Thank you, authors! Thank you to our artist!
Thank you to the whole Electric Spec team!
Thank you, readers!
We hope you enjoy this issue as much as we did.
Thank you, readers!
We hope you enjoy this issue as much as we did.
Time travel stories often involve a character trying to change or prevent an action, choice, or situation that had a major effect on their life. For my story, I wanted to approach this time travel trope from a different angle. Here, the main character, Charlie, can't change the past or do anything to prevent his partner's death. What he does get, though, is closure and resolution courtesy of Celeste's knowledge and ability to give him what he needs: a last moment with Rebecca. The story is also set in a world where time itself is a commodity, and we see the same haves and have-nots that exist in the real world now, as well as corporate burdens that often command people's lives and expend our most precious resource, which is our time.
Interesting! Thanks, Phillip! Be sure to check out "Full Nova" and the rest of the stories on August 31!
I've spent my whole career thinking about science and scientists, and one recurring theme is the gap between how most people think research works, and how it actually happens.
Most experiments fail. The controls die, the apparatus you cobbled together breaks, or the cool thing you thought you'd discovered turns out to be an artifact. Sometimes something works as intended, which is a nice change of pace. But the best thing, the moment scientists live for, isn't when an experiment works, but when it fails in an interesting way. When you're scratching your head saying "wait, that can't happen," you just might have stumbled onto something new.
This story started out with the usual sort of sci-fi musing: "wouldn't it be cool if we could ..." Then I wondered who would discover such a capability, under what circumstances, and how would they first realize it? I decided it would probably happen when they were trying to do something else. And maybe they'd think the experiment had failed.
Initially, I started with a very different cast of characters, and had trouble deciding how to shape the story. Once I hit on the idea of a graduate student making the opening discovery, everything suddenly came together. Heather finds herself confronted with something that doesn't make sense, and gets sucked into figuring it out. She learns a few other things along the way. To the extent that there is a theme, it emerged from what these characters wanted to tell me.
I hope people enjoy reading "Half Lives" as much as I enjoyed writing it.
Interesting! Thanks, Alan! Be sure to check out "Half Lives" and the rest of the stories on August 31!
This story was written for a competition that had 'identity' as the prompt (perhaps I strayed a bit in my story!). The inspiration came when my wife was seriously ill in hospital for quite a long time, and I struggled to juggle work with looking after our young daughter. I made an offhand comment to my mother-in-law about putting on my childcare hat, and then it was only a short hop to think that there could by a physical manifestation of such hat swapping. Add a dash of corporate greed and employee frustration, and there you go!
I think the stress and helplessness I felt at the time bled into the story, which was both unexpected and cathartic, and I do think it has a kind of angry energy that my other work doesn't have.
I'd love to dedicate the piece to my wife and children, Carly, Kara and Thomas. They're the best family anyone could wish for!
Interesting! Thanks, Christopher! Be sure to check out "Hats" and the rest of the stories on August 31!
Woo hoo! I can't wait!