This collection of illustrated poems explores those risks inherent in utopia and the idea that through science alone we can solve our environmental problems. Through femme and queer perspectives, Smith lays bare the social implications of a technological savior, and creates a blueprint for co-opting technology in the name of […]
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Land, Maggie O’Farrell
Maggie O’Farrel’s (author of Hamnet) novel Land is about separation and reunion, tragedy and recovery, colonization, and rebellion. It is a story of buried treasure, overlapping lives, ancient woodland, persistent ghosts, a particularly loyal dog, and how, when it comes to both land and history, nothing ever goes away. As […]
Read MoreThe Clinking, Susie Greenhill
This stunning, devastating debut starts slowly, easing us into the future where the novel takes place, a future marked by global heating and mass extinction. Tom, a scientist working to find and preserve the fading vestiges of plant and wildlife, brings home specimens and treasures to share with his daughter, […]
Read MoreThe Verdant Cage, Jess Lourey
Fans of The Hunger Games and Divergent, consider this your warning: with The Verdant Cage, Jess Lourey has unleashed a YA dystopian thriller so taut and propulsive I was breathlessly tearing through pages straight to 3 a.m. It’s pure adrenaline—with a slow-burn romance glinting beneath the danger and a jaw-dropping […]
Read MoreThe Given World, Melissa Harrison
In the ancient Welm Valley, something is shifting: the river is behaving oddly, while the arrival of spring, with its familiar rhythms, is shadowed by an undercurrent of unease. Coming May 2026. Read more at Shakespeare and Company.
Read MoreIndie Corner – Robert Savino Oventile
Back to the Indie Corner series Robert Savino Oventile hikes Eaton Canyon regularly. He is a coauthor with Sandy Florian of Sophia Lethe Talks Doxodox Down (Atmosphere, 2021). Through poems and photos, The Canyon, by Robert Savino Oventile, meditates on Eaton Canyon, a unique ecosystem nestled adjacent to Pasadena and […]
Read MoreThe Black Fantastic, André M. Carrington
The Black Fantastic: 20 Afrofuturist Stories, edited by André M. Carrington, includes weird and fantastic tales, horror and the paranormal, apocalyptic lyricism, time travel, superheroes, and more. Here are twenty mindblowing, horror-strewn, weird, woke, nerdy, terrifying, liberating, fantastic, utopian, surreal, genre-defying and empowering short stories, all of them worth reading […]
Read MoreBeasts of the Sea, Iida Turpeinen
Newly translated by David Hackston. A breathtaking literary achievement and an adventure that crosses continents and centuries, Beasts of the Sea is a tale of grand ambition, the quest for knowledge, and the urge to resurrect what humankind has, in its ignorance, destroyed. Read more at Hachette Book Group.
Read MoreECO24: The Year’s Best Speculative Ecofiction, Marissa Van Uden
Featuring works by rising stars and established names, this anthology is an exploration of humanity’s deep relationships with other species and of our communal fears, grief, and passion as we try to protect our natural world—all told through the lens of the fantastic. Ranging from literary science fiction and magical […]
Read MoreThe Unidentified – Rae Mariz
Fifteen-year-old Katey Dade knows her school’s corporate sponsors not-so-secretly monitor her friendships and activities for market research. It’s all a part of the Game; the alternative education system designed to use the addictive kick from video games to encourage academic learning. Each school day, a captive audience of students ages […]
Read MoreSpotlight – The Storm, Arif Anwar
Click here to return to the world eco-fiction series About the Book Rebooted for November 2025 At once grounded in history and fantastically imaginative, Arif Anwar’s The Storm (Washington Square Press, 2021) “moves us deftly through time and across borders, beautifully illustrating the strange intersections we call fate, […]
Read MoreWhat a Fish Looks Like, Hayati Beker
Told in margin notes, posters, letters scrawled on napkins, and six retellings of classic fairy tales, What A Fish Looks Like gathers the stories of a queer community co-creating one another through the strange landscapes of climate change, wondering who is going to love us when there are not, in […]
Read MoreForest Imaginaries, Ainehi Edoro
Forests in fiction are often understood simply as settings, symbols, or remnants of a premodern past. Yet many African novelists have turned to the forest to experiment with worldbuilding and to imagine new futures. This groundbreaking book explores the life of the forest in African fiction, showing how writers have […]
Read MoreIndie Corner – Micah Thorp, Aegolius Creek
Back to the Indie Corner series Micah Thorp is a physician and writer in Portland, Oregon. His first novel, Uncle Joe’s Muse, won a 2022 Next Generation Indie Book Award and a Foreword Indies Book of the Year Award. A sequel, Uncle Joe’s Senpai, was published in 2023. His writing […]
Read MoreP. Finian Reilly, Ice’s End
Click here to return to the world eco-fiction series I’m thrilled to talk with P. Finian Reilly about his new novel Ice’s End. It’s only the second time the world eco-fiction series has traveled to Antarctica—the first being a conversation with Ilija Trojanow about his novel Lamentations of Zeno. About […]
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