‘Traitor’ or ‘revolutionary.’ These labels are two sides of the same coin, just as ‘hero’ or ‘villain’ depends on the point of view of the person telling the story. These are obvious concepts when spelled out in clear cut settings. Because
Miner. Harvester. Mechanic. Sanitation Worker. These are not the typical careers of your average science fiction protagonist. Until now.MENIAL: Skilled Labor in Science Fiction presents seventeen stories about the people who aren’t afraid to get their h
Disaster upon catastrophe forces an unlucky engineer to become someone more adventuresome.A tech-savvy private investigator stalks organ traffickers across a toxic cityscape.International hostilities on an alien planet turn a human architect into a dogged
The Memory Eater is an anthology consisting of 27 uniquely illustrated stories based on a device with the ability to locate and destroy any memory in the human mind. Follow the story of a conflicted man who tries to become the fantasy inside his head by d
After a year’s hiatus, Crossed Genres Magazine returns! Collected here are the first 6 issues of the new magazine:* Boundaries* Cloak & Dagger* Myth* Discovery* Escape* She18 stories and 6 Spotlight interviews make up this first anthology of the reb
Kids can say the creepiest things.27 New Zealand and American authors delve into the strange, the unexpected, and the downright terrifying things that kids say in this collection of all new flash fiction. From the mouths of babes come 37 stories, from the
What if Rumplestiltskin had a bum rap? Sure, he tried to take the queen's baby, but a deal is a deal. Besides, he even gave her the opportunity to renege on their agreement. Plus, he never sought revenge, but allowed her to live happily ever after. Maybe
In a world where eye color may determine your future, Leya is born with one green and one blue eye. Will this diminish her potential or provide the exceptional opportunity to become a Double Vision Mistress?Even if she fulfills her gifts, Leya must learn
Women may hold up more than half the sky on earth, but it has been different in heaven: science fiction still is very much a preserve of male protagonists, mostly performing by-the-numbers quests. In The Other Half of the Sky, editor Athena Andreadis offe