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Through the Portal: Tales from a Hopeful Dystopia

Mary Woodbury

February 2, 2025

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Hopeful dystopias are so much more than an apparent oxymoron: they are in some fundamental way the spearhead of the future—and ironically often a celebration of human spirit by shining a light through the darkness of disaster. In Through the Portal: Tales from a Hopeful Dystopia, award-winning authors of speculative fiction Lynn Hutchinson Lee and Nina Munteanu present a collection that explores strange new terrains and startling social constructs, quiet morphing landscapes, dark and terrifying warnings, lush newly told folk and fairy tales. See more at Exile Editions.

Here’s my review

I recently wrote in a newsletter that art is the oar that guides us through dystopian rivers. As the world teeters on disaster, what saves us ranges from graceful failure to full-fledged resistance and opposition. Through the Portal, an anthology of eco-fiction, offers 35 artful, provoking stories to propel us forward. The book serves to reconnect us with Nature in diverse storytelling, from cautionary tales to fiction that brims with hope while also helping us grieve what we’ve lost—described as solastalgia.

The anthology is a stunning collection of short stories and poetry that address our most existential concerns through metaphysical, epic, solarpunk, mythological, and contemporary perspectives. From landscape and weather transformations to stars, fairy tales, parking lots, mermaids, whales, storms, bees, and much more, the reader is treated to a journey of colorful narratives woven into a chronology: imagination, after the fall, and Earth hour. -Mary Woodbury

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Tags: Nina Munteanu,Lynn Hutchinson Lee

Mary Woodbury

2 Comments

  1. Nina Munteanu
    February 7, 2025 @ 6:14 pm  ·  Reply

    Thanks for this wonderful review. This is a project that means a lot to me, given its messages and intent, looking forward with informed optimism and an abiding faith in humanity…

    • Mary Woodbury
      February 10, 2025 @ 5:29 pm  ·  Reply

      You’re more than welcome, Nina! I love your work and hope to support it when possible.

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