A powerful collection of queer and trans speculative fiction that asks the question, “But what if things were different?”
Here, queer and trans characters become rebellious teens experiencing their first heartbreak; participants in actual, violent rebellions; and collectors of futuristic artifacts. Sam J. Miller’s opener, “The Republic of Ecstatic Consent,” is a burst of queer, polyamorous joy that teases the palate for what’s to come. In “When the Devil Comes From Babylon,” Maya Deane imagines a brighter future for two closeted trans teens living on a religious cult’s compound. Dominique Dickey’s “Forever Won’t End Like This” examines the overlap between queerness and fandom, blending together the stories of an actor and the character he plays on a hit TV show. Ramez Yoakeim puts a gay couple at risk of being exterminated by a violent militia in “Fettle & Sunder.” In Sarah Gailey’s “MoonWife,” a digital medium channels the spirit of a trans man’s late friend, while in Esther Alter’s “The Shabbos Bride,” a Jewish trans woman receives a Shabbos miracle that remolds her entire body. Editor Mandelo has pulled together 22 stories from some of the strongest speculative fiction authors working today. The writing is crisp, clean, and evocative throughout. Every tale opens onto a different vision of the future—some far-flung, others right around the corner, and each as compelling as the next. Although the mood shifts frequently throughout the anthology—Miller’s tale is easily the most lighthearted, Yoakeim’s the saddest—each story is a poignant, unflinching look at what could be for the LGBTQ+ community.
A radically queer anthology of trans joy and suffering.