The Sea Is Ours

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The Sea Is Ours Page 24

by Jaymee Goh


  Kate Osias has won four Don Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature, the Gig Book Contest, Canvas Story Writing Contest, and the 10th Romeo Forbes Children’s Storywriting Competition. She has earned a citation in the international Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror for her story “The Riverstone Heart of Maria dela Rosa” (Serendipity, 2007). Her works appear in LONTAR: Journal of Southeast Asian Speculative Fiction #1, in various volumes of the Philippine Speculative Fiction, Horror: Filipino Fiction for Young Adults, Maximum Volume, and the WFC Unconventional Fantasy (2014). Her updated bibliography can be found on her Facebook timeline. She co-edited the sixth and seventh volumes of Philippine Speculative Fiction. Kate is a proud founding member of the LitCritters, a writing and literary discussion group. Occasionally, she ventures out into the real world to hoard chocolate and shop for shoes.

  Nghi Vo lives on the shores of Lake Michigan, and her fiction has appeared in Strange Horizons, Expanded Horizons, Crossed Genres, and Icarus Magazine. She likes stories about things that fall through the cracks and live on the edges, and she has a deep love for tales of revolution (personal and political), transfiguration and transmutation. She’s a writer by trade, a storyteller by nature, a volunteer by inclination, and a dreamer by design.

  About the Editors

  Joyce Chng writes science fiction, steampunk, urban fantasy, and things in between. Her fiction has been published in such publications as Crossed Genres, the Apex Book of World SF II, and The Alchemy Press Book of Urban Mythic. She co-edited The Ayam Curtain, a Singaporean anthology of SFF micro fiction. She blogs at A Wolf’s Tale: http://awolfstale.wordpress.com. She is interested in social justice, feminism and its intersectionalities, permaculture, and bread-making.

  Jaymee Goh is a writer, editor, reviewer, blogger, and academic, of science fiction and fantasy generally, and steampunk specifically. She writes a blog on postcolonialist steampunk called Silver Goggles, and has been quoted in Jeff and Ann Vandermeer’s Steampunk II: Steampunk Reloaded, as well as The Steampunk Bible, and has written steampunk-related non-fiction in The WisCon Chronicles 5 & 6 and Steampunk III: Steampunk Revolution. She has an ongoing fiction series across several venues exploring an alternate history Melakan Straits. Beyond steampunk, she is interested in issues of radical womanism, utopia, sustainability, critical race theory, agriculture, and botany.

  Also Available from Rosarium…

  “… an eye-opening illumination of the full reach and depth of Delany’s influence.”

  The New York Times Book Review

  Stories for Chip: A Tribute to Samuel R. Delany

  Edited by Nisi Shawl and Bill Campbell

  978-0990319177

  Stories for Chip brings together outstanding authors inspired by a brilliant writer and critic, Science Fiction Writers of America Grandmaster Samuel R. “Chip” Delany. Award-winning SF luminaries such as Michael Swanwick, Nalo Hopkinson, and Eileen Gunn contribute original fiction and creative nonfiction. From surrealistic visions of bucolic road trips to erotic transgressions to mind-expanding analyses of Delany’s influence on the genre—as an out gay man, an African American, and possessor of a startlingly acute intellect—this book conveys the scope of the subject’s sometimes troubling, always rewarding genius. Editors Nisi Shawl and Bill Campbell have given Delany and the world at large, a gorgeous, haunting, illuminating, and deeply satisfying gift of a book.

  ALSO FEATURING: Christopher Brown, Chesya Burke, Roz Clarke, Kathryn Cramer, Vincent Czyz, Junot Díaz, Geetanjali Dighe, L. Timmel Duchamp, Hal Duncan, Fàbio Fernandes, Jewelle Gomez, Nick Harkaway, Ernest Hogan, Walidah Imarisha, Alex Jennings, Tenea D. Johnson, Ellen Kushner, Claude Lalumière, Isiah Lavender III, devorah major, Haralambi Markov, Anil Menon, Carmelo Rafala, Kit Reed, Kim Stanley Robinson, Benjamin Rosenbaum, Geoff Ryman, Alex Smith, Sheree Renée Thomas, Kai Ashante Wilson

  “… may be one of the most important sf anthologies of the decade.”

  The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction

  Mothership: Tales from Afrofuturism and Beyond

  Edited by Bill Campbell and Edward Austin Hall

  978-0989141147

  Mothership: Tales from Afrofuturism and Beyond is a groundbreaking speculative fiction anthology that showcases the work from some of the most talented writers inside and outside speculative fiction across the globe—including Junot Diaz, Victor LaValle, Lauren Beukes, N. K. Jemisin, Rabih Alameddine, S. P. Somtow, and more. These authors have earned such literary honors as the Pulitzer Prize, the American Book Award, the World Fantasy Award, and the Bram Stoker, among others.

  ALSO FEATURING: Linda D. Addison, Lisa Allen-Agostini, Joseph Bruchac, Tobias Buckell, Indrapramit Das, Minister Faust, Jaymee Goh, Kawika Guillermo, Carlos Hernandez, Ernest Hogan, Thaddeus Howze, Darius James, Tenea D. Johnson, Rochita Loenen-Ruiz, Carmen Maria Machado, Anil Menon, Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Farnoosh Moshiri, Daniel Jose Older, Chinelo Onwualu, Andaiye Reeves, Eden Robinson, Kiini Ibura Salaam, Sofia Samatar, Charles Saunders, Nisi Shawl, Vandana Singh, C. Renee Stephens, Greg Tate, Tade Thompson, Katherena Vermette, George S. Walker, Ran Walker, Ibi Zoboi

  Coming Soon …

  “Carlos Hernandez treats science, culture, and genre with a bracing irreverence. The Assimilated Cuban’s Guide to Quantum Santeria is a zany, kaleidoscopic whirl of a book that delivers both tantalizing ‘what ifs’ and moments of true pathos.”

  —Sofia Samatar, author of A Stranger in Olondria

  “A remarkable collection.”

  —Delia Sherman, author of Young Woman in a Garden

  Funny, smart, and fierce, these stories are a breath of fresh air in a tightly constricted world.”

  —Christopher Barzak, author of Wonders of the Invisible World

 

 

 


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