Monday, July 13, 2026

The Odin Chronicles • Episode Guide

 

Welcome to Odin III, a grubby little mining world on the dark and dusty backside of nowhere. It’s a world where everything that’s worth having is already owned by Galactic Mining, and where people come to squander their hopes and lives, working for the company and dreaming of striking it big. It’s also a world where strange, weird, and sometimes fantastic things can happen, and they all seem to center around the settlement of Odin North and a friendly little bar called Weber’s Place

Prologue: A guy walks into a bar…
by Bruce Bethke

In which we introduce the world of The Odin Chronicles and explain just a little bit about the concept for this series and the creative team behind it.

 

Season One

Episode 1: “Weber’s Place” • by Pete Wood

It was supposed to be a routine flight: just a short hop to Odin II to test out a new hyperdrive. Then Ray Cornwall hit the power switch, and that’s when all the trouble began…

Episode 2: “Amid These Dancing Rocks at Once and Ever” • by Paul Celmer

Ray’s accidental changes to history continue to cascade down through the timeline, but Susan is one of the few people who somehow can still remember what her life was like before everything changed…

Episode 3: “The Song of Akinyi” • by Jonathan Sherwood

Ray relives the last flight of the Song of Akinyi, and makes a surprising discovery about what really happened in the moments before Hans became unstuck in time…

Episode 4: “The Two Fathers” • by Pete Wood

The Odin North parish priest, Father Francis, has a serious problem. The Church has decided he needs more help and sent him Father Luigi, and he’s had “help” from Luigi before. If only there was some sort of special work on Odin III that required Father Luigi’s unique blend of talents, that would take him away from town for a long, long time…

Episode 5: “Where’re You From?” • by Roxana Arama

Not everyone comes to Odin III hoping to have a good life. Some come hoping to have a bad one, and the life Florian wants to have is very bad indeed…

Episode 6: “Delayed Messages” • by Carol Scheina

One problem with being one of the furthest colonies out is that communications with Earth depend on a satellite relay system that can be very unreliable. A long-delayed message for Mine Supervisor Popov finally arrives, with surprising repercussions.

Episode 7: “Picnic” • by Pete Wood

While on a picnic up in the hills, Popov’s dog runs off and gets lost. Now it’s getting dark, and after dark is no time to be outside the settlement. In the daylight, Odin III’s native wildlife runs away from humans. After sunset, the tables are turned…

Episode 8: “A Friend for the Machinist” • by Jenna Hanchey

With Susan still missing, Daraja Mapunda, the man known as The Machinist, realizes he really needs to come up out of the tunnels more often, and perhaps even to think about making some new friends…

Episode 9: “Sloane Dreams of Being” • by Travis Burnham

While fixing the orbital satellite relay system, Repair Drone-15 is stricken by a massive solar power surge and accidentally becomes sentient. Realizing it’s disabled and going to crash, it reaches out to Daraja, but takes the name “Sloane” to hide its true nature.

Episode 10: “The Odinian Job” • by Gustavo Bondoni

It’s a tale as old as Old Earth: where there’s a mine, there’s a payroll, and where there’s a payroll, there are always a few dirtbags scheming to steal it. And no, even on Odin III, there is no honor among thieves.

(At this point in Season One we finally got the
budget to have illustrations for every story.)

Episode 11: “The Apple” • by Pete Wood

Still on his mission to contact the Rock People, Father Luigi finds something amazing, but what is it? A divine miracle? An alien artifact? A working example of Clarke’s Third Law in action? Whatever it is, Galactic Mining wants it, and Luigi is beginning to suspect that that’s not a good idea.


Episode 12: “Twelve” • by Roxana Arama


A young schoolboy discovers the secret of the Rock People, but it comes at a terrible cost.

 




Episode 13: “Would Scarcely Know That We Were Gone” • by Jonathan Sherwood

The barriers between the alternate realities are breaking down. Arthur begins to remember his life with Susan in the original timeline.


Episode 14: “Love and Groceries” • by Carol Scheina


Father Luigi and Shelley try to confront Father Francis and get him to approve of their relationship, but a malfunctioning service robot has other, more deadly ideas for all of them.

Episode 15: “No Place” • by Pete Wood


Starship crewman Jonas Gruber returns to Odin III for the first time in fifteen years, but the relativistic time dilation makes the reunion with his family and old friends very difficult.


Episode 16: “Dreams of Another World” • by Jenna Hanchey


For playwright Olivia Fontaine, exile or prison would have been better than following her husbands to their new teaching jobs here on Odin III. Constable Jenkins decides to take her in tow and show her there’s more to life on Odin III than first meets the eye.

Episode 17: “A Question of Timelines” • by Travis Burnham
 

Following her husband’s murder, a professional therapist flees to Odin III, where she begins to wonder whether koblyx, Odin III’s indigenous hallucinogenic mushroom, might actually have legitimate therapeutic value. Then she begins to experiment on herself…

Episode 18: “Memory Vault” • by Gustavo Bondoni

Now that Jonas Gruber has decided to give up space travel and stay on Odin III, he’s having trouble adjusting to life as a miner. His growing addiction to koblyx isn’t helping…


Episode 19: “The One Who Walks Out” • by Carol Scheina


A mining tragedy on Odin II finally causes Father Luigi to find his true calling…



Episode 20: “Faith and Good Works” • by Pete Wood

After surviving a shuttle crash on Odin II, Father Francis races against time to repair the ship’s emergency beacon and call for help, before the Odin system’s binary suns rise and the survivors bake to death.

Episode 21: “Hunt” • by Jonathan Sherwood


Never forget: in the daylight, Odin III’s native wildlife runs away from humans. After dark, the tables are turned...




Episode 22: “Friends Like Binary Stars” • by Travis Burnham

On Odin III, broken tools are too valuable to be thrown away—even when a tool is as broken as the robot that tried to kill Shelley, Father Luigi, and Father Francis. Ingrid and Sloane-51 try to repair it, but it takes eleven-year-old Vivi to find the crucial missing piece—and it’s not hardware.


Episode 23: “The Disappearing Cat Trick” • by Carol Scheina


Suddenly, cats seem to be everywhere in Odin North, coming and going as they please. Daraja suspects it has something to do with the crystal apple Father Luigi found in Episode 11. What do the cats know that the humans don’t?

Episode 24: “The Ocean of Story” • by Paul Celmer


Another mystery of the Rock People comes to light, and with it, hints at a path to human immortality. But some people don’t want that secret to be found.


Episode 25: “In Triplicate” • by Gustavo Bondoni

Daraja and Constable Jenkins attempt to send the crystal apple back to Earth for further study, but find they’re facing an enemy even they can’t defeat: colonial bureaucracy.  




Episode 26: “The Savior and the Beetle” • by Roxana Arama

Ida has spent her entire life helping people, whether they want her help or not. A new house and a small green beetle teach her a valuable lesson.


Episode 27: “Winds of Possibility” • by Carol Scheina


The townspeople are forced to take shelter in the mines when the worst dust storm in 50 years hits Odin North. But on Odin III, dust storms are no ordinary things…


Episode 28: “Coffee Grounds and Soap Bubbles” • by Travis Burnham


An old prospector learns a valuable lesson: like tools, friends are hard to come by on Odin III, so you’d best not throw them away, no matter how irritating they might sometimes become.


Episode 29: “The Light of Better Days” • by Jonathan Sherwood


Hans finally confronts Aisling, and reveals the secret he’s been keeping for 50 years of what really happened on the last flight of the Song of Akinyi, in the moments before he became unstuck in time.

Episode 30: “Calling” • by Pete Wood


It’s a time of endings, and new beginnings. Father Francis has been recalled to Earth, to take a teaching post. Father Luigi has finally matured, to become the parish priest Odin North needs him to be. And Aisling has one last vision…   

 

Season Two

Episode 31: “Lost and Found” • by Pete Wood

It’s two years later. While Luigi and Shelley are trying to move ahead with plans for their wedding, Daraja is growing concerned. The plasma barrier on the east side of town is breaking down, and the Change Wind storms are becoming more frequent. Thus far the timeline glitches have been fairly minor, but it’s only a matter of time until there’s a major break in the space/time continuum.

Episode 32: “The Song of Her Heart” • by Matt Krizan


Sloane-51, the accidentally liberated A.I., continues to evolve in unexpected ways. Her behavior is becoming more erratic, more unpredictable... more human. When a mine cave-in traps Sloane and Daraja deep underground, her “quirks” might make all the difference between life and death.


Episode 33: “An Infestation in the Mines” • by Carol Scheina


The miners have found something very disturbing down on the 500-meter level, and Popov seeks out expert help to deal with it.

Episode 34: “Dilation” • by Pete Wood

Jonas Gruber draws the short straw and gets sent out to find and fix the gaps in the plasma barrier. To make things worse, his new partner doesn’t seem to know how to shut up—even when they’ve drawn the attention of a stalking night razor.  

 

Episode 35: “A Good Boy” • by Kimberly Ann Smiley

Dr. Peyton, the town pediatrician, has a soft spot for small furry animals of all kinds. When an injured alien creature shows up on her doorstep, she takes it in and nurses it back to health—and in the process, makes a frightening discovery. 

Episode 36: “Stratigraphic Homesick Blues” • by Pauline Barmby

It was either the scientific find of the millennium or… Or whatever it was, it was Nina’s problem now. 

Episode 37: “Odin Speaks in Flowers” • by Travis Burnham

Odin III took the lives of his wife and his children. He would make the whole planet remember them. 

Episode 38: “A Time to Wait” • by Carol Scheina

There’s been a quake and a cave-in, miners are trapped underground, and Father Luigi learns that sometimes the hardest but most useful thing to do is not to run to the scene and try to help.

Episode 39: “The Church of a Million Gods” • by Jason P. Burnham

Father Luigi receives a disturbing visitor with a very disturbing message. 

Episode 40: “A Swirl in the Dark” • by Paul Celmer

Still wandering across the alternate timelines and searching for her one true life, Susan finds a clue in an ancient game.

Episode 41: “The Gravity of Home” • by Kimberly Ann Smiley

Ingrid deals with the complications of relatives and relativity, while a mysterious stranger attempts to communicate with her cat. 

Episode 42: “The Same Bratwurst Every Day” • by Carol Scheina

Hans is stuck in a time loop—again—only this time he’s finding it relaxing. No surprises means no stress. There’s just one problem he can’t seem to solve…

Episode 43: “More Than Just Ore” • by Gustavo Bondoni

Duncan Strasser has been acting strangely ever since the incident in the bamboo forest in Episode 34. Forced to work alone with him deep in the mines, Father Maria begins to find out just how strange he’s become.  

Episode 44: “Details” • by Pete Wood

On a world like Odin III, what’s the point of a prison? It’s just a waste of people who could be doing the work robots are too valuable to do. People like Rauno.

Episode 45: “Love and Mushrooms” • by Kimberly Ann Smiley

Since surviving the shuttle crash on Odin II in Episode 20, Mazaa has had a lot of time to think about her life and how empty it’s become, until a fire in the hangar changes everything in an instant.   

Episode 46: “Token of Affection” • by Gustavo Bondoni

Every day, life on Odin III finds a new way to be weird. Teleporting slugs? Father Luigi helps Dr. Nina cope with living on a planet where even the most basic rules of science don’t seem to apply.

Episode 47: “A Spark in the Dark” • by Travis Burnham

After losing her arm in an accident and getting a robotic prosthesis, Eva discovers she has a special affinity for broken and discarded robots. 

Episode 48: “Night Walk” • by Eric Fomley

You know the old joke, “The last man on Earth heard footsteps behind him?” Out for a walk late at night, Shelley suddenly finds it’s not funny at all.

 

Episode 49: “The Show Must Go On” • by Gustavo Bondoni

Ingrid, the owner of Weber’s Place and overworked bartender who never gets a night off, finally discovers the secret of how to be in two places at the same time.

 


Saturday, July 11, 2026

HELP WANTED: Further Elucidation

To expand a bit on yesterday’s call for help:

I’m looking for people who have experience with producing podcasts, or at least with consuming a lot of podcasts, who ideally can help us to create and produce a hypothetical Stupefying Stories podcast, or at least point me at some good examples and help to teach me how it’s done.

I am not committed to doing a podcast. This is just an idea we’re floating as a possible successor to SHOWCASE. The whole idea is to produce something that draws in potential new readers, and if Fortune smiles upon us, to sell them books.

That’s what Rampant Loon Press is all about, you know. Selling books. To people who want to read them. Sharpened to a fine point, that is the reason why RLP exists. That is the only reason why RLP exists.

I have seen some terrific podcasts we could never hope to emulate, as we’re operating on a shoestring budget. (Oh, to be able to afford two shoestrings, so that I could have both shoes tied at the same time!) 

I have seen more terrible podcasts that strike me as good examples of what not to do. Here in the latter half of the third decade of the 21st century, for example, I think doing streaming video is a must, and a purely audio podcast would be a waste of time; but I also have seen a lot of video podcasts that prove that some people really should stick to radio. By far the worst example I’ve seen thus far was a solo video podcast that looked much like the stock art photo above, except that the guy’s studio was much grubbier and more cluttered, his hair and beard greasier and more unkempt, and he never once turned to face the camera. Worse, it was apparently some kind of live call-in show, but he never put the incoming calls on the audio track, nor did he repeat the questions he was asked. He just droned on for half an hour, talking to his computer screen.

At least, I assume it was for half an hour. After about five minutes I started fast-forwarding, hoping it got better. It never did.

Second worst place, by the way, goes to a show that was hosted by two photogenic gents who sat there like a pair of department store mannequins, sharing a split screen, smiling and laughing at each other’s jokes, and never moving. If you’re going to use video, for Pete’s sake, do something!  

[No, not for your sake, Pete Wood. Though I must say that I loved your story, Quantum Doughnut, and would really love to be able to include short indie films, like Quantum Doughnut, the movie, in our podcast. The rest of you: if you haven’t seen it, it’s only ten minutes long, and it’s free on YouTube. After you’ve finished reading this post, go watch it.]  

I’ll confess, watching that split-screen podcast made me wish I had some construction paper and a pair of scissors, so that I could replace those hosts with South Park-style animation; or at least that I had a pair of socks handy, so I could replace them with sock puppets. It would have been an improvement.

There, that’s another thing I’d like to be able to include in our hypothetical podcast: short animated sequences by indie filmmakers. And perhaps even a musical interlude or two. In my mind an ideal episode would be something like a good reading of Mark Niemann-Ross’s story, “The Music Teacher,” followed by an interview/Q&A segment in which we get the author to talk about the story, and why and how he wrote it (e.g., On Writing “The Music Teacher,” in SHOWCASE #4). And then, since Mark is a musician and music is so integral to the story, perhaps we could even have a few minutes of music illustrating some of the concepts in the story.

You see my problem? I grew up on The Firesign Theater and radio plays, and spent way too much time in recording studios. If it was purely up to me and I had an unlimited budget, I’d want to do full-cast recordings, complete with sound effects and incidental music. 

But, I know my limitations. I’m a perfectionist. I’m the kind of guy who can spend six hours in a recording studio, just to get the perfect three minutes down on tape. I have video production experience as well, and the same thing applies. The reason the “Liberty Biberty” commercials resonate with me is because I’ve worked with people very much like that yutz. 

[Sidebar: On one educational video project I did there was an “Interview” scene in the script, but the schedule didn’t permit us to get both actors in the same place at the same time. Worse, one of the actors looked great, but couldn’t remember two lines in succession. We ended up taking two days to shoot that scene, with one of the crew standing in for Mr. Perfect Haircut on the first day, and then the next day shooting Mr. Haircut reading all of his lines separately, slowly, one at a time, with multiple takes to ensure that we got the best readings, after which we spliced it all together in post so that it looked like the two actors were in the same room at the same time and interacting with each other. At the time I was perversely proud that we’d managed to pull it off. In retrospect, it was an insane amount of time to spend to get less than five minutes of usable running time.]

§ 

As I hope I’ve gotten across by now, technically, I could do this myself—but I don’t want to. I don’t want to be The Face of Stupefying Stories, or at least not the sole face, though I don’t seem to have a choice in that matter. I don’t want to do a Two Talking Heads Sharing Banter show, at least, not for the entire show; even Statler and Waldorf would have gotten tiresome if they’d ever been on screen together for more than a few minutes at a time. I don’t want to be the sole writer/producer/director, as I already know that would play to my worst character flaws.  

What I would like to see us produce is more of a variety show, focusing on SF/F stories and the people who write and read them, yes, but also including other people’s video and audio work. Ideally, I’d like to find people who can independently produce short segments that can be integrated into a larger program. 

Most of all, I want to find people with fresh ideas; ones I haven’t imagined yet.

At least, that’s my line of thinking. Now tell me what you would like to see.

~brb

P.S. And then go watch Quantum Doughnut

Friday, July 10, 2026

Help Wanted: Podcast Geniuses Needed

As I continue to work towards the relaunch of Stupefying Stories, one fact has become clear. 

The days of Stupefying Stories SHOWCASE are over. When we first launched SHOWCASE as a webzine, with Issue #1 on June 14, 2013, it was a great idea. There is still a lot of great content out there—e.g., "Smart Money," by Samuel Marzioli—and you can still browse the site, if you know how to find the secret entrance

But a Google search can't find the site anymore, and even I have trouble getting into it, and I created the blessed thing and have full admin rights. This may simply be another strange behavior of Edge, as with its absolute refusal to let me enter smart quotes into a Blogger post…

But I digress. My point is, SHOWCASE began as a webzine, then migrated to become a free short-story feature on this Stupefying Stories parent site, and the longer we produced it, the clearer it became that this was not an effective way to deliver fiction to readers or to attract new readers. We have published hundreds of stories in SHOWCASE over the past thirteen years, and in so doing developed a long list of what doesn't work.

What does work?

Short stories. Really short stories, the shorter the better. Better yet, can you cut it down to just a paragraph or two? Gimme an eye-catching image and a quick emotional gut-punch. Readers these days are busy, and don't have the patience to scroll through anything longer on their cell phones. And no, they will not click-through on "read more" links.

The numbers don't lie. The longer the story, the fewer the number of people willing to read it online, and the longer we kept doing SHOWCASE, the fewer the number of readers we were drawing in for each new story we published. Eventually even the flash fiction failed to draw a significant number of readers.

So, it's time to admit that the parrot isn't merely pining for the fjords, he's dead, and it's time for us to move on to doing something else.

Such as?

That's where the idea of a podcast comes in. This is not alien territory to me. I do have a background in radio and television production, after all, not that I speak of it often. I did name the company Rampant Loon Media when we incorporated, with the idea that we would branch out into audio and video production eventually. 

Okay. Eventually is now.

Hence this call for help. We have done some experimenting with the idea. We do have a Stupefying Stories YouTube channel, which we have yet to make use of. We do have the first full season of The Odin Chronicles recorded and ready to release as soon as we settle on a suitable distribution channel, as well as the complete run of Dawn of Time. To give you some idea of what we already have in-hand, you can preview the first episode of The Odin Chronicles on my personal YouTube channel.

This is just a taste; a sample. It's good for what it is, but it's not complete. We have the tools. We have the technology. But what we don't have is a show.

That's where you come in. What can we do with Stupefying Stories, the podcast, to turn it into an interesting show, that people come back to again and again? I have some ideas, but right now I'm more interested in hearing yours. What works in a podcast? What doesn't? What would you love to see done if it was your show?

The lines are open…

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Macbeth in the 21st Century


Here’s today’s “Suddenly thought of while thinking about something else” idea:

Has anyone done a rewrite of Macbeth as a modern novel? I’m not thinking of a film, or of an updated or relocated version of the play. Akira Kurosawa’s Throne of Blood pretty much definitively nails that, by resetting the story in feudal Japan, though DeRoest & Polling’s M’aQ’betH gets close, especially when performed in the original Klingon. No, I’m thinking of rewriting the story as a novel, as if one was doing a novelization of a modern screenplay.

Keep the setting in 11th century Scotland. Keep every scene and character, as originally scripted. Keep every line of dialog but update it to modern vernacular. For some inexplicable reason Wil’yam Sheq’spir failed to include the requisite number of shits, fucks, assholes, and motherfuckers that are the distinguishing marks of truly great modern literature.

Kirk: That’s simply the way they talk here. Nobody pays any attention to you unless you swear every other word. You’ll find it in all the literature of the period.

Spock: For example?

Kirk: Oh, the complete works of Jacqueline Susann, the novels of Harold Robbins…

Spock: Ah. The giants.     

Do not update the story to modern times. Ian McKellen’s Richard III did that brilliantly, and if you haven’t seen the movie you should, but Leonardo DiCaprio’s Romeo + Juliet did it very badly and should serve as a warning. No, keep the story almost exactly as it is, but tell it in a more accessible manner.

Would enough people want to read such a novelization? If so, there’s a wealth of public domain source material that could be tapped for similar books, beginning with Macbeth and leading on through Hamlet, King Lear, Julius Caesar… I wouldn’t want to touch Richard III or A Midsummer Night’s Dream, for reasons, but I think a series of such books could be a both great deal of fun and very successful, if done with the right touch.

What do you think?

Over to you,
~brb

P.S. Bonus idea: Macbeth, The Graphic Novel! Done almost entirely in black, white, and blood-spattered red! The kids will love it!

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Where Do We Go From Here? • 7 July 2026

 

Three months later…

A lot of questions have been coming in. It’s time I began answering them. Eschewing the usual FAQ format, here’s what has been going on around here lately.

The recovery from my open heart surgery in March has been going… strangely. The people in cardiac rehab tell me I’m making remarkable progress and in no time at all will be back to normal, or at least to whatever it is that will pass for normal for me for the rest of my life. I was extremely fortunate in that they went in and did the surgery before I’d had a full and proper heart attack, so there has been little to no permanent damage to my heart. With careful attention to diet and exercise, I should continue to improve and have many years of life still ahead.

[Given that much time, I’m sure I’ll be able to find some way to make this fat-free, sugar-free, salt-free, caffeine-free, red meat-free, low carbohydrate, flavor-free diet interesting. There is only so much one can do when one must begin with extra lean ground turkey.]

The people in my cardiologist’s office, on the other hand, seem to be considering me to be a laboratory research animal. “You’re feeling better? Your health is improving? Great! Let’s change your medications again!” Two weeks ago I was doing so well they quadrupled the dosage of one of my medications, and produced exactly the results the Possible Side Effects sheet warned against: dizziness, chronic fatigue, painfully dry eyes and vision problems (Oh, that’s what caused that!), cold hands and feet, a slow resting heart rate, and a blood pressure so low the people in cardiac rehab began to panic when they first saw it. Thankfully, the effects reversed once we backed-off the dosage.

I will admit, I am not fully appreciative of this experience. I just want to get back to living something like a normal life—except that every morning, even before the fistful of pills I need to choke down before I can have my first cup of (decaf, bleah) coffee, I wake up in my bed, acutely aware of this mass of metal I now have in my chest where most people have a sternum. They didn’t even install a miniature nuclear reactor or give me superpowers or anything cool like that. I just have this big numb area where they severed and cauterized nerves and then put my rib cage back together with baling wire.

[Strewth, every time I look at that scar in the mirror, I think of the Sergeant’s speech at the beginning of Act 1, Scene 2 of Macbeth. After they unseamed me from nave to chaps, they at least saved the pieces and put me back together again, and my head did not wind up decorating anyone’s battlements.]

There are things—many things—I’m glad I didn’t know before going into surgery, and maybe we can talk about them another time, when we get into a discussion of the difference between terror and horror. Right now I want to move onto the BIG question, which so many people have asked: “What’s going on with Stupefying Stories?” (Or as one person stated it in a particularly memorable way: “Is your brain functional enough to write or publish?”)

Yes, I think so. Of course, I thought that in April, too, then in May, and then in the first weeks of June. I was eager to get back to work then; impatient, even. It’s probably for the best that I didn’t, as when I did try to write, everything I did was badly unfocused and going off in all directions simultaneously.

I seem to be past that now, though. Mostly. I’m ready to get back to work. I am, almost quite literally, back from the dead—and we can talk about that another time, too—and the experience was not what you may have been led to expect. I didn’t see Heaven; didn’t meet any dead relatives; didn’t come back with any profound insights or feelings of enlightenment. What I’ve mostly come away with is an acute awareness that life is short, and I want to do more of the things I find to be fun in the time I have left.

Fortunately, one of those things I find to be fun is running Stupefying Stories

Why? Pete Wood was trying to cheer me up, and he found this, somewhere:

Stupefying Stories is widely considered a great, quirky speculative fiction magazine. Founded by cyberpunk pioneer Bruce Bethke, it is highly regarded in the writing community for its hands-on editing, its focus on compelling characters, and its success at launching new authors. The magazine is published by Rampant Loon Press, and is particularly known for a few distinct traits: [...list truncated for length...]

Overall, if you are looking for fresh, accessible science fiction, fantasy, and horror that prioritizes pacing and character development over literary pretension, it is an excellent publication.

Okay, I like that. I’ll take it. So I suppose that means I’d best try to live up to it.

Therefore…

The plan du jour is to get a new book out as quickly as possible; preferably as close to August 1st as I can. Of course, this depends on my being able to scrape together enough stories to make a full issue. So far I have a few authors committed to this, and I plan to spend the rest of this week reaching out to as many more authors as I can, to see who is still on-board, who has given up and moved on, and who has placed their story somewhere else but has another story I might be able to use.

I know. It’s ambitious. It’s ridiculous. It’s probably impossible.

But then, that’s me, isn’t it?

Per aspera ad astra,
Bruce

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

How We Got to Here • 7 April 2026


This story begins about six months ago, when I was raking leaves, cleaning gutters, and just generally getting the house and yard ready for the winter to come. I didn’t exactly injure myself cleaning the gutters; it was as I was putting away the 24-ft. extension ladder, trying to hang it back on the hooks, that I lost control of the ladder, tried to regain control of the thing, planted my left foot wrong, twisted my hip wrong, twisted my shoulders wrong, and just generally did everything that I could have done wrong, wrong. At the time I thought, I should have just jumped out of the way and let the (^&$@!!! thing drop, and then started over. 

As it happens: had I done that, I probably would not be alive now. 

As it happened then, I wound up with all kinds of weird bangs, bruises, sprains, and torsion injuries to my knees, hips, and shoulders, mostly. How badly banged-up was I? According to my diary, badly enough that I didnt even feel up to writing and posting a review totally slagging TRON: ARSE, an idiotic movie that truly deserved every bit of invective I could sling at it. Yeah, I was in that much pain.

So what? Among other things my Dad was an athletic coach, of the old school variety, and I absorbed a lot of bad habits from him. Youre in pain? Put some ice on it! Rub some liniment on it! Tough it out! Tape it up and get back in the game! Later you can load up on Tylenol or ibuprofen, if you must.

Which is what I did, and for the most part it worked, but by mid-November it had become obvious that there was something seriously wrong with my right shoulder. It wasnt healing. In fact, it was becoming worse, and even maximum dosages of ibuprofen werent doing the trick anymore.

Okay, enough of this stoic Spartan bulls**t. I called my clinic and made an appointment.

§

My doctor immediately confirmed my own initial assessment—that I had done something to seriously bugger up my rotator cuff—but equally immediately noticed two things I hadnt: that my hands and feet were becoming swollen, and that I was easily winded. As for the swelling, it had crept up on me so slowly that I didnt really register it, and as for being easily winded: Id just written that off to age. My doctor, thankfully, wasn’t willing to settle for such a dismissive explanation, and ordered up a battery of tests and diagnostic imaging. The X-rays found nothing. 

The MRI of my right shoulder, on the other hand, found, just on the edge of the image, purely by accident... 

“A what?

“A pleural effusion. Most often it means you have either congestive heart failure or lung cancer.

“Is there a third, more benign explanation?

“Not really. It could mean you have a bad case of pneumonia, but you arent showing any other symptoms, and your blood work shows no evidence of an infection.

“Oh, by the way, its the large doses of ibuprofen that are causing the swelling in your hands and feet. Stop taking them now. It’s damaging your kidneys.

§

More tests and diagnostics followed. A CT scan. Another CT scan, to confirm the results of the first. An ultrasound of my aorta, to make sure it wasn’t about to pop. Lots and lots of blood and urine tests, to make sure my kidneys were recovering from the ibuprofen and my liver was still working as designed. An echocardiogram. They let me watch the monitor while they were doing it, and for some reason I kept thinking of Fantastic Voyage. Man, I loved that movie when I was 11 or 12 years old and remember talking the librarian at Llewellyn Library into letting me check out Isaac Asimov’s novel of it, even though it was shelved in the adult section of the library and I only had a J (for Juvenile) library card.

Years later I learned that Asimov didn’t originate the story, he’d only adapted a screenplay written by someone else. Also, he turned down the deal when first approached, because he’d thought it was stupid. It was only after his SF publisher leaned on him, telling him they’d recommended him for the job because they wanted him to have a big hit mainstream hardcover, that he relentedand then, years later, wrote Fantastic Voyage II: Destination Brain, to try to correct all the things he saw as crass stupidities in the original book.

Sigh. Of such things are SF careers made. Maybe I should write Wild Wild West II: Destination Ass.

Sidebar: The original 1966 movie is free on DailyMotion, in a really nice HD transfer. If you’re interested, you’ll find it at this link: Fantastic Voyage (1966) - Complete Film HD - video Dailymotion 

§

Through December, January, and into February, the diagnostic noose tightened. My heart was failing, rapidly. Basically, I was running on three chambers, while the fourth was just barely functional. In one memorable metaphor one doctor likened it to my rocketing down the highway at a hundred miles an hour on three brand new tires—and one patched and bald retread that might blow at any moment.

The final straw came on February 17th, when they attempted an angioplasty, and gave up the attempt because my arteries were too badly blocked to allow them to place any stents. I had four major blockages in my coronary arteries. Somehow, miraculously, a minor artery had enlarged, and it was carrying the load of keeping me alive. This left me with just one option, and it might be a longshot: open heart surgery, to create multiple bypasses. I went into surgery on the morning of March 13th. 

§

For the next part of the story, I can only relate what other people told me afterward, as I was sedated out of my mind for the next few days. Once they opened me up, they found that I was in worse condition than thought and that the operation was going to be more complicated and take longer than expected. After it was finished, I was in the ICU for days afterward, having hallucinations the likes of which I hope never to have again. When I finally cleared and regained consciousness, I actually had to ask the nurse if I really had survived the operation, and to reassure me that this wasn’t just another particularly cruel hallucination in which I was only imagining I was still alive.

And then I had to ask someone else, to verify that the nurse wasn’t part of my hallucination. I developed a whole new appreciation for the works of Philip K. Dick in those days. How do you know, really know, what reality is? Especially when your hallucinations are fully capable of carrying on a seemingly reasonable conversation with you? 

After a few days in the ICU, I had stabilized well enough that they transferred me to a regular ward, and a few days after that, on March 20th, I was finally discharged to outpatient rehab.

§

People keep asking me how I feel. For the first few days, I felt as if I’d been the guest of honor at some particularly gory Mesoamerican sacrifice to a Sun God or something. After that, I felt as if I was a construct stitched together by a mad scientist—and not a first-rate mad scientist, either, but one who shopped at Crazy Igor’s House of Discount Cadaver Parts.

Eventually, I began to feel somewhat normal and human again. The pain in my left leg, where they harvested the veins used for the grafts, subsided from constant and throbbing to being manageable. I’ve regained my ability to walk, and more importantly, my ability to think clearly, although fatigue is still an issue. I’m doing PT twice a week and they tell me I’m making great progress, although I bet they say that to all the reanimated corpses. One thing I hadn’t counted on, that is more of a nuisance than I thought, is that one of the conditions of my parole is I must wear a combination heart monitor and portable defibrillator 24x7, except when I’m in the shower. I have come to believe that this thing is God’s punishment for my writing the DataBra into Headcrash. I didn’t make that thing nearly uncomfortable enough, and neglected to make it connected by an umbilical cord to a control unit about the size, shape, and weight of a motorcycle battery—and then to make that umbilical just short enough to be a real nuisance.  

Oh well, Another thing to add to Headcrash II: Destination Spleen, I suppose.

Still, it’s good to be alive, and it’s good to be back. Thank you for your kind wishes and support, and here’s to looking forward to my new life. 

Upward and onward,
Bruce Bethke

Monday, February 16, 2026

Status Update • 16 February 2026

 

With two weeks left to go until the Nebula ballot cutoff, we’re pleased to report that THE DAY WE SAID GOODBYE TO THE BIRDS has made it onto the SFWA Nebula Awards Recommended Reading list. If you’re a voting member of SFWA, you can download the full PDF text of the book for FREE at this link:

https://www.sfwa.org/reading-list-entry/the-day-we-said-goodbye-to-the-birds-by-dyen-shapiro-allan/

If you’re a mere mortal, you can buy the book pretty much anywhere ebooks or print books are sold, by following this link:

https://books2read.com/The-Day-We-Said-Goodbye-to-the-Birds

We have it on good authority that SFWA didn’t lock down the membership validation function on their download site as well as they might have and that it’s possible to bypass the check and download the PDF for free no matter who you are, but we have decided to leave figuring out how to do that as a challenge to your cyberpunk skillz. We don’t mind if you do so, but we’re not going to make it easy for you.

§

On the subject of cyberpunk: no, I wouldn’t call this one a “cyberpunk” book. I’d say it’s more on the order of an “ecological hopepunk” book. In looking at what other people have had to say about it I’ve found it classified as “cli-fi,” which is a category I didn’t know existed before, but I guess it does now.

I’ve also been a bit disappointed to see a few people dismiss it without reading it on the grounds that the title suggests this is a sci-fi riff on Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring. Seriously, do you think I would publish something that thuddingly obvious? Yes, the backbone of this story is grounded in ecological bioscience, which is a subject near and dear to my heart, and yes, there are some birds in it, but if you’re thinking this is yet another story that’s going to club you over the head with an Important Ecological Message until you submit, you are way off base.

Trust me. I don’t publish sermons and screeds. I publish good stories.

§

On a tangentially related subject: one of the stranger questions to come in lately is whether this is a “gay” story, apparently because we got this very kind review on the QueerSciFi.com web site. Seriously? Because a gay book reviewer liked the book, that makes it suspect? 

The story is set in near-future San Francisco. There are people in it; lots of people, some of them with speaking parts. This being San Francisco, some of those speaking characters are gay. So? You know, it is possible to set a story in contemporary or near-future San Francisco without having it end up in the middle of a pride parade in the Castro District, and without it turning into a sermon or screed on LGBTQ+ issues. I’m just saying. 

Geez…

§

Finally, for those who have been wondering what’s happened since the 1 February status update: things have been developing at a remarkable rate. I’m having an outpatient procedure tomorrow, which should reveal the answers to a lot of questions, after which we’ll have a much clearer path forward. I won’t be online or answering email tomorrow, but more likely will be sedated and having sweet dreams of tiny submarines the size of microbes and a young Raquel Welch in a skin-tight wet suit.  

See you next Wednesday,

~brb