Books | Big Mouth House | Chapbooks | Peapod Classics | Titles by Author
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Alien Virus Love Disaster
Abbey Mei Otis“Highly recommended for anyone interested in weird fiction, sf, or just a breathtaking reading experience.”
— Booklist (starred review) -
The Invisible Valley
Su Wei Austin Woerner“An extraordinary novel.”
— Ha Jin, winner of the National Book Award -
Ambiguity Machines
Vandana SinghPublishers Weekly Top 10 SF, Fantasy & Horror Spring 2018
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The River Bank
Kij JohnsonWashington Post Notable Books
Seattle Times Noteworthy Books of 2017
NPR Best Books of 2017 -
Telling the Map
Christopher Rowe“A clutch of complex, persuasive visions of an alternative South.”
— Kirkus Reviews -
The Bodies of the Ancients
Lydia Millet“Children, adults, and myriad creatures fight the final battle in a war over climate changey…. relationships are tender. Memorably unusual.”
— Kirkus Reviews -
Best Worst American
Juan Martinez“In his idiosyncratic approach to fiction, Martinez delivers truly new ways to read the world.” — Booklist
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The Chemical Wedding by Christian Rosencreutz
John Crowley“A strange literary concoction that fizzes with creative energy.”
— Michael Berry, Portland Press Herald -
Words Are My Matter
Ursula K. Le Guin“In fact, it was the mainstream that ended up transformed.”
— The New Yorker -
A Natural History of Hell
Jeffrey Ford“Seamlessly blends subtle psychological horror with a mix of literary history, folklore, and SF.”
— Publishers Weekly (starred review) -
The People in the Castle
Joan AikenOne day a few years from now you’ll be busy with something and these stories will come back to you.
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The Winged Histories
Sofia SamatarWho wields the pen? A new novel from the award-winning author of A Stranger in Olondria.
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You Have Never Been Here
Mary Rickert“Beautiful, descriptive prose enriches tales of ghosts, loss, and regret in this leisurely collection.”— Publishers Weekly
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The Entropy of Bones
Ayize Jama-Everett“Rooted in Chabi’s voice, the story is spare, fierce, and rich.”
— Publishers Weekly (starred review) -
Prodigies
Angélica Gorodischer translated by Sue Burke“If you are ready for the experience of Prodigies, it is definitely ready for you.”
— Carmen Maria Machado, NPR -
Was: a novel
Geoff Ryman“In an era of bright, simple adaptations, Was is different—melancholy, beautiful, and yes, full of heartaches and nightmares.”
—Slate -
The Liminal War
Ayize Jama-Everett“Jama-Everett has a knack for braiding issues of spirituality and race throughout a compelling fantasy landscape.”— Leilani Clark, KQED
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Archivist Wasp
Nicole Kornher-Stace“A ravishing, profane, and bittersweet post-apocalyptic bildungsroman transcends genre into myth.”
— Kirkus Reviews (starred review) -
Cloud & Ashes: Three Winter’s Tales
Greer Gilman“Sublimely lyrical Jacobeanesque dialect . . . readers who enjoy
symbolism and allusion will cherish Gilman’s use of diverse folkloric elements to create an unforgettable realm and ideology.” —Publishers Weekly -
Get in Trouble
Kelly LinkPulitzer Prize finalist
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Young Woman in a Garden: Stories
Delia Sherman“Lightly flecked with fantasy and anchored in vividly detailed settings.” — Publishers Weekly Best Books of the Year
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Prophecies, Libels, and Dreams: Stories
Ysabeau S. Wilce“Califa: riotous carnival world of soldiers, drunks and magick.”— Kirkus Reviews
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Exit, Pursued By a Bear
Greer GilmanBen Jonson has written the part of a lifetime for the Prince of Wales: he will play Oberon, the King of Faerie. It’s only theater. What could go wrong?
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Sherwood Nation
Benjamin ParzybokIt was morning and the power was not yet on. Zach and Renee lay in the heat of the bed listening to the city wake outside the building’s windows.
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Monstrous Affections
Kelly Link & Gavin J. Grant, EditorsWorld Fantasy Award winner
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A Summer in the Twenties
Peter DickinsonA young man has to choose who to love, who to leave in the 1926 General Strike in Britain.
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Other Worlds, Better Lives: Selected Long Fiction, 1989-2003
Howard Waldrop“Waldrop is probably the single most remarkable writer I know of who non-genre readers remain largely unfamiliar with.”—William Gibson
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Things Will Never Be the Same: A Howard Waldrop Reader: Selected Short Fiction 1980-2005
Howard Waldrop“Howard Waldrop is the Studebaker Golden Hawk of genre fiction, a classic of structure and design. His unique stories autopsy the entrails of our eccentric past and reveal, often in oracular fashion, insanities to come.” — Lucius Shepard