want my students to consider the possibilities that language isn’t a poor substitute for direct brain-to-brain communication, but can be deployed with sufficient dexterity that even the shortcomings of language can be used to make something more interesting. Think of a rock song that keeps the buzz of a guitar being plugged into an amp, and the squeal of feedback, to add sonic information to the song even if those sounds wouldn’t be transcribed on sheet music.
A SHORT WALK DOWN A DARK STREET shares a short sample from Joe R. Lansdale’s “Hyenas,” which appears in HAP AND LEONARD.
When I drove over to the nightclub, Leonard was sitting on the curb, holding a bloody rag to his head.
At SCI-FI & SCARY, The Kali Krew Presents Tempting Titles featuring Peter Watts’ THE FREEZE-FRAME REVOLUTION.
Along similar lines, Shilpa Garg on A ROSE IS A ROSE IS A ROSE! offers 10 eXtraordinary Book Titles.
WE ARE ALL COMPLETELY FINE by Daryl Gregory
Oh, I’m worried already, and I don’t even know who all are in danger. Why are they telling me they are okay? Clearly they’re not okay. They should tell me about it. This is a brilliant book title which will make you dive into it right away.
Tachyon tidbits featuring Ellen Klages, Michael Cadnum, Nick Mamatas, James Tiptree, Jr., and Tim Powers
Rick Klaw blog ask nick: Publishing 201, book four: expose, can't catch me and other twice-told tales, earth and skye, ellen klages, gardner dozois, henry wessells, interview, james tiptree jr, josh wilson, Lit Reactor, michael cadnum, muchael swanwick, Nick Mamatas, passing strange, review, rpg, the bible repairman and other stories, the endless bookshelf, the fabulist, the people's republic of everything, Tim Powers, unknown armies, wicked wonders 0
The latest reviews and mentions of Tachyon titles and authors from around the web.
Ellen Klages
Photo by Scott R. KlineMichael Cadnum Nick Mamatas
Photo by Tristian CraneJames Tiptree Jr. Tim Powers
Photo by Matt Gush
Josh Wilson for THE FABULIST interviews Ellen Klages.
Will you be returning to these characters and this world in any future stories?
Well, there’s a story that came out four years before “Passing Strange” called “Caligo Lane,” you can find it online [and] read it for free; it’s also in my short story collection, WICKED WONDERS. It takes place three years after “Passing Strange,” but it is a very short story, 3,000 words, and entirely about Frannie’s magical process, in great detail. There’s also a story that takes place two years before “Passing Strange” about Polly called “Hey, Presto!” And I just finished and sold a story called “Pox” for “The Book of Dragons,” which will be out in July. That takes place in San Francisco in 1969, and both Franny and Polly are in it.
I might continue to revisit these characters, except for Emily Netterfield and Loretta Haskel. I will never go back to them, because at the end of “Passing Strange” they go off on an adventure of their own, and [there are] tens of thousands of ways that could go. I’m sure that if I wrote one version of how their lives unfolded, it would not be the same as what someone else imagined. I won’t write about them because I don’t want to close any of those possible doors.
Cover design by Elizabeth Story
EARTH AND SKYE praises Michael Cadnum’s short story “Can’t Catch Me.”
I’ve never really thought about how the gingerbread man felt in the story. Or even why so many people were chasing a cookie… but this short story definitely gave a new spin to an old classic. There is something in the way it’s written and the intensity of the story that made me go “duh” of course that’s the way that it was.
Nick Mamatas produces the LIT REACTOR column “Ask Nick: Publishing 201”. The most recent column is on the conventions and conferences.
Here’s a question, variations of which I receive all the time, that I have always refused to answer….until now.
I’ve been publishing fiction and non-fiction for years, but I still haven’t landed a book publisher yet. Many writers I know say they got a break meeting their publisher at a convention. I don’t really like conventions and I can only bring myself to schmooze so much. Should I suck it up and try harder, or are conventions not that important to a successful writer’s career arc?
—Wondering in my Rabbit Warren
I hate this question for two reasons—the first is that it is a Publishing 101 question, and I’m answering 201 questions here. The answer is “No.” The second reason is that the question usually isn’t one. Rather, it is a request for permission: “Please tell me I can just stay home.” All right, you can just stay home. In fact, these days, you have to stay home. But let’s say that one day there will be conventions again…
What makes this question interesting is that Warren is pretty interesting: he’s been writing and publishing for a long time, and already attends conferences and conventions with some frequency. So it’s worth breaking things down a bit.
Tachyon tidbits featuring Caitlín R. Kiernan, Nick Mamatas, Kameron Hurley, Lavie Tidhar, and Lauren Beukes
Rick Klaw blog a man lies dreaming, afterland, apocalypse nyx, Caitlín R. Kiernan, central station, eleni sakellis, kameron hurley, lauren beukes, lavie tidhar, meet me in the future, Nick Mamatas, podcast, Publishers Weekly, r/weirdlit, reading envy, reddit, review, seiun award, the national herald, the people's republic of everything, the very best of caitlin r kiernan, xingyun award 0
The latest reviews and mentions of Tachyon titles and authors from around the web.
Caitlín R. Kiernan
Photo by Kyle CassidyNick Mamatas
Photo by Tristian CraneKameron Hurley Lavie Tidhar Lauren Beukes
Photo by Tabitha Guy
Over at REDDIT in r/WeirdLit there is a hub for THE VERY BEST OF CAITLÍN R. KIERNAN.
This is our hub thread for collecting the short story discussion threads surrounding THE VERY BEST OF CAITLÍN R. KIERNAN. As long as Reddit allows me, I’ll be linking each discussion in order so that we can follow along.
Design by Elizabeth Story
Eleni Sakellis for THE NATIONAL HERALD includes Nick Mamatas’ THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING among Tips and Recommendations for Your Lockdown Reading List.
For those interested in reading Greek-American authors, Nick Mamatas is a gifted writer with an impressive range of works to enjoy, including Sabbath, THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING, and Mixed Up, a collection of cocktail recipes and flash fiction edited by Mamatas and Molly Tanzer.
READING ENVY 186 discusses several works by Kameron Hurley including MEET ME IN THE FUTURE and APOCALYPSE NYX.
Cover by Wadim Kashin
Design by Elizabeth StoryCover by Carl Sutton
Design by Elizabeth Story
Happy birthday to the award-winning writer and editor Nick Mamatas
Rick Klaw birthday, blog birthday, Nick Mamatas, sabbath, the people's republic of everything 0
The acclaimed author and editor Nick Matamas has, by his own count, written 7 and a half novels including Move Under Ground (2004), Under My Roof (2007), Sensation (2011), The Damned Highway: Fear and Loathing in Arkham (2011 with Brian Keene), Bullettime (2012), Love Is the Law (2013), The Last Weekend (2014), I Am Providence (2016). and most recently Sabbath (2019). His short fiction has appeared in genre publications such as Asimov’s Science Fiction and Tor.com, lit journals including New Haven Review and subTERRAIN, and anthologies such as Hint Fiction and Best American Mystery Stories 2013. Many of these have been collected in 3000 MPH in Every Direction at Once (2003), You Might Sleep… (2009), The Nickronomicon (2014), and THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING (2018).
He gained a level of notoriety following the publication of his essay “The Term Paper,” which described how Mamatas funded his early writing career by producing term papers for college students. His numerous other non-fiction works have appeared in Razor Magazine, The Village Voice, BenBella Books’ Smart Pop Books anthologies, and others. Mamatas non-fiction books include Starve Better: Surviving the Endless Horror of the Writing Life (2011), Insults Every Man Should Know (2011), and Quotes Every Man Should Know (2013).
Mamatas has been nominated for the Bram Stoker award five times, the Hugo Award twice, the World Fantasy Award twice, and the Shirley Jackson, International Horror Guild, and Locus Award. He won the Bram Stoker Award for Haunted Legends (2010 with Ellen Datlow). His other anthologies include The Urban Bizarre (2004), Realms: The First Year of Clarkesworld Magazine (2007 with Sean Wallace), Spicy Slipstream Stories (2008 with Jay Lake), Realms 2: The Second Year of Clarkesworld Magazine (2010 with Sean Wallace), Phantasm Japan: Fantasies Light and Dark, From and About Japan (2014 with Masumi Washington), The Battle Royale Slam Book (2014 with Masumi Washington), Hanzai Japan: Fantastical, Futuristic Stories of Crime From and About Japan (2015 with Masumi Washington) and Mixed Up: Cocktail Recipes (and Flash Fiction) for the Discerning Drinker (and Reader) (2017 with Molly Tanzer).
All of us at Tachyon wish the amazing Nick a happy birthday! Hope you enjoy your drinks with the Old Ones. But please drink responsibly, those ancient critters are not to be trusted.
The Write Now! StoryBundle, curated by Nick Mamatas, features Jeff VanderMeer, Kate Wilhelm, Nisi Shawl, Steve Aylett, Kit Reed, and others
Rick Klaw blog jeff vandermeer, kate wilhelm, Kit Reed, Nick Mamatas, nisi shawl, steve aylett, storybundle, the write now! 0
With Write Now!, STORYBUNDLE empowers you not just to become a better writer, but to discover the myriad ways one can become a writer. The 11 extraordinary books include BOOKLIFE: STRATEGIES AND SURVIVAL TIPS FOR THE 21ST CENTURY WRITER and Monstrous Creatures by Jeff VanderMeer, Starve Better by Nick Mamatas, Storyteller: Writing Lessons and More by Kate Wilhelm, Heart of the Original by Steve Aylett, Story First – The Writer as Insider by Kit Reed, and Writing the Other by Nisi Shawl and Cynthia Ward.
There are as many ways to become a writer as there are writers, and as many styles and voices as there are eager readers for them. One writing guide is not enough, and indeed, one type of writing guide is not enough. The Write Now! StoryBundle empowers you not just to become a better writer, but to discover the myriad ways one can become a writer.
STORYBUNDLE
The bundle, perfect for a New Year’s Resolution, to start writing, includes practical guides to the particulars of being a working writer, memoiristic explorations of the writing life, specific deep-dives into issues of representation, and explicit attempts to blow your mind!
Nick Mamatas’ THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING is a literary tour de force, that successfully juggles a multitude of genres, styles, and themes
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized ben church, elizabeth story, fanbase press, margaret killjoy, michael thomas berry, new york journal of books, nicholas diak, Nick Mamatas, podcast, review, sabbath, the great armored train, the people's republic of everything, we will remember freedom
At FANBASE PRESS, Nicholas Diak praises Nick Mamatas’ THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING.
Though not being genre-focused like other authors’ short story collections, Mamatas’ THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING
is a literary tour de force, juggling a multitude of genres, styles,
themes, and experimentation with form. There’s political discourse
within the pages, but made palpable with Mamatas’ distinctive, engaging
style.
On Margaret Killjoy’s podcast WE WILL REMEMBER FREEDOM, Ben Church reads “The Great Armored Train” by Nick Mamatas.
SO, THIS IS WHAT COMMUNISM MEANS? Gribov
thought. The train was magnificent. It seemed too heavy to move, but it
fairly glided along the tracks. It was the smoothest ride Gribov had
ever been on, and it bustled with activity—warehouse, restaurant,
barracks, even a Politburo office and telegraph station, a two-car
garage, and even a small biplane among its twelve wagons. Never mind the
armored engines with gun turrets. All this, and it doesn’t even have a name! It was just the train of the Predrevoyensoviet, Leon Trotsky. Didn’t the War Commissar have a wife or a girlfriend to name his personal armored war-train after?But really, it was the workers’ train, and there was much work to be
done. Gribov was a soldier, but no longer just a standard peasant with a
rifle and a children’s book on the Russian alphabet to help him learn
to read. He was one of the Red Sotnia, the hundred soldiers who made up
Trotsky’s bodyguard and rushed out to join pitched battles. Not long
before, he’d been in the cavalry train that followed behind Trotsky’s,
shoveling horse shit. But the train, and the Bolshevik efforts, had
taken some hits lately, and now Gribov was decked out in black leather,
presumably ready to give his life for the world proletariat, and for
comrade Trotsky. Gribov dutifully collected the train’s newspaper, V puti,
but mostly used it to insulate his boots. It was cold tonight on the
Polish border, and he was glad that Trotsky wrote so much. Almost toasty , he thought, as he leapt from the roof of one car to another, watching the forest for Mensheviks, for Cossacks, for Poles.“Comrade!” one of the sharpshooters stationed on the roof whispered harshly. “Step lightly! You’ll bring them down upon us.”
Michael Thomas Berry for NEW YORK JOURNAL OF BOOKS recommends Mamtas’ new novel Sabbath.
Overall, Sabbath is an entertainingly vivid, blood-soaked,
sexually charged page turner that is freshly conceived and surprisingly
poignant in its ultimate revelations. Mamatas does an excellent job of
weaving thought provoking and humorously snappy dialogue into the story.
His excitement in telling this type of tale (a subject he knows very
well) is unmistakable and profound. A highly recommended read for anyone
with a keen interest in violently graphic horror/ fantasy novels.
For more info on THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover by Elizabeth Story
Get Nick Mamatas’ subversive and darkly humorous THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING for only $1.99!
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized elizabeth story, jeffrey ford, kdd, kindle daily deal, Nick Mamatas, the people's republic of everything
Nick Mamatas’ acclaimed collection THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING is a Kindle Daily Deal for Thursday, August 22 .
For today only, the ebook is available for just $1.99!
“[Mamatas] is the People’s Commissar of Awesome.”
—China Miéville, author of Embassytown
Welcome to the People’s Republic of Everything—of course, you’ve been here for a long time already. Make yourself at home alongside a hitman who always tells the truth, no matter how reality has to twist itself to suit; electric matchstick girls who have teamed up with Friedrich Engels; a telepathic boy and his father’s homemade nuclear bomb; a very bad date that births an unforgettable meme; and a dog who simply won’t stop howling on social media.
THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING features a decade’s worth of crimes, fantasies, original fiction, and the author’s preferred text of the acclaimed short novel Under My Roof.
“Each tale is entertaining on its surface, but all hold a deeper meaning … This collection will be an easy sell to readers who enjoy genre-blending authors of thought-provoking and topical tales, such as Jeffrey Ford, China Miéville, and Jeff VanderMeer.”
—Booklist, starred review
“The 15 stories in Mamatas’s strong collection show impressive imaginative range, cutting across the boundaries of fantasy and science fiction and veering into territory that defies genre pigeonholing.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Bay Area author Nick Mamatas is renowned in his work and in his online presence as witty and perspicacious; his new collection will bolster that reputation … brilliant, oddball.”
—Seattle Times
“THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING is a subversive and darkly humorous collection of stories showcasing author Nick Mamatas’s ability to work across a variety of genres.”
—Shelf Awareness
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Introduction by Jeffrey Ford
- Walking with a Ghost
- Arbeitskraft
- The People’s Republic of Everywhere and Everything
- Tom Silex, Spirit-Smasher
- The Great Armored Train
- The Phylactery
- Slice of Life
- The Glottal Stop
- The Spook School
- A Howling Dog
- Lab Rat
- Dreamer of the Day
- We Never Sleep
- Under My Roof
“Mamatas is such a great novelist that it’s easy to forget he also writes superb short stories. This collection is a testament to his short-form chops, and a powerful one at that.”
—LitReactor
“Nick Mamatas is the gadfly that makes the horse buck—whip-smart and no bullshit and with one hell of a bite. These are canny, nimble stories that navigate between genre and literature, and are unlike what anyone else is writing.”
—Brian Evenson, author of The Warren and Fugue State
“Mamatas at his best. Makes me laugh. Makes me drop things. Makes me read on. Makes me run for cover.”
―Terry Bisson, author of Bears Discover Fire
“How does speculative fiction retain its relevance in an era when daily events feel fictitious and the mere possibility of a future seems speculative? If anyone knows the answer, it’s Nick Mamatas. THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING is a great leap forward. Let’s hope there’s somewhere to land.”
—Jarett Kobek, author of I Hate the Internet
For more info on THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover by Elizabeth Story
The Science Fiction and Fantasy Satire Bundle, curated by Nick Mamatas, features Thomas M. Disch, Andrew Fox, Lavie Tidhar, and Terry Bisson
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized andrew fox, Ann Monn, elizabeth story, lavie tidhar, Nick Mamatas, science fiction and fantasy satire bundle, storybundle, Terry Bisson, the good humor man, the people's republic of everything, the word of god: or holy write rewritten, thomas m disch
STORYBUNDLE offers a science fiction and fantasy satire bundle of 12 extraordinary tales including Nick Mamatas’ brilliant, oddball THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING, Thomas M. Disch’s extraordinarily funny bit of heresy THE WORD OF GOD: OR, HOLY WRIT REWRITTEN, Andrew Fox’s intensely interesting, wild ride THE GOOD HUMOR MAN, Terry Bisson’s fresh, imaginative Tva Baby, and Lavie Tidhar’s inspired and fantastical Jesus and the Eightfold Path.
Curator Nick Mantas, dubbed “The People’s Commissar of Awesome” by China Miéville, had this to say:
Satire runs through the field of science fiction/fantasy like veins of gold in the Earth. Both genres have their origin with Lucian’s A True Story, which parodied the various epics and myths known to educated readers in the second century AD, and which featured a trip to the moon, interplanetary warfare, and philosophical analysis of some rigor. Even the title is both satirical and an exercise in logic—the text of the story is all lies, Lucian admits, but the work is a true story because it exists in the category of story: it is true that it is a story.
And now let us skip ahead almost two thousand years, thanks! You all know about H.G. Wells and Joanna Russ and Kurt Vonnegut and all that stuff. The world we live in is obviously absurd, and has been so for quite some time. (It’s why we needed to skip ahead.) But one cannot just strip off one’s clothes and run through downtown screaming, “We used to pretend little pieces of paper had value just to be able to eat and live, but now we pretend that little bits of electricity are the valueless pieces of paper! We’re all mad! Resist! Revolt!” and expect to get very far, even if climate change means more days per year of appropriate streaking weather. But when we can do is trade electricity for electricity, and get you a dozen amazing books for fifteen or more amazing dollars.
For more info on The Science Fiction and Fantasy Satire Bundle, visit STORYBUNDLE.
For more info on THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover by Elizabeth Story
For more information about THE WORD OF GOD: OR, HOLY WRIT REWRITTEN, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover by Ann Monn
For more info on THE GOOD HUMOR MAN, visit the Tachyon page.