i am super excited to *finally* receive the newly rebooted F & SF mag, after a 1½ year hiatus, now under a new publisher. as you can see, they are continuing their strong tradition of amplifying diverse choices in the field. i hope that this will have a looooong run !
#FandSF #fantasy #ScienceFiction #SciFi #magazines #print

Good news!

I got an email response from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction's new owner. Their Summer 2025 issue should be out the end of this month.

Hurrah!
#FandSF #magazine

The early years of the 1960s brought a number of French science fiction stories into English, thanks in a big way to the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. This kicked off decades of French science fiction in English, including several Pierre Boulle novels (like Planet of the Apes), that in turn inspired major films, introducing American readers to a more expansive view of SF. According to the introduction of The World Treasury of SF (which includes three stories by two French authors), the French magazine Fiction began in the 1950s as a translation of F&SF, but slowly began including stories by French writers, Eventually, these stories, in turn, began appearing in the English F&SF, many translated by author and editor Damon Knight.

In 1961 alone, four French stories in English appeared in F&SF: by Marcel Aymé, Claude F. Cheinisse, Claude Veillot, and Gérard Klein. The latter was a French anthologist, editor, and author whose novels came into English in the 1970s and 80s via DAW and Doubleday. Editor of the prestigious SF imprint Ailleurs et Demain for four decades, Klein’s early influence was Golden Age American science fiction and wrote several space operas that focus on humans in the far-future, including four that were translated into English. His short story “The Monster in the Park” is a work of quiet SF-horror, in which aliens have landed in the middle of a Parisian park, near where a woman knows her husband walks on his way home from work. When he’s late, and she hears reports about the aliens on the radio, she begins to worry about her husband’s safety. When an alien finally speaks, its voice sounds… like her husband’s.

Aliens inhabit another of the French stories in F&SF published in 1961—this time it’s Claude Veillot’s “The First Days of May.” Here a story about alien domination eerily echoes the Nazi occupation of France during World War Two.

In Cheinisse’s story, “Juliette,” a woman becomes emotionally attached to her sentient car, à la Knight Rider. The last 1961 French story in F&SF, Aymé’s “The Ubiquitous Wife,” imagines a woman whose special power is the ability to split herself into multiple versions of herself, and thus live multiple lives. She keeps this a secret from her husband (for obvious reasons), but eventually he starts to notice that something is off, especially when a version of her starts seeing another man.

It’s unfortunate that French science fiction (and science fiction as a subgenre, in particular) has been translated into English less and less since the heyday of the 1960s-80s. Hopefully, though, more French SFT will come to us in the future.

https://seattlein2025.org/2024/09/27/fantastic-fiction-french-sf-in-translation-in-fsf-1961/

#ClaudeFCheinisse #ClaudeVeillot #FAndSF #GérardKlein #MarcelAymé

“I gave up trying to figure out the relationship between those two back when Helen of Troy was still beautifying her diapers.” Demeter talking about Hades and Persephone, in Dog People by Esther Friesner in F&SF Summer 2024 issue.
#FandSF #quote #EstherFriesner

The Nov/Dec 23 edition of Fantasy & Science Fiction had some cracking stories. I loved the cover story, ‘The Many Different Kinds of Love’, and ‘Pluto and Tavis D Work the Door’ in particular.

Unusually there were a couple of quite poorly written stories, but mostly the standard was as high as ever.

#fantasyandsciencefiction #fandsf #sf #sciencefiction #fantasy #fantasyfiction #horror #horrorfiction #sff #sffh #sffh #shortstories #shortfiction

#FandSF #FavoriteStories #ScienceFiction #Fantasy Sep/Oct 2023

If I Should Fall Behind by Douglas Smith

The Trolley Problem becomes even more problematic when it is the whole universe on the track and the love of your life on the siding, but our hero finds a rather unique solution.

#FandSF #FavoriteStories #ScienceFiction #Fantasy Sep/Oct 2023

Growths by Nina Kiriki Hoffman


The ethical dilemma of whether to change something in your child that might make their life easier, but fundamentally alter who they are.

This very short story kept me thinking for some days after reading.

#FandSF #FavoriteStories #ScienceFiction #Fantasy Sep/Oct 2023

Sugar Steak by Jenny Kiefer

Flossing won’t help much after a meal of sugar steak.

Pairs well with Shinya Tsukamoto’s 1989 body-horror film “Tetsuo: The Iron Man.”

#FandSF #FavoriteStories #ScienceFiction #Fantasy Sep/Oct 2023

On the Matter of Homo Sapiens by Kel Coleman

Three robots on a geocache scavenger hunt left by extinct humans discuss the ethics of bringing back homo sapiens.

Would make for a good episode of Love, Death and Robots.

#FandSF #FavoriteStories #ScienceFiction #Fantasy Sep/Oct 2023

Night Haul by #AndrewCrowley
Dangerous cargo, but there is no safe route detour for this trucker. Dread and terror on the long haul road.