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The Future Fire
@thefuturefire.bsky.social
Magazine of social-political and progressive speculative fiction, feminist SF, queer SF, eco SF, world SF and cyberpunk. (Bleets by Djibril.)

https://futurefire.net/
We’re very happy to introduce V. Zixin, author of “The Better Ends” in The Future Fire #74, who joins us for this week’s #microinterview.
press.futurefire.net/2025/11/micr...
Micro-interview with V. Zixin
We’re very happy to introduce V. Zixin, author of “ The Better Ends ” in The Future Fire #74, who joins us for this week’s microinterview. ...
press.futurefire.net
November 8, 2025 at 4:26 PM
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Nancy S. Koven, author of “Seven Stories for Now and Later” in The Future Fire #74, joined us for a quick chat about extinction, fetishization and writing in this week’s #microinterview
press.futurefire.net/2025/10/micr...
Micro-interview with Nancy S. Koven
Nancy S. Koven, author of “ Seven Stories for Now and Later ” in The Future Fire #74, joins us for a quick chat about extinction, fetishiza...
press.futurefire.net
November 1, 2025 at 2:45 PM
Nancy S. Koven, author of “Seven Stories for Now and Later” in The Future Fire #74, joined us for a quick chat about extinction, fetishization and writing in this week’s #microinterview
press.futurefire.net/2025/10/micr...
Micro-interview with Nancy S. Koven
Nancy S. Koven, author of “ Seven Stories for Now and Later ” in The Future Fire #74, joins us for a quick chat about extinction, fetishiza...
press.futurefire.net
November 1, 2025 at 2:45 PM
There's some #socialpolitical #sciencefiction if you want it. Weird mix of old-fashioned (even for the 60s!) moralising, and eerily modern-feeling critique of materialism and environmental destruction. And a pastiche of archaeological narrative-making.
And today I learned that in 1962 the BBC let Jaquetta Hawkes imagine the archaeology of apocalyptic Britain. As a short film 👀10/10 Will weird your day youtu.be/c8yEIe69M4k?...
1962: What Was Britain Like Before the Apocalypse? | Monitor: The Lonely Shore | BBC Archive
YouTube video by BBC Archive
youtu.be
October 26, 2025 at 6:32 PM
This week we welcome Justin Taroli, author of “Unblooded Gospel” in The Future Fire #74, for a super brief #microinterview about his story, dreams and writing press.futurefire.net/2025/10/micr...
Micro-interview with Justin Taroli
This week we welcome Justin Taroli, author of “ Unblooded Gospel ” in The Future Fire #74, for a super brief chat about his story, dreams a...
press.futurefire.net
October 24, 2025 at 8:35 PM
We’re delighted to be joined by @eleanorglewwe.bsky.social, author of “Limue’s Alphabet” in The Future Fire #74, for a quick chat about alphabets and languages, in this week’s installment of our #microinterview series press.futurefire.net/2025/10/micr...
Micro-interview with Eleanor Glewwe
We’re delighted to be joined by Eleanor Glewwe, author of “ Limue’s Alphabet ” in The Future Fire #74, for a quick chat about alphabets and...
press.futurefire.net
October 16, 2025 at 7:44 PM
Rowley Amato, author of “The Sons of Victor Levitak” in The Future Fire #74, joins us to talk about his story and other speculative matters in our micro-interview series press.futurefire.net/2025/10/micr...
Micro-interview with Rowley Amato
Rowley Amato, author of “ The Sons of Victor Levitak ” in The Future Fire #74, joins us to talk about his story and other speculative matte...
press.futurefire.net
October 8, 2025 at 7:08 PM
#microinterview We’re joined by @nsborwein.bsky.social, author of the wonderful poem “The Void 𝘐𝘴 in a Playful Mood Tonight” in The Future Fire #74, to talk about alienation, transmateriality, and writing. press.futurefire.net/2025/09/micr...
Micro-interview with Naomi Simone Borwein
We’re joined by Naomi Simone Borwein, author of the wonderful poem “ The Void Is in a Playful Mood Tonight ” in The Future Fire #74, to ta...
press.futurefire.net
September 29, 2025 at 8:13 PM
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If you'd like to comment on, review, give feedback or say anything else about any of the stories, poems and art in this issue, please do so in the comment thread under the blog post at: press.futurefire.net/2025/09/new-...
New issue: 2025.74
“We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by hum...
press.futurefire.net
September 14, 2025 at 9:29 PM
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New issue: 2025.74
Fiction and art by Barbara Candiotti, Carmen Moran, Eleanor Glewwe, Justin Taroli, Leuren Ferebee, Nancy S. Koven, Naomi Simone Borwein, Rowley Amato, Toeken & V. Zixin.
press.futurefire.net/2025/09/new-...
New issue: 2025.74
“We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by hum...
press.futurefire.net
September 13, 2025 at 10:44 PM
New issue: 2025.74
Fiction and art by Barbara Candiotti, Carmen Moran, Eleanor Glewwe, Justin Taroli, Leuren Ferebee, Nancy S. Koven, Naomi Simone Borwein, Rowley Amato, Toeken & V. Zixin.
press.futurefire.net/2025/09/new-...
New issue: 2025.74
“We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by hum...
press.futurefire.net
September 13, 2025 at 10:44 PM
Reposted by The Future Fire
The Future Fire issue 2025.74

Out now with free #sciencefiction #fantasy #horror #poetry and #scifiart http://futurefire.net/2025.74/
The Future Fire: Social-political and progressive cyberfiction
futurefire.net
September 13, 2025 at 6:33 PM
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and, free to read, my latest short story is "Dare Seize the Fire" in @thefuturefire.bsky.social !

futurefire.net/2025.73/fict...
July 19, 2025 at 1:58 PM
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This week's free spec rec is the powerful story "Born of the Mountain's Chill" by Louise Hughes @trailofleaves.bsky.social in @thefuturefire.bsky.social

futurefire.net/2025.73/fict...
"I ate my meal sitting on a rock, letting the wind talk to my bones."
#writingcommunity #specfic ✍️ 🔱
Born of the Mountain's Chill, Louise Hughes
I was born on a day of deepest cold, on a mountain wrapped in ice, and lived there without worry for the first fifteen years of my life. Then came the newcomers and their village, fires, and judgement...
futurefire.net
June 24, 2025 at 5:23 PM
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New story! A girl is asked to hide her difference for the good of all, in the new issue of @thefuturefire.bsky.social.

futurefire.net/2025.73/fict...
Born of the Mountain's Chill, Louise Hughes
I was born on a day of deepest cold, on a mountain wrapped in ice, and lived there without worry for the first fifteen years of my life. Then came the newcomers and their village, fires, and judgement...
futurefire.net
May 8, 2025 at 6:26 AM
Reposted by The Future Fire
New story! "Bright Bleeding Girls" is a dark fantasy about wealth and health, now up in the new issue of @thefuturefire.bsky.social.

futurefire.net/2025.73/fict...
Bright Bleeding Girls, J.L. George
When a brightblood girl dies they stop her mouth with rags, or leaves, or dirt, or whatever they have to hand, and they sew her lips shut, and they bury her fast—that same day if they can—for fear she...
futurefire.net
May 9, 2025 at 6:10 AM
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An Epic in Verse - guest post from Mary Soon Lee
### An Epic in Verse Mary Soon Lee Once upon a time, fantastical epics were written in poetry: the _Epic of Gilgamesh_ (about four thousand years old), the _Iliad_ (about three thousand years old), the _Mahabharata_ (about two thousand years old), _Beowulf_ (a mere thousand years old). Nowadays, however, we expect our epic fantasy in prose, often as a series of hefty volumes. But in 2013, I started writing a group of poems that grew into my own epic fantasy, _The Sign of the Dragon_, which tells the story of King Xau, chosen by a dragon to be king. Why did I do this? It was almost an accident. I meant the opening poem to be a standalone piece. Except I was drawn to the boy in that poem. So I wrote another poem about him, and another, and another, until, three years later, I had over three hundred poems that together made up Xau's story. I said that it was almost an accident, but writing the tale in individual poems suited me well. My youngest child was eight years old when I began. I wanted a writing project that would fit neatly into school days. Happily, I could usually complete a poem before it was time to pick up my children. Often I could get the laundry done as well. So writing my epic in verse was a major advantage for me. As for how it affected the tale itself… Firstly, I should be clear that _The Sign of the Dragon_ is not like the epics I mentioned earlier. It is mostly written in free verse, without rhyme or meter. And I think there's very little chance people will be studying it thousands of years from now! Breaking the long story into poem-sized pieces gave me flexibility. I could switch from one character's perspective to another. I could zoom in on a particular battle, or a moment in that battle, or show that same moment from multiple perspectives. I could zoom out to an overview, or skip past months between one poem and the next. I could switch styles. (Yes, there are even some rhymed poems and haiku nestled in the book.) Here, for instance, is a short poem about how news of an enemy invasion arrives, before the next poem switches to King Xau's thoughts as he rides off to war. This is the only time in the book that either Pigeon Six or the pigeon girl are mentioned. * * * > ### Pigeon Six > > (first published in _Uppagus_) > > Pigeon Six: no rank, > no name beyond her number, > but she the soldier sent > with news of the invasion. > > Pigeon Six: no honors, > her message all that mattered > to any but the pigeon-girl > who cleaned her empty perch. * * * A conventional novel can also present dozens of different perspectives or switch styles, but I think it takes more skill on the writer's part, as well as more concentration on the reader's part. The break between poems in itself signals a change, such as a shift in mood or a jump in time. Breaking the story into poems also made it easier to write the tale out of sequence, and so allowed me to gradually work out the story's shape. For example, soon after I began, I wrote several poems about a demon, then later I went back and inserted a whole war before the demon ever appears. One poetic device that I deliberately used was the epithet, following in the footsteps of Homer's wine-dark sea and swift-footed Achilles. So King Xau is sometimes called Horse Boy, and his first enemy is "red-haired, red-handed in war." I'm fond of repetition, plus it lets readers track characters without having to memorize every name. Some of the epithets are straightforward—"captain of Xau's guards" or "the young king"—yet can still be helpful. In hindsight, I wish I'd used epithets more extensively. I loved being able to switch point of view! Unsurprisingly, we see Xau's perspective. And we also see from the perspective of his enemies, his bodyguards, his sister, his wife, his chief advisor, soldiers, a stable boy, a minstrel, a cleaning woman, a dragon, a monster, a cat. That was a great delight to me. I think the switches in point of view had one other effect. They let me write about a character who was, or so my family warned me, too perfect. Xau spends most of the story doing what he believes is the right thing, no matter the personal cost to himself. This is exactly, precisely how I wanted Xau to be. Yet staying inside Xau's head all the time would make the story rather one-note. Shifting to his enemies, or seeing him from the point-of-view of one of his companions, hopefully adds flavor. I say "hopefully" because sometimes there's a gap between intentions and the end result. Of all the things I've written, _The Sign of the Dragon_ is the one that means the most to me. But that doesn't guarantee readers will love it. An ebook edition of _The Sign of the Dragon_ appeared early in the pandemic, but it was only in 2025 that the first print edition was published. It's a chunky book, nearly six hundred pages, and contains forty wonderful illustrations by Gary McCluskey, two of which are shown here. I will close with two short extracts showing very different points of view. First, one of Xau's enemies, and then the royal cat. * * * (From **Vengeance** , first published in _Star*Line_) > They think her nothing, think her beaten, > think the dungeon holds her in. > > But hers the will which woke the dead, > hers the wrath, the wolves' wild tread. > > They think that's her: defeated, lamed, > thrown to the floor, tethered, tamed; > > think her trapped, her limbs bound tight, > think the blindfold stops her sight. * * * > Permissible that the king pauses, > pushes away paper and brush, > bends down to stroke > behind her ears. > > Later, she will inspect his desk. > Items may need to be rearranged. * * * **Mary Soon Lee’s _The Sign of the Dragon_ has a book page with blurb, reviews and more samples, and can be ordered from Amazon or other good bookstores.** **Mary Soon Lee is also the author of three poems, “Alien Armada”, “Not for Sale, Used Asteroid, One Owner” and “What Heroines Read” in past issues of _The Future Fire_.**
press.futurefire.net
March 3, 2025 at 10:13 PM
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‘That Small, Hard Thing on the Back of Your Neck' by @vanessafogg.bsky.social in @thefuturefire.bsky.social is the hot internal hum of being a teen girl struggling to fit in when everything + everyone says you're not enough or you're too much. Monstrously perfect. futurefire.net/2024.71/fict...
That Small, Hard Thing on the Back of Your Neck, Vanessa Fogg
futurefire.net
January 8, 2025 at 12:26 AM
J.R. Mabry, The Where, the Who & the What: A Gnostic Science Fiction Novel. Apocryphile Press, 2025. Pp. 668. ISBN 978-1-958061-92-3. $24.99 pb/$0.99 e. Reviewed by Don Riggs reviews.futurefire.net/2024/12/mabr...
Mabry, The Who the Where and the What (2024)
J.R. Mabry, The Where, the Who & the What: A Gnostic Science Fiction Novel. Apocryphile Press, 2025. Pp. 668. ISBN 978-1-958061-92-3. $24.99...
reviews.futurefire.net
January 2, 2025 at 10:52 AM
We’re joined for this week’s #microinterview by @jonolfert.bsky.social, author of “Whiskey Mud” in The Future Fire #71
press.futurefire.net/2024/12/micr...
News & Press from The Future Fire
We’re joined for this week’s micro-interview by Jonathan Olfert, author of “ Whiskey Mud ” in The Future Fire #71. Art © 2024 Cécile Matt...
press.futurefire.net
December 30, 2024 at 11:27 PM