Queer Dimensions edited by James EM Rasmussen

Oct 31, 2009 18:43


The Night Hunters by Jacques L. Condor: “Lights in the sky, circles in the snow and stolen moose carcasses…in the Alaskan wilderness two former lovers stand together in the face of the unknown.”

Frank and Pete are more than 80 years old and former lovers. They are still living together on the account that they haven't any other place where to go. At the beginning of the XX century they moved to Alaska, built an isolated cabin and probably started a life together in a place where no one cared if they were lovers. In the '60 they "divorced", meaning that they decided they were no more in love and tracked a red line in the middle of the cabin. For the following years they continued to live together bitching and questioning, but, for me still loving each other, they have only to find a reason to understand that the love is stronger than the habit.
The "sci-fi" elements in this story are only a nice side effect, the main focus are Frank and Pete and their story. In few words the author told us a whole lifelong experience, and Frank and Pete came out as two wonderful characters. At the beginning, I was thinking for them to be only supporting characters, I'm true, I didn't think to more than 80 years old men as possible "lovers", and so I thought it was their friend Dill to be the hero. And instead Frank and Pete, with all their years, and with their past history, stole the scene and headed together towards a very nice happily ever after... again!

Borrowed by R.J. Bradshaw: “In Borrowed, Pete’s average working day takes a bewildering turn when his hot neighbour pays him an uncharacteristic visit.”

This a very short story and it’s quite funny actually. Pete is a 20 years old guy living in a small country farm village, and he has nothing to do if not fantasizing on his neighbour, Walt. Problem is that Pete has not courage to come out, at least with Walt, and so his situation is without hope. But then he receives an unexpected help from an alien who borrows Walt’s body. As in the previous story, I had the feeling that the sci-fi element was not the main aspect; more in this case, I even felt an old-fashioned taste, like an alien’s story of the ’50, when the alien were still “simple” creature and not the monster of recent imagination.

The Communion Fields by Trent Roman: “Around the world, a group of people find themselves in a strange dreamland when they go to sleep, where the laws of physics are suspended and something lurks over the horizon.”

In Trent Roman’s story, the gay character represents only one of the various examples of misfits in the real world. Michael, as others, sometime awakes in a different world, what he calls the Communion Fields. It’s not a dream, he actually made friends with some of the people he met there, persons he had the chance to meet also in the real world. But till this night, he didn’t understand why him, or the others, have this particular experience. Maybe this story is a bit more alternative dimensions than the previous ones, but still, it’s a very sophisticated type of sci-fi, and again it has an old fashioned feeling, this time more ’70 type, like 2001 Space Odyssey or some other cult movies.

Stargazing by Inga Gorslar: “The journey might just be the reward.”

In a world where soldiers were turned in half human half beast for being better at fight, Jack has no more a place where to stay. The war is ended, and Jack at 36 years is too old to go back home, a place he left 20 years before. He is now a drifter, without a place, and only a friend, Andy, an android he saved from destruction. Jack and Andy are at the opposite, Jack was a ground trooper and to be so he was given claws and special sight, and scales instead of skin, they made him loose his humanity. Andy instead has the body of a perfect man, but it’s a robot. Both of them now don’t have a reason to exist, if not that they are the only other contact for each other. Wandering together from small town to small town, Jack is trying to regain his humanity and Andy to learn it; in the meantime, they maybe will find also something else, that where no real human will want to be with them, they can be for each other also lovers other than friends.

The Prettiest Girl in the Room by Mallory Path: “Duster Mann adores women-especially when they have XY chromosomes like the woman he fell for at first sight and has been searching for ever since. ”

This is probably the most “futuristic” of all the previous stories, the one I usually refer to as “Apocalypse Now”. The setting is an oppressive and dark future world, that I really hope we will never reach. The difference between people are thinner, there are no more men or women, black or white, but there is still the sex. Duster is a man with a mission, and is mission is called Lyre. Lyre is a whore, she/he works with Faye and they are responsible for Lolly. All of the three “girls” are in between, not yet men or women, not yet adult but no more boys. Probably the story is not your classical M/M romance, as I said, the gender of the characters are very much “uncertain”, and so you can’t define it as gay, lesbian or transgender, it is all of it and at the same time no one of them. It’s also quite sad, I’m not sure if I liked the sadness, I would have probably preferred for an happily ever after, at least a “for now” one.

Time Now by C.S. Fuqua: “Mattie will do anything to change the past… but what if the past won’t let her?”

This is quite a strange story. Mattie and Abby are lovers, but Abby is not stable, she is always on the brink of suicide till the day Mattie arrives too late to save her. But Mattie and her college professor, Dr Davies are working on a time portal and maybe Mattie is not really too late to save Abby. Again another perspective in how you look at sci-fi: here is more a psychological one, and also, probably, the affirmation that destiny somewhat is stronger than science.

The Man in the Mirror by Lacey Louwagie: “In a world of declining male birth-rates, Gina moves to a Ranch searching for love. When Gina’s marriage fails, her best friend Andi takes drastic steps to make sure Gina’s dreams of love still come true.”

This is probably the most sincere of the stories: what are you willing to do for love? Not always the answer is everything. Andi loves Gina since forever; they went school together, they grew up together, and Andi thought Gina was everything she wanted, but for Gina was not the same. In the future world where they live, women outcome men 10 to 1, and finding a man is a so small chance that lesbian couple are an ordinary thing. But Gina wants an old fashioned relationship, doesn’t matter if there is no love in that. She is wrong obviously and in the end she comes back to Andi, with a daughter they can bring up together. But again, Gina is not happy, and Andi thinks that she can do the latest sacrifice, loosing herself for the love of Gina.

The Toti by Michael Itig: “Where can the gay man who has everything find fulfilment? There’s only one possible place: in the arms of a toti....”

This is a very cute story. In a world were everything is synthetic and “fake”, people give birth to people through clones. You are what your “fathers” or “mothers” are, and so, if your father is gay you are gay. Being homosexual is common, as it’s having open relationship. Jay, our hero, has 6 husbands and he is such a good husband himself that he has never had a divorce. But he is lonely. When the story starts, the reader has the idea that Jay isn’t accepting what society is expecting from him, to be gay. He is having payed sex with a woman, but there is something more of sex that he is searching, and only at the end the reader will find his answer, one that is surprisingly as it’s simple: Jay wants to be a normal man, and this doesn’t mean that he doesn’t want to be homosexual.

The Visitor by Fiona Glass: “Can love follow a person through time? When Madoc meets a man from the future he little realizes it will be the catalyst to change his world.”

The Visitor is a strange silver romance. Madoc is a fifty years old man who is searching for a dream. Thirty years before he falls in love for a man, Josh, who was a visitor from the future. He couldn’t stay and when he left, Madoc was only 20 years old and full of life. The world was a bad place where to live and Madoc fought to make it better. Now, 30 years after, the world is better, and Madoc is still alive, but will his love for Josh be enough? I liked a lot this short story, in a way, I think Josh would have been the right man for 20 years old Madoc. Now Madoc is a more interesting man, and maybe, this is exactly what Josh wanted.

Zoogarish by John Randall Williams: “Cole’s panic attacks aren’t about to keep him from a Zoogarish. He fights his fears only to find the hallucinations generated by this Zoogarish are something different, something deadly.”

Cole is living in a world that it’s not real, probably a place where he can be what in reality he has not the courage to be. And in that fake world, Cole is able to do things that real Cole will never do. I don’t know if I like so much “fake” Cole, I think I prefer real “Cole” and his stuttering, and his simple crush for simple and ordinary Johnny.

The Future of Dr Lole San Paulo by A.J. Astruc: “High above the morals and laws of the civilized world, a disgraced geneticist finds a new lease on life when an unusual thief comes to him with an indecent proposal.”

Lole isn’t whole and Bink isn’t real. Lole is a genetic scientist, the type of man that will not stop in front of anything, above all not life. He is quite the mad scientist and he got punished for one to many mistakes with the amputation of his limbs. When Lole meets Bink, he doesn’t know if loving or hating him, Bink is a clone and he can grow again flesh and bones. Together they have a dream, to make enough money to realize their dreams, but the problem is that their dreams don’t match, and the border between love and hate is too thin. More than a sci-fi, this is almost a futuristic Frankenstein and it has an horror side that overcome everything.

The Sister Bush by Joel Best: “A young woman from the distant future, plagued by strange dreams, learns that love and profit can be at odds with one another.”

I think the most interesting aspect of this short story it’s that it’s like reading poetry in prose. It’s not an easy story to read, and I think it has very little hope in the future; it’s also very dark and oppressive, but it’s a lyrics in it that made for a very strange experience to read.

Plumbing the Depths by Angelia Sparrow & Naomi Brooks: “Washed-up Space Exploration Rangers, Cliff Cody and his husband Jake, are sent on a mission to the earth’s core, only to have the nature of their world and relationship shaken.”

Cliff and Jake were space warriors and both of them got seriously injured during a fight. They survived but other than losing limbs and other exchangeable body part, they lost something irreplaceable, their third husband Frank. Now retired officers, they survive but they don’t really live. Jake is resenting Cliff, but above all himself to be alive and Frank not. When they are called back into service, Jake thinks it will be the end of their relationship, and instead, maybe, it will be their only chance to happiness. I really liked this story, above all since it focused more on the relationship between Cliff and Jake than on their space adventure, that, in the end, was even more funny than dangerous.

Off Course by Logan Zachary: “Disaster leads to a close encounter of the best kind.”

Paulis is a space traveller, he flights alone with the only companionship of his computer Martha. He is the perfect man of the future, but there is nothing of futuristic in his passion for Ruark, a very much old fashioned big and strong man who helped him when he is derailed from his original route. I like how from a very aseptic and futuristic setting the story evolves in a very familiar and sexy story, with even the appearance of a mother, who proves that Paulis is not at all so modern as he at first appeared.

Eurydice by James EM Rasmussen: “Eurydice: a world filled with fanatics, lunatics and isolationists where they’d rather kill you than say hello. The perfect holiday stop, only if you’re still young enough to feel immortal…”

This is a very complicated story, but basically I think that Micael doesn’t accept himself, he is always searching for something more, something different. And even if he can have the love of Dary, a perfect man, for that exact reason he can be content with it: Dary is perfect and Micael is not, he wants to change, he wants to be a different man.

Whatever the Risk by Erastes: “Paroche is one planet Teless never wants to go to. When his partner and Captain announces that they are going to be trading there on their next jump, Teless knows it can only end badly.”

Here be Gardens by David Edison: “Jaime’s been living off world when the death of an ex-lover draws him back to Earth-or does he have a different motive for leaving the herbaceous Dyson Sphere he’s called home for two years?”

Jamie’s travel is accompanied by Henry’s letters, the letter of a dead lover. It’s a strange relationship, but stronger than the one Jamie is having in real life, where whose he thinks to be a friend is instead a traitor. Is Jamie’s coming back home to fulfil the last desire of a man he loved, or to find instead his true path?

http://www.queeredfiction.com/queerdimensions.htm

Amazon: Queer Dimensions

Amazon Kindle: Queer Dimensions

The Rainbow Awards: Third (and last!) Phase: http://elisa-rolle.livejournal.com/850354.html

genre: futuristic, author: inga gorslar, author: a.j. astruc, author: james em rasmussen, author: r.j. bradshaw, author: logan zachary, editor: james em rasmussen, author: mallory path, author: joel best, author: naomi brooks, author: c.s. fuqua, author: david edison, author: michael itig, review, author: lacey louwagie, author: trent roman, author: angelia sparrow, author: fiona glass, author: jacques l. condor, length: novel, author: john randall williams

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