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Today’s Women in SF&F Month guest is Gabriella Buba! Her short fiction includes “Dying Rivers and Broken Hearts” and “A Unified Explanation for Elven Urbanization and Associated Morphological Changes,” and her first novel, Saints of Storm and Sorrow, is being released on June 25. The first installment in a Filipino-inspired epic fantasy duology, The Stormbringer Saga, her book is described as featuring “a bisexual nun hiding a goddess-given gift [who] is unwillingly transformed into a lightning rod for her people’s struggle against colonization.” I’m excited she is here to discuss one of the reasons she wrote her upcoming debut novel in “Fantasy Safe Spaces: Facing the Specters of the Past Now They’ve Come Back to Haunt Us.”

Cover of Saints of Storm and Sorrow by Gabriella Buba

Fantasy Safe Spaces: Facing the Specters of the Past Now They’ve Come Back to Haunt Us
by Gabriella Buba

Fantasy has always held a special place in my life. From school days when the quiet of the library was a rare sanctuary from bullying, through to the pandemic when once again Fantasy became a window out of the creeping isolation, dread, and anxiety of daily life.

But more than an escape, for me, Fantasy has always been the safest place to dig deep into the topics that most trouble and grieve me. I was once told I write like I’m wringing my grief onto the page, and I am. As a biracial Filipino-American child of immigrants, I struggled a great deal with feelings of disconnection. There is so much grief that is part and parcel of being diaspora. Displaced from homeland, language, history—handed down culture piecemeal and fragmented. Carrying these stories and this grief inside like seeds, growing ever growing, feeding a burning anger and resentment that modern life and the modern world has very few spaces or tools to unravel or examine.

But Fantasy can ask all the what ifs of history: what if all the victors destroyed and time has lost still remained? It can fill in the gaps between the lines of racist reports written by Spanish clergy—Spanish that I read with more fluency than my stumbling Tagalog.

And so reading and then writing Fantasy became the vehicle by which I could safely unspool and grapple with the history of colonialism and imperialism that created the war, want, and waste that sent my Filipino family across an ocean.

Taking this fragmented pre-colonial history together with re-imaginings of myths and folklore, Saints of Storm and Sorrow is a Filipino-inspired Fantasy in which Lunurin, a bisexual nun hiding a goddess-given gift, is unwillingly transformed into a lightning rod for her people’s struggle against colonization.

It is Lunurin’s efforts to protect those she loves from the crushing realities and abuses of colonialism and its twin tools of greed and religion that ultimately awakens her Goddess and forces Lunurin to act, to break the status quo, and finally face the past she’s become so good at running from.

Did you know, the Philippines is the only country in the world where divorce is illegal? Abortion is illegal and Human Rights Groups have faced backlash for attempts to push against the stance. In addition despite 2012 efforts to increase access to contraception it remains controversial. A once thriving pre-colonial tradition of women-led, and often queer and gender non-conforming spiritual leadership of the babaylan/katalonan/shamans, has been consistently denigrated and pushed to the edges of society, with every tool western powers had at their disposal. The long history of Spanish suppression of many of these shaman-led revolts against colonial rule is brutal and bloody from the earliest days of colonization in the 1600s to the dios-dios revolts of the 19th century.

And though in the modern era the Philippines is one of the most conservatively Catholic countries in the world, I grew up on a steady diet of my grandmother’s stories of the suffering that ultra-conservative Catholicism created in her own life and the lives of her friends and family. From forced marriages in cases of rape, to the dangerous ends women pursued to stay in school if an accidental pregnancy was discovered, to even worse abuses of power the Church allowed to run rampant.

I was told of how war and greed exacerbated poverty that threatened to steal away every gain my grandmother made to better her own life. Of years spent stealing newspaper scraps so she wouldn’t forget how to read when she was forced to leave school. Darker stories about how the soldiers who uphold empire will never face the consequences for their cruelties.

For me the worst thing was the inevitability in my grandmother’s stories, in the lack of accountability or justice, or sense in the suffering of herself and others. There was only grief, only pain.

And so in Saints of Storm and Sorrow I wrote a story where women and girls looked that hopeless inevitability in the face and had the power to say No More. It ends here. It ends with me. In addition to addressing colonialism, Saints tackles difficult realities of sexual abuse enabled by the Church, a resulting teen pregnancy and abortion.

Because sadly, these abuses don’t only live in our past but in our present as well.

In a political climate where women and girls all across the world are rapidly losing rights to bodily autonomy and necessary healthcare, the suffering my grandmother uprooted her family to escape has started proliferating anew all around me. In the year after Texas’s near total abortion ban teen birth rates rose for the first time in 15 years. And every day the reproductive rights of women in the state are eroded further.

This year the 5th Circuit recently upheld a Texas decision to prevent Title X federal clinics in the state from providing birth control to teens without parental consent—effectively blocking any ability for teens with unsupportive parents to control their reproductive health and safety. Decades of progress towards helping women and girls control their reproductive futures and have a chance at education and economic independence is being undone, by a minority of greedy power-hungry men determined to drag us all back into the dark ages.

So I wrote Saints of Storm and Sorrow in part because the writing of it was the safest, kindest space to own my anger and lay my grief to rest. But also because I hope that if we remember to stand together we will discover we have the power to make sure that this kind of suffering goes no further. I hope we can create a truly safe space for all of us, and that we do not repeat and repeat these cycles of suffering. I hope that we can stand together and say No More. It ends here. It ends with me.

Photo of Gabriella Buba Gabriella Buba is a mixed Filipina writer and chemical engineer based in Texas who likes to keep explosive pyrophoric materials safely contained in pressure vessels or between the covers of her books. She writes adult epic fantasy for bold, bi, brown women who deserve to see their stories centered. SAINTS OF STORM AND SORROW comes out June 2024 from Titan Books.

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Today’s Women in SF&F Month guest is Amber Chen! She’s the author of the contemporary webnovel The Cutting Edge, which was adapted for television as an eight-episode miniseries released in 2021, as well as the fantasy story “Hugging the Buddha’s Feet” in Wilted Pages: An Anthology of Dark Academia. Of Jade and Dragons, her young adult novel coming out on June 18, is described as “silkpunk fantasy about a girl who must disguise herself as a boy and enter the famed and dangerous Engineer’s Guild trials to unravel the mystery of her father’s murder.” I’m thrilled she’s here today to discuss one of its themes in “Using Fiction to Empower Girls in STEM.”

Of Jade and Dragons by Amber Chen Book Cover

Using Fiction to Empower Girls in STEM
by Amber Chen

Few may know that I am, in fact, a scientist. I graduated with a degree in Biochemistry, and I’ve been a science student my entire life, so sometimes I wonder how in the world I ended up writing fantasy novels. I suppose my own inclination toward STEM was what led me to shape the silkpunk world in Of Jade and Dragons, my debut YA fantasy, because to me, science has always been the equivalent of magic. As a child, I remember being fascinated with finding out what made the world tick—whether it was the microscopic structure of a living cell or the macroscopic nature of the universe—and that sort of curiosity and hunger for knowledge is a trait that I have, for better or worse, passed on to the protagonist of my novel, Ying.

When I first wrote Of Jade and Dragons, I crafted a tech-infused fantasy world that closely mirrored the societal structure of Qing dynasty China in the 1600s, one that was steeped in patriarchy and where roles were strictly delineated along gender lines. A girl living in those times would have been expected to abide by those societal expectations, and to dream of stepping out of those boundaries would be unthinkable. That is the world that Ying lives in, and what she has to stand up against in order to achieve her dream of becoming an engineer.

The idea of empowering girls to not only take on but also excel in traditionally masculine fields, like engineering, is an important theme in Of Jade and Dragons, and a theme that is particularly close to my heart. I count myself lucky to live in a time and place where many of these restrictions that were once placed upon women have been lifted, to have been given the opportunity to pursue my interest in science to the highest level, and to have my voice heard in traditionally male-dominated spaces. That said, I realise that this privilege is not uniformly accorded across all parts of the world, and there is still much work to be done to truly level the playing field. The deeply entrenched patriarchy and its accompanying misogynistic attitudes and casual sexism still exist in the realms of science and tech, even in countries that are considered “progressive”, and sometimes when I reflect on the state of our world as it is today, I wonder if we’ve truly moved on from those Qing dynasty days, or if the supposed progress is merely a façade.

Regardless, I believe that fiction is an incredibly powerful tool that we can and should tap on to effect real change in the world, because fiction allows us to show possibilities. To remove the blinkers that we may not realise we have. I would very much like a reader to pick up Of Jade and Dragons and think “hey, maybe a girl like me can build airships and mechanical beasts one day” and then go on to do it the way Ying has—because why not?

Cover of Gearbreakers by Zoe Hana Mikuta Cover of Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao Cover of The Deep Sky by Yume Kitasei

Some readers have told me how much they appreciate the representation of women in STEM in Of Jade and Dragons, and it always makes me so happy to hear that. This goes to show that there’s still plenty of room for more of such stories and protagonists to fill the shelves! To round off, here are some of my book recommendations for those who are interested in stories featuring girls in STEM or girls generally wreaking havoc in male-dominated worlds (as they should):

  • Gearbreakers by Zoe Hana Mikuta follows the journey of Eris Shindanai, a Gearbreaker who specializes in taking down Windups, the giant mechanised weapons wielded by a tyrannical regime, from the inside. When she ends up in prison after a mission goes awry, Eris meets Sona Steelcrest, a cybernetically enhanced Windup pilot who has infiltrated the Windup programme so that she can bring down the regime from within, and the both of them must work together to achieve their common goal.
  • Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao follows 18-year-old Zetian, who volunteers as a concubine-pilot for the Chrysalises, giant robots that are used to fight aliens that threaten humanity, so that she can assassinate the male pilot responsible for her sister’s death. When her psychic abilities prove far stronger than anyone expected, she attempts to use them to undo the misogynistic pilot system in order to prevent more girls from being sacrificed.
  • The Deep Sky by Yume Kitasei follows Asuka, the last member of a space crew picked to leave Earth when it is on the verge of environmental collapse, in order to save humanity. On their journey to a livable planet, an unexpected bomb knocks their vessel off course and Asuka must find the culprit before humanity’s last chance of survival is thwarted for good.
Photo of Amber Chen Amber Chen is a Singaporean-Chinese author of SFF and contemporary fiction. She holds a BA and MSci from the University of Cambridge and also has a diploma in screenwriting.

Amber spends much of her free time living within Chinese fantasy novels and dramas, and also drinks one too many cups of bubble tea. Her debut silkpunk fantasy novel, Of Jade and Dragons, is forthcoming from Penguin Teen in Summer 2024, and her work has also been published in Wilted Pages: An Anthology of Dark Academia. One of her webnovels, The Cutting Edge, has been adapted for television.

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Tomorrow marks the start of the second week of the thirteenth annual Women in SF&F Month. Thank you so much to all of last week’s guests for making it an excellent first week!

There will be more guest posts on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday this week, too. Before announcing the schedule, here are last week’s essays in case you missed any of them.

All of the guest posts from April 2024 can be found here, and last week’s guest posts were:

And there are most guest posts coming up, starting tomorrow! This week’s essays are by:

Women in SF&F Month 2024 Schedule Graphic

April 8: Amber Chen (Of Jade and Dragons, “Hugging the Buddha’s Feet“)
April 10: Gabriella Buba (Saints of Storm and Sorrow, “Dying Rivers and Broken Hearts“)
April 12: Genoveva Dimova (Foul Days, Monstrous Nights)

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Today’s Women in SF&F Month guest is speculative fiction author Eliza Chan! Her short fiction has appeared in The Dark, Fantasy Magazine, PodCastle, and other publications, and her work includes stories selected for the Locus Recommended Reading List (“Weaving in the Bamboo“) and The Best of British Fantasy 2019 (“Joss Papers for Porcelain Ghosts“), as well as a British Fantasy Award finalist (“The Tails That Make You“). Fathomfolk, her fantasy debut novel inspired by East Asian mythology and ocean-related folktales, was released in February, and I’m thrilled she’s here today with “Into the Retelling-Verse.”

Cover of Fathomfolk by Eliza Chan

Into the Retelling-Verse
Eliza Chan

At a recent event, I was asked what the lure of retellings was. Why are mythological retellings trending right now? My answer is… Spider-Man.

I grew up with Tobey Maguire as my Spider-Man. (Yes, even the emo Spider-Man 3 that we don’t talk about.) Then along came Andrew Garfield. As an elder millennial, I turned up my nose at him, why do we need another Spider-Man? Tobey was fine. Aren’t Hollywood executives just being lazy and money grabbing? Then Tom Holland’s charmingly boyish Spider-Man came along and I swallowed my words. Even if you hate Spider-Man, you know roughly how that story goes: high school boy bitten by radioactive spider; with great power comes great responsibility; swinging between New York skyscrapers.

We know the story, and yet we are drawn to its retellings precisely because we know the story. When Teletubbies first came on TV it was criticised for having a repeated section in the middle. What an obvious way for them to save money, having the same clip twice! In reality, children love repetition. Again, again. That’s why we sing the same nursery rhymes and listen to “Let It Go” for the umpteenth time on repeat. As adults we pretend we are different, when we are just as comforted by these familiar things. Who has not watched a rerun of a favourite TV show or reread a beloved book?

Take fairy tale retellings. Many of us grew up on Disney fairy tales which were much more sanitised than the original Hans Christian Andersen or Grimm brother versions. Happy endings for everyone. Every children’s story book abridges and rewrites familiar fairy tales with the sensibilities of the time period they are in. I recently read an old nursery rhyme book to my son and hastily glossed over all the whippings and beatings that happened in it. We all do it to an extent. Modern YA and adult books go further, deliberately playing with conventions: from Hannah Whitten’s For the Wolf to Naomi Novik’s Spinning Silver. A familiar template, Easter eggs scattered throughout, and yet ultimately they are not the same stories you remember as a child.

Fathomfolk is a The Little Mermaid retelling. The Disney version is all about love at first sight and wanting something different to what her father wanted for her. In the Hans Christian Andersen original, it’s an unrequited love. It’s a million stabbing knives every time she walks on her newly acquired feet. It’s a literal fish out of water, not being able to fit into her new society, voiceless with devastating consequences. I saw the opportunity to retell the fairy tale to be about the liminal space between land and sea, the culture shock of moving to a new country, the lack of power or agency for minorities groups.

This brings me to folklore and mythology retellings. I love mythology and actively seek out different local mythologies when I go travelling. Fathomfolk was born from all the stories from the sea: from kappas to kelpies, water dragons to sirens. Water is important across cultures and yet female figures in mythology are often reduced to seductresses or damsels. Like many modern writers, I wanted to subvert the trope of a fridged woman with no agency other than to wait for a man. From Vaishnavi Patel’s Kaikeyi to Madeline Miller’s Circe, I am glad to be part of that movement of feminist mythological retellings.

In my Spider-Man filled opening, I didn’t mention the best version: Miles Morales and Into the Spider-Verse. This version is in conversation with the screen versions before, with the comic book versions and with those yet to come. More than that, it’s a version that offers a BIPOC Spider-Man. A female Spider-Man. A spider…pig. It pushed boundaries not simply with representation, but with animation style and plot.

I could have written my themes in Fathomfolk just as easily by using aliens or original creatures of my own creation. Instead, I chose to use figures from different mythologies because of the familiar touchstone. By offering a multicultural melting pot of mythologies, I was reflecting the realities of modern cityscapes and all the stereotypes that come with it. A siren is a seductress. A water dragon is wise and old. I wanted to take what is familiar and subvert it, making everyone, myself included, interrogate our own prejudices and expectations. It’s not the Spider-Verse, but I hope my retelling will continue to be in conversation with all those which came before, and all those that will come after—another interpretation that is both comforting and surprising in equal degrees.

Photo of Eliza Chan
Photo Credit: Sandi Hodkinson
Eliza Chan is a Scottish-born speculative fiction author who writes about East Asian mythology, British folklore and reclaiming the dragon lady. Her short fiction has been published in The Dark, Podcastle, Fantasy Magazine and The Best of British Fantasy. Her debut novel FATHOMFOLK — inspired by mythology, ESEAN cities and diaspora feels — was published by Orbit in Feb 2024.

She has been a medical school drop-out, a kilt shop assistant, an English teacher and a speech and language therapist, but currently she spends her time tabletop gaming, cosplaying, crafting and toddler wrangling.

Find out more on her website www.elizachan.co.uk.

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Today’s Women in SF&F Month guest is speculative fiction author Premee Mohamed! Her short fiction has appeared in numerous anthologies, including The Book of Witches and Robotic Ambitions: Tales of Mechanical Sentience; in Slate‘s Future Tense Fiction series of stories about science and technology; and in many publications, including Analog, Escape PodFireside, and PodCastle. She is also the author of several longer works, such as the Aurora Award–winning post-apocalyptic novella The Annual Migration of Clouds, the Nebula and World Fantasy Award–winning novella And What Can We Offer You Tonight, and the novels in the Beneath the Rising series, which includes books nominated for the Locus and British Fantasy Awards. She has had two books released in the last couple of months, The Siege of Burning Grass and The Butcher of the Forest, and We Speak Through the Mountain is coming in June. I’m thrilled she’s here today with “Speculative War and Writing What You Cannot Know.”

Cover of The Siege of Burning Grass by Premee Mohamed Cover of The Butcher of the Forest by Premee Mohamed

Speculative War and Writing What You Cannot Know

If we can start with a shocking, even unspeakable opinion, then let’s start there: Murder is bad and we shouldn’t do it. If we can expand from that (do we dare?): Ordering people to murder is also bad and we shouldn’t do that either.

But we do. And we do. And we have for millennia. What is wrong with us?

I’ve never held to the idea that writers should only ‘write what we know.’ It’s constraining to the point of parochialism, it’s an embarrassment to say out loud. Even when people mean it to be expanded into ‘Writers should research what they don’t know,’ I don’t like it. Just as an example, I don’t know anything about what it’s like to go to war (even though I’ve literally read a book entitled What It Is Like To Go To War by Karl Marlantes: it didn’t help) but I write about it all the same—stubbornly, repeatedly, year after year.

Most recently, my novel The Siege of Burning Grass deals with a war in progress, and a pair of mismatched pawns shoved across a colossal chessboard by one side in an effort to win it (they carefully avoid saying ‘end’ it). My novella The Butcher of the Forest deals with the aftermath of a war of colonization, and an arrogantly invasive out-group refusing to seek out the knowledge of a subjugated in-group. My short stories have covered war against zombies (Instructions), nuclear powers (Sixteen Minutes), other humans (Four Hours of a Revolution, The General’s Turn), nature (The Arrival of the New World), and gods (too many to list). Arguably, I’m obsessed with war in a speculative setting. Why?

Writer and filmmaker David Mamet has described an author’s motivation to return to specific subjects as their bruise—something they repeatedly touch to see if it still hurts. Usually, he suggests, this is something they simply ‘can’t figure.’ His example is a young playwright who is enraged by personal and systemic racism, feeling it should be eradicated by now, and so keeps writing about racism in play after play because they want to comprehend what seems to be incomprehensible, either because it’s so obvious or because it’s so opaque.

I’m the same way about war. It pains me even from my immense moral and physical distance, so I keep returning to it, hoping rather than expecting that at some point, in some piece, I’ll arrive at a conclusion to make it stop hurting. I’ve read hundreds of books about war and related topics over the years: the evolution of weapons, changes to strategy, the lives of officers, memoirs of the enlisted, sociological studies of pre- and post-war populations and economies, the psychology of war, the philosophy of war, as well as the usual reams of basic historical accounts. This group attacked that group, this country attacked that country, it went on for so many years, so many people died, etc.

I’ve been down in the trenches with young men watching their toes rot off, and up in the control rooms watching timers count down, and I still don’t understand it. There’s always a point where we can step back from deliberately, cold-bloodedly taking a human life, no matter the provocation. And to say not only can we not, but we can’t on a giant scale—that makes me despair for what I know about human nature, and maybe think that I’m wrong about humanity overall.

For me, this is where fiction comes in. Just as someone writing graphically about murder or torture may not be able to imagine themself doing it, they must be able to imagine a character doing it to write about it convincingly, and to justify the character’s desires and motivations. I have to explore this glaring void in our humanity through the filter of made-up worlds.

Why speculative war instead of historical fiction then? I like N.K. Jemisin’s reasoning around speculative fiction in general: Sometimes we need to write about the world next to ours in order to remove the confounding factors about our own world. In this way we can convey our ideas more clearly—forgoing the tangled mess of real history, and constructing simpler, purer geometries consisting of only those things we want to focus on. (A friend suggested that if I had taken out all the speculative elements from The Siege of Burning Grass and set it in the Balkans, it might be up for the Man Booker prize. But that wasn’t the goal.)

In genre work, particularly sci-fi and fantasy, the author is counting on the reader to do two things. The first is just to expect genre—that is, to be prepared for, even eager to see, a certain level of worldbuilding and imagination that deviates from the real world. The second is to do some of the work—the world we build in the story is collaborative, and the reader, we hope, will bring in their own images, ideas, and details as they read.

But when I write about war, I don’t want the reader to bring in a backpack full of knowledge about real wars and their outcomes. That’s one of the variables I’d like to control in the fictional experiment, just as I want to focus on characters rather than real historical figures, so that I can highlight other story components: the trauma, atrocity, and immorality of war. Instead of the way things did turn out, I want readers to focus on the narrative uncertainty of how things might turn out, in a much more contained setting.

Cover of Beneath the Rising by Premee Mohamed Cover of A Broken Darkness by Premee Mohamed Cover of The Void Ascendant by Premee Mohamed

Particularly in The Siege of Burning Grass, what I wanted to explore was character agency through the lens of knowing that real people generally have very little agency in life, and even less in times of war. Generations of editors and readers have been trained to seek out and approve only those stories where the active characters, veritable locomotives of independence and individualism, force their way through every obstacle in the perfect circle of the Hero’s Journey, blowing up mountains and filling in swamps, laying the track of their lives as they go. Whereas in real life, we’re all vaguely aware that everything from the food in our fridge, to our commute to work, to the jobs that we’re trained and hired to do, to where we can live, the roads we traverse, the quality of the air we breathe, is all the result of the communities, systems, and institutions that control our lives to the point where our everyday movements are genuinely so limited we may as well be living in a shoebox.

It’s true that it’s nice to read stories about ‘active’ characters as escapism, but we should show some respect to ‘passive’ characters who, after all, have the advantage of verisimilitude. Alefret is coerced into his mission with threats to his friends and his own freedom; his minder, Qhudur the military fanatic, is going because he was ordered to (also, he’s a fanatic). As with virtually all military operations, the decisionmakers at the top are the only ones with ‘agency,’ and their goal is to use it to make everyone else do what they’re told.

In the world of the story, the volunteer recruits have run out long ago; they’re well into conscription, another uncomfortable topic to address in the microcosm of a novel (also, I would be remiss not to shout out Matt Wallace’s Savage Legion series here, as the titular legion of conscripts is, unusually for epic fantasy, the focus of the three books). War is about bodily autonomy, and it’s the starkest example of how easily and completely it can be taken from the average person by powerful people, for reasons that may not be logical, moral, or even rational. Conflict versus cooperation or collaboration or compromise is another thing I have to address in writing about war; stories, we’re told, all stories, have to run on conflict. Conflict is the story engine, or else why bother? And so with the real world: When disagreements arise on a large scale, it’s true that sometimes we can talk our way out of things getting violent, or buy or scheme or negotiate our way out. But when those fail, I almost still cannot believe the final recourse is “I’m sending my people to murder your people.”

Writing about war means writing about failure, and I’m so uncomfortable with it I feel I have to keep doing it. I also have to keep circling back to the collateral damage of war, which decisionmakers have historically either taken heroically in stride (“It can’t be avoided”) or aimed directly at (“It’ll help us win the war”). In Siege, I discuss the civilian-killing actions both sides take to deny resources like timber or livestock to the enemy; in These Lifeless Things I focus on civilians surviving the guerrilla war ongoing in their city, avoiding being targeted by the enemy and finding food, water, and shelter.

Particularly in the intersection between cosmic horror and military stories, I also want to explore the trope of the traditional cosmic horror ‘villain’ as an ancient being or pantheon of unimaginable power and knowledge, who can therefore either wipe humanity off the face of the planet or will simply not notice or care that that’s an option—uncomfortably similar, again, to military commanders who consider noncombatants either an obstacle or a conceptual sacrifice, perfectly reasonable to make in order to achieve their other objectives. In my Void trilogy of novels (Beneath the Rising, A Broken Darkness, The Void Ascendant), the main question that gets asked is: How can you wage war when only one side can fight? What can humanity do against insurmountable odds? Why bother, when you get right down to it, fighting at all when you know you cannot defeat your aggressor? Who buckles, who collaborates, who goes underground, who continues to resist, and why?

In The Butcher of the Forest, the only way to avoid the dangers of the forest (which itself checks many boxes for the average cosmic horror antagonist!) is to possess knowledge about it, and again war ruins this: The Tyrant and his people are outsiders who have waged war to take possession of Veris’ region, and they regard their latest conquests as resources to be used up rather than human beings to connect with and learn from. As a result, the conflict that kicks off the story is the Tyrant’s children going missing in a forest that poses no danger to the local children, because they know to avoid it. In many of my stories I want to dig into the ‘why’ of war, and ‘war to colonize’ is another topic I cover better in a speculative setting, so that I can speak about and around the violent history of India and the Caribbean, where my family is from.

It’s not that I enjoy writing about dehumanization, forced migration, famine, enslavement, imprisonment, starvation, torture, death, disease, and all the other atrocities attendant upon war; it’s that this is the bruise that keeps hurting me, compelling me to write till I get to the bottom of it. Not that I intend to spend my entire career writing about war in speculative settings, but certainly I have not gotten to the end of it yet. And unfortunately, neither has humanity.

Photo of Premee Mohamed Premee Mohamed is a Nebula, World Fantasy, and Aurora award-winning Indo-Caribbean scientist and speculative fiction author based in Edmonton, Alberta. She has also been a finalist for the Hugo, Ignyte, Locus, British Fantasy, and Crawford awards. Currently, she is the Edmonton Public Library writer-in-residence and an Assistant Editor at the short fiction audio venue Escape Pod. She is the author of the ‘Beneath the Rising’ series of novels as well as several novellas. Her short fiction has appeared in many venues and she can be found on her website at www.premeemohamed.com.

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Women in SF&F Month opens today with a guest post by Nebula and Locus Award–winning author Samantha Millsand a giveaway of her upcoming science fantasy debut novel, The Wings Upon Her Back! Her short fiction has been published in Strange Horizons, Uncanny Magazine, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, and others, and her stories have appeared on the Locus Recommended Reading List and the BSFA Awards longlist. “Rabbit Test,” her most recent short story, won the Nebula Award, the Locus Award, and the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award, and it was included in The Best American Science Fiction & Fantasy 2023. The Wings Upon Her Back, which is coming out in trade paperback and digital formats on April 23, has garnered starred reviews from Booklist, Library Journal, and Publishers Weekly. More information on the book follows with more on how to win a copy below “The WIP of Theseus,” her essay about a question she explores in her debut novel.

Cover of The Wings Upon Her Back by Samantha Mills

About THE WINGS UPON HER BACK:

A loyal warrior in a crisis of faith must fight to regain her place and begin her life again while questioning the events of her past. This gripping science-fantasy novel from a Nebula, Sturgeon, and Locus Award-winning debut author is a complex, action-packed exploration of the costs of zealous faith, ceaseless conflicts, and unquestioning obedience.

[STARRED REVIEW] “A triumphant debut novel.” —Booklist

[STARRED REVIEW] “This cathartic adventure will stay with readers long after the final page.” —Publishers Weekly

[STARRED REVIEW] “VERDICT Mills’s debut novel is complex and haunting, filled with beautiful prose and timely themes of political and religious upheaval and personal journeys.” —Library Journal

Zenya was a teenager when she ran away from home to join the mechanically-modified warrior sect. She was determined to earn mechanized wings and protect the people and city she loved. Under the strict tutelage of a mercurial, charismatic leader, Zenya became Winged Zemolai.

But after twenty-six years of service, Zemolai is disillusioned with her role as an enforcer in an increasingly fascist state. After one tragic act of mercy, she is cast out and loses everything she worked for. As Zemolai fights for her life, she begins to understand the true nature of her sect, her leader, and the gods themselves.

The WIP of Theseus
Samantha Mills

What is the heart of a story? This is something I think about a lot during the planning process, when the work is still shifting, clarifying, taking shape. It’s something I think about again during the editing process, when I’m chopping it apart, replacing/removing/combining characters, adding subplots. Is it still the same story it was at the start? At what point is it something new?

In 2020, Uncanny Magazine published a story of mine called “Anchorage.” The original idea was for a haunted apartment complex. It was going to be told from the perspective of a ghost wandering multiple floors, observing but unobserved, piecing together the story of this place. Then somewhere along the way I got bored and the setting changed to space, and instead of a ghost it was a robot. But I wasn’t satisfied with the robot, either, so it developed into something much more enthusiastic and strange. Also, now there was an anchorage floating around out there, and a persistent problem with lichen.

Is it the same story? I could still write the ghost story if I wanted to, and I don’t think anyone would say I was copying myself — even if deep down it would feel like I was exploring the same sense of isolation, the same story of an observer who loves the people she observes, but can’t connect with them in the way she really wants. Was it a new story as soon as I changed the setting? Did the anchorage make it wholly unrecognizable from the ghost story, or was it the lichen? Maybe I just keep telling the same handful of stories over again, with the settings changed and my perspective maturing over time.

As a society we’re drawn to retellings, too, but there’s a point where they evolve so far that the source material is barely more than a nod and a wink. Is The Lion King really Hamlet? If not, what tipped it over the line from remake to inspired-by? Perhaps more difficult to pinpoint: is every stage production of Hamlet the same Hamlet? Or is it a new play with every cast change, directorial decision, set design, degree to which the script may or may not be abridged?

If you watch the same stage run of the same script five nights in a row, is it new every night? Why or why not?

If we get real galaxy brain about it, we can conclude that yes, every tiny difference creates something unique and therefore different, tada, take that, check and mate.

But in practice, this simply isn’t true for reader experience, and reader experience is the world I’m living in! Swapping out character names isn’t enough to dodge a plagiarism charge, and even an earnestly written work can be branded derivative, cliché, too tropey even for its trope-lovers.

What makes an old story fresh? What makes a work of art satisfyingly different from the works that came before, whether accidentally or deliberately in conversation with them? We want to scratch the same old itches; we also want to be surprised and entertained. Make it familiar, but make it fresh, is the advice we’re often given as writers.

All of this goes into planning a new book. It has to be the same enough to fit on a shelf in one’s genre, but it has to be different enough to stand out. And in the course of editing, an author might tug it a little more in one direction or the other, weirding it up or dialing it back, attempting to find that sweet spot of familiar-but-fresh while still clinging to the story they are really trying to tell, at the heart of the thing.

I became so interested in this question that it leaked into the book that would become my debut, The Wings Upon Her Back. I wrote the first draft in 2017, pregnant with my second child, working by day and taking care of a toddler at night, feverishly trying to get something, anything on paper. That draft was about emotional abuse, an exercise in exorcism as I worked through lingering questions about a relationship that was nearly a decade in my past. Over the next several years my perspective matured, and subsequent drafts looked at the situation from more nuanced angles. It became less about a single moment in time, and more about cycles, the things we pass on, changes wrought over time. An essay crept into the text, a new thesis laid out in interludes between the main action.

I began to wonder if it was the same book I’d started with — and I began to wonder about myself. Was I the same person who had started the book? After years of parenthood, pandemic stress, and family tragedy, I barely recognize the life of the person I was in 2017. But I’m still me, aren’t I? I have a little more life experience every day. But I am also still eminently predictable to the people who know me best.

As I wrote the final draft, a meta-narrative crept in about slow transformations and the disorientation of trying to pinpoint moments of change. The characters ask each other directly: Is the person who wakes up the same as the one who fell asleep the night before? Or are we ever-evolving, an entirely new person from one moment to the next, unique iterations of a loosely connected core memory set?

Do we really change? is what I’m asking. Or are we every person we have ever been?

The main character of my novel, Zemolai, has to face her past in a very direct way. As a child, she gave up everything to serve a charismatic leader. Twenty-six years later, that leader has taken control of the city, and Zemolai must grapple with the fact that in her youthful idealism, she helped enable a fascist state. There is a moment in the book when she falls back on defensiveness — she was only a child when she joined the cause, after all. She couldn’t have known where it was going. And one of her new companions pushes back, “So when was the tipping point? Was there one day you were innocent, and the next day complicit?” It is a question that haunts Zemolai, and it is a question that haunts the book. Has she really changed? Or is she still caught in the same old story?

After years of cycling through ever-more inward-looking iterations of this book, I had to type The End for the last time and let it go to the printer. It’s frozen now, an amalgamation of all the things I ever wanted it to be. I hope you like where it ends up.

Photo of Samantha Mills
© Samantha Mills, 2023
Samantha Mills is a Nebula, Locus, and Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award winning author living in Southern California. You can find her short fiction in Uncanny Magazine, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Strange Horizons, Escape Pod, and others, as well as the best-of anthologies The New Voices of Science Fiction and The Year’s Best Science Fiction & Fantasy 2023. Her debut novel, The Wings Upon Her Back, is coming out in April 2024 through Tachyon Publications. You can find more, including social media handles and a full list of published work, at www.samtasticbooks.com.

Book Giveaway

Courtesy of Tachyon Publications, I have one trade paperback copy of The Wings Upon Her Back to give away!

Giveaway Rules: To be entered in the giveaway, fill out Fantasy Cafe’s Wings Upon Her Back Giveaway Google form, linked below. One entry per household and the winner will be randomly selected. Those from the US are eligible to win. The giveaway will be open until the end of the day on Friday, April 19. The winner has 24 hours to respond once contacted via email, and if I don’t hear from them after 24 hours has passed, a new winner will be chosen (who will also have 24 hours to respond until someone gets back to me with a place to send the book).

Please note email addresses will only be used for the purpose of contacting the winners. Once the giveaway is over all the emails will be deleted.

Note: The giveaway link has been removed since it is now over.