by Libby O'Neil

Schrödinger’s Wife (And Other Possibilities) – Pippa Goldschmidt

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Goldschmidt turns abstruse theories into metaphors of interpersonal relation, uncovering the hidden labor of scientific research and recovering the technical language of physics for humanistic consideration.

Steven Shaviro & Mark Bould

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One of the great potentials of science fiction is its ability to relativize our own experience, to put it in different contexts.

The Years Shall Run Like Rabbits – Ben Berman Ghan

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Ghan weaves together technical jargon and strikingly erotic organic language to depict the cyborg post-human as it goes forth and multiplies.

Her Body Among Animals – Paola Ferrante

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There’s no denying, in these stories, that having a body means being vulnerable: to viruses, to heartbreak, to violence. Yet the stories also inspire hope. . . . HER BODY AMONG ANIMALS illustrates the insoluble contradictions of modern life while gesturing toward the possibility of redemption.