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Blood in the Fruit L. Timmel Duchamp
Blood in the Fruit, the hard-hitting fourth volume of the five-novel Marq’ssan Cycle, focuses sharp, analytical attention on human rights issues. The novel opens in October 2086. After ten years’ absence, the Marq’ssan… More
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Dorothea Dreams Suzy McKee Charnas
When her old friend, Ricky Maulders, who is dying of cancer, visits artist Dorothea Howard, he discovers she’s being held captive by the magical power of one of her own creations that she refuses to let go of, and… More
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Renegade L. Timmel Duchamp
Renegade, the second of the five-novel Marq’ssan Cycle, opens in August 2077 as the Pacific Northwest Free Zone, having survived the first year of its existence, faces both internal and external challenges.… More
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Slightly Behind and to the Left Claire Light
The day all the men disappeared she went outside to see if it was true, if they were really all gone. The streets were quieter. You could hear more wind. Sometimes almost half a minute could go by without a car passing. The… More
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Stretto L. Timmel Duchamp
Stretto, the grand finale of the Marq’ssan Cycle, weaves together the major threads of the Marq’ssan story and encourages readers, as Joan Haran says, "to write beyond the ending." The novel,… More
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Tomb of the Fathers Eleanor Arnason
In Tomb of the Fathers, a short novel by Eleanor Arnason, Arnason’s recurring character Lydia Duluth joins a motley crew of intergalactic travelers to explore the long-lost homeworld of the Atch, who have a mysterious… More
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Tsunami L. Timmel Duchamp
Tsunami, the gripping third volume of the five-novel Marq’ssan Cycle, opens in early 2086, immediately after the signing of the Madrid Accords at the conclusion of the Global War. Many countries, including … More
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The Moment of Change (edited by ) Rose Lemberg
An anthology of feminist speculative poetry edited by Rose Lemberg. The contributors include many fine poets, among them Ursula K. Le Guin, Delia Sherman, Theodora Goss, Amal El-Mohtar, Vandana Singh, Nisi Shawl,… More
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Ordinary People Eleanor Arnason
Spanning thirty years, this volume collects six stories, one poem, and a WisCon Guest of Honor speech. In the richly ironic “Warlords of Saturn’s Moons,” first published in 1974, a cigar-puffing… More
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The Queen, the Cambion, and Seven Others Richard Bowes
Richard Bowes’ book of modern Fairy Tales, their Fantasy offspring and Legendary ancestors presents eight of his stories including “The Lady of Wands,” in which a Fey cop tells her story, that appears here for the first… More
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Missing Links and Secret Histories L. Timmel Duchamp (editor)
Ever wonder who that frequent addressee of Anglophone Nineteenth century narrators, “Dear Reader,” really was? About Nancy Drew’s mother? Or what the true story on which Edgar Allan Poe based his melodramatic “Fall… More
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The Haunted Girl Lisa M. Bradley
The supernatural, the animal, and the deadly often find each other in Lisa M. Bradley’s landscapes, tame or wild. Vampires, either restless or filled with ennui; shape-shifters and skin-walkers; demigoddesses… More
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The Prince of the Aquamarines Louise Cavalier Levesque et al.
Louise Cavelier Levesque was born in Rouen, November 23, 1703, and died in Paris, May 18, 1745. She was one of the eighteenth-century writers who continued the tradition that had begun in the decade before her birth of… More
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Back, Belly, and Side Celeste Rita Baker
Did you ever wonder what the earth thinks? What’s its favorite song? How she ended up in your heart? Think you can’t fly? Think you have a job you don’t like? How much would you pay for answers?No, you… More
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Metamorphosis Alaya Dawn Johnson et al.
Metamorphosis offers a taste of work from WisCon 39 Guests of Honor Alaya Dawn Johnson and Kim Stanley Robinson, as well as an interview of Johnson by Justine Larbalestier and an interview of Robinson by Jeanne Gomoll.… More
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The Merril Theory of Litry Criticism Ritch Calvin
Although Judith Merril is best known for her short fiction and her novels (in collaboration with C. M. Kornbluth), she wrote a great deal of nonfiction. She wrote about SF fandom. She wrote about space and space exploration.… More