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New Story at Strange Horizons

Commissioned artwork by Caterina Gerbasi As mentioned previously, I recently sold a story to Strange Horizons. Up In the Hills, She Dreams of Her Daughter Deep In the Ground is now available to read online, and part of their Childbearing Issue. I would be honored if you read it. I mentioned it was inspired in part by The Juniper Tree, but the other inspiration for the story was the decades-long sterilization campaign of poor women of color in Puerto Rico, which is called simply "la operación". By the time it ended in the 70s, up to 30% of women on the island had been sterilized. This U.S.-led and -funded eugenics program was supposed to solve the perceived overpopulation of the island. It would also prepare women on the island to become part of the workforce at a time that Puerto Rico was becoming attractive as a place for U.S. companies to...

2020: Year of the Novel?

On the eve of going on vacation, I've been thinking about what I should do next in terms of my writing, and have decided I'm going to go ahead and work on a novel in 2020. When I went to Futurescapes in 2018, I had an idea for a YA novel. Its setting begins in a fantastical version of Mexico City and ends up in the Mayan land of the dead. The characters are still there, waiting for me to give them voice, and I resolve to push past my wariness to start working on the book. I'm resolving to start with no more than 250 words a day, starting when I return from Puerto Rico and want to try to write for at least 5 days a week. I've never tried to write a novel, always concentrating on writing shorter fiction, but I'm going to try. Maybe it'll stop short...

New Narration Out Today

My narration of José Iriarte's Life in Stone, Glass, and Plastic was release over at Podcastle today. It was great getting a chance to read this story again (it first appeared in Strange Horizons) and I hope I was able to do it justice in my reading. Give it a listen! ...