REVIEW: “The Seal Wife” by Madeline White

Review of Madeline White, “The Seal Wife,” Flash Fiction Online 141 (June 2025): 23-25 — Purchase here. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

I sometimes shy away from selkie stories because the myth is so narrowly defined that it is hard for an author to do something new and different. One aspect I really enjoyed about White’s take was that the titular seal wife while nevertheless always longing for the sea simultaneously refuses to give up her humanity and the chance to linger in the sunshine. That’s an angle I rarely see, and I liked it. More than that, I liked how the would-be husband to the narrator’s wife steadfastedly refused to satisfy the normal tropes, and instead doggedly insisted on consent and respect.

It wasn’t quite a happy story, but it was close.

REVIEW: “The Aftertaste” by Julia Lafond

Review of Julia Lafond, “The Aftertaste,” Flash Fiction Online 141 (June 2025): 19-21 — Purchase here. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

Content note: Disordered eating.

The last thing Mom needed was my worries on top of hers (p. 20).

This is a story of accommodation, of swallowing all the distress, fear, anger, unhappiness, tamping it down, keeping it down, so that everyone else can be happy.

It’s beautiful and toxic and Lafond’s words make the tastes tingle on my own tongue.

(First published in Twenty-Two Twenty-Eight, October 2023.)

REVIEW: “Things Elan Reacquainted Himself With After Being Broken Out of His Single-Day Time Loop” by D. A. Straith

Review of D. A. Straith, “Things Elan Reacquainted Himself With After Being Broken Out of His Single-Day Time Loop,” Flash Fiction Online 141 (June 2025): 13-15 — Purchase here. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

I do love a good list-story! This was short, but effective, especially in conjunction with another title-which-is-basically-a-story-in-itself.

(First published in Inner Worlds 2024.)

REVIEW: “This Island Towards Which I Row and Row, Yet Cannot Reach Alone” by Jennifer Lesh Fleck

Review of Jennifer Lesh Fleck, “This Island Toward Which I Row and Row, Yet Cannot Reach Alone,” Flash Fiction Online 141 (June 2025): 8-12 — Purchase here. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

I love it when a title is almost an entire story in itself.

I love it even more when the story that goes with the title is not at all what I thought it would be, and yet the title is exactly right for the story.

REVIEW: “The Growing Song” by Heather Pagano

Review of Heather Pagano, “The Growing Song,” Luna Station Quarterly 62 (June 2025): 147-173 — Purchase here. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

The Growing Song that Anila’s choir sings is one that urges the Dawlee sprouts to grow, to rise up from the base of the Atlantic ocean according to a careful blueprint that will eventually provide sustainable housing. This is a story of how aliens fleeing the destruction of their own planet landed on earth unknowingly bringing with them the saviour of our planet. In that respect, the story starts off feeling very much like fiction — the idea that we could welcome immigrant, refugee aliens rather than destroy them seems far away from our current reality. But sometimes it’s good to read stories about how we would like humanity to be, rather than how it is! And as it goes on, humanity-as-we-know-it reasserts itself in all sorts of recognizable and disappointing ways — but also in ways which actually make it hard for me to sympathise with alien-Anila, rather than her human-husband Thomas. A lot of ambivalence in this story!

REVIEW: “Something Broken, Someone New” by Caroline Shea

Review of Caroline Shea, “Something Broken, Someone New,” Luna Station Quarterly 62 (June 2025): 15-34 — Purchase here. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

Content note: Child terminal illness.

This is a story of two forgotten children living in a forgotten airport — are they shadows? Are they ghosts? For much of the story the reader doesn’t know, and it seems like even the children themselves don’t know. Only towards the end is it revealed how they got there, why they are there, in an intimate portrayal of sibling rivalry and love. It’s a strange little story; I enjoyed it.

REVIEW: “Oathbinder” by L. Fox

Review of L. Fox, “Oathbinder,” Luna Station Quarterly 62 (June 2025): 303-319 — Purchase here. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

There was something about Fox’s use of language in the opening pages — how the words sort of slipped and rolled sideways — that was purely magical. The feeling of the prose translated, for me, into a feeling of the world itself, slightly strange, slightly confusing, full of depths that I definitely couldn’t quite understand. This is probably my favorite story of the entire issue.