REVIEW: “Alone” by E. M. Gaucher

Review of E. M. Gaucher, “Alone,” Luna Station Quarterly 53 (2023): Read online. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

Content note: Parental abuse; death.

The bulk of this story is conversation between a woman and a girl. Mother and child? Sisters? Friends? As the reader I have to piece together their relationship through their words, and Gaucher does an excellent job at pacing things so that each exchange builds a picture of who they are and what they’re doing, and why.

REVIEW: “Artist in Residence” by Anna Ziegelhof

Review of Anna Ziegelhof, “Artist in Residence,” Luna Station Quarterly 53 (2023): Read online. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

I loved this piece, which was centered around the questions of who gets to do art, and who gets to value art, and how these decisions get made, all set within a deep and vivid SF setting. It’s full of power and recovery and healing — and then a sharp shift sideways into even bigger questions and issues. So much packed into one short story!

REVIEW: “Lake Small” by V. J. Hamilton

Review of V. J. Hamilton, “Lake Small,” Luna Station Quarterly 53 (2023): Read online. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

Lake Small, like all the other lakes, rivers, puddles around, is beginning to dry up, until one day the swimmer who used to swim in Lake Small daily goes on a quest to find the Tomten who will tell her how to make it rain again.

This quiet little story is a quick, easy read.

REVIEW: “The Swimmer” by Ann Wuehler

Review of Ann Wuehler, “The Swimmer,” Luna Station Quarterly 53 (2023): Read online. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

Content note: Domestic abuse, murder.

This is a story about Gracie, now grown old, and her mother, and one special day they shared at the beach when Gracie was young. And yet, the most fascinating part of the story was the narrator, who is neither Gracie nor her mother and whom we never really quite get to know, but who is tremendously weird and entrancing to read.

REVIEW: “Collector of the Dead” by Chelsea Catherine

Review of Chelsea Catherine, “Collector of the Dead,” Luna Station Quarterly 53 (2023): Read online. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

Minnie is haunted by ghosts only she can see. Most are there one moment, gone the next, but Sheila is different — she comes, she speaks to Minnie, and when she goes, she comes back again another day. Soon, the two have become friends, or perhaps more.

This is both a hopefully, happy story and a sad one, with an ending that is both exactly what it needs to be and exactly the one I didn’t want. Strongly written and enjoyable!

REVIEW: “The Knells of Agassiz” by Holly Schofield

Review of Holly Schofield, “The Knells of Agassiz,” Luna Station Quarterly 53 (2023): Read online. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

I love it when a story gives me cause to pause and look something up to see if it’s real or not. In this case, it was the Agassiz Ice Cap, and it’s real — but for who knows how long. Climate change and the quickly disappearing ice cap form the basis for Schofield’s story, in which Emma returns to the ice cap one last time to say good-bye. It could so easily be a sad and depressing story, but it is not: It has the tinge of realistic hope that all good climate SF should have.

REVIEW: “The Little Husky” by Rebecca Harrison

Review of Rebecca Harrison, “The Little Husky,” Luna Station Quarterly 53 (2023): Read online. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

Eliza’s father is on trial. His crime? He has stolen the Artic Circle, to ensure that he, and not his rival Mennor, would be the first man to reach the North Pole.

This was an interesting story, with some very beautifully-used language, but I felt like I had to wait too long to find out what was actually happening.

REVIEW: “How to be Caffeine-Free” by Shannon Roberts

Review of Shannon Roberts, “How to be Caffeine-Free,” Luna Station Quarterly 53 (2023): Read online. Reviewed by Sara L. Uckelman.

This story won “best title of the issue” in my book, and thus was an easy first choice to read and review.

For Greyce, being caffeine-free matters. She’s living in Cosmos, where nothing matters more than chasing your dreams; but if she drinks too much coffee, her sleep gets screwed up, and if her sleep gets screwed up then she doesn’t dream any dreams. I found this to be an odd story, oddly written, and — for me — not quite living up to the potential of its name.