
I see the blurred teenager long before the others do.
Read MoreProximity
An interview with featured author Mari Ness.
Read MoreInterview with Mari Ness
The house won’t stop talking to you. You’ve tried to turn it off, several times, but it keeps happily turning itself back on, with a little chirp and a hum.
Read MoreInhabiting Your Skin
Welcome to issue 73!
Read MoreWords from the Editor-in-Chief
An interview with our cover artist.
Read MoreInterview with Cover Artist Beth Spencer
Oh, if I had a dime for every time a character recognized a long-lost parent or sibling based on eye color, a widow’s peak, a peanut allergy, or some other physical quirk. Sure, first-degree relatives do tend to look alike, and many visible traits tend to run in families. Yet they should not be used to establish (or disprove) kinship because it’s not that simple.
Read MoreEye-based Paternity Testing & Other Human Genetics Myths
1892 had been a bad year for seafarers. So many dragon-worms survived the spawning season that the seas across the warmer parts of the world seemed to churn with their gelatinous bodies, serrated teeth destroying everything in their path.
Read MoreA Sister’s Weight in Stone
It has finally happened, after literally years of persistence: My father has given me a slice of wild land north of town, a rambling stretch of brushy thicket, one hundred acres of promise.
Read MoreWildcat (from The Secret Diary of Donna Hooks)
An interview with our featured author.
Read MoreInterview with Sarah Pinsker