PART II: MUST IT BE HORROR? This month I needed an easy cheat, so I beg your forgiveness as I set...
PART II: MUST IT BE HORROR? This month I needed an easy cheat, so I beg your forgiveness as I set...
A BOOK REVIEW BY SOHAM GUHA When we look at the night sky, two things occur to a...
A BOOK REVIEW BY SOHAM GUHA This world has received your message. I am a pacifist of this world....
PART I: MUST THERE BE HORROR? The news report gave me a comforting buzz of confirmation and...
Translated from the Bengali by Chirayata Chakraborty 3. Retrograde Amnesia ...
Translated from the Bengali by Chirayata Chakrabarty 1. Late Train A couple...
This week, The Antonym published the book review of Kalicalypse: Subcontinental Science Fiction, a...
In some strange way, the apocalypse has always been the quintessential object of desire. All the...
Science fiction stories nowadays have broken the boundaries or what we call stereotypes. The Gollancz Book of Science Fiction (Volume 2) reconfirms that.
A sceince fiction by Andrew Joron openes up at the world Hurth that does not turn, but is forever divided into Dayside and Nightside. Pastoral tribes wander across the snowy fields of Dayside under a cold blue sun that never changes its position in the sky. By mythic coincidence, all tribes simultaneously arrive at the gates of Lunagrad, an automated city.