Status Updates From Clarkesworld Magazine, Issu...
Clarkesworld Magazine, Issue 232, January 2026 by
Status Updates Showing 1-30 of 38
Thia Reads A Lot
is 99% done
Destination: The Asteroid Belt interesting essay about asteroids
— Jan 11, 2026 07:05PM
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Thia Reads A Lot
is 90% done
Indomitable Persistence: A Conversation with Alastair Reynolds good interview
— Jan 11, 2026 06:44PM
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Thia Reads A Lot
is 81% done
The Desolate Order of the Head in the Water: 4*
A family flees into the woods after the Great Fall, where the superintelligence killed half the population with brain implants. One of their tents is damaged, the father goes into town for supplies, never comes back. The mother goes next, same thing. The boy goes, gets new parents from the superintelligence. He wonders if his parents are in the lot somewhere.
— Jan 11, 2026 06:44PM
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A family flees into the woods after the Great Fall, where the superintelligence killed half the population with brain implants. One of their tents is damaged, the father goes into town for supplies, never comes back. The mother goes next, same thing. The boy goes, gets new parents from the superintelligence. He wonders if his parents are in the lot somewhere.
Thia Reads A Lot
is 72% done
writer skill set is interesting, I might note that down in my commonplace notebook.
— Jan 10, 2026 07:23PM
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Thia Reads A Lot
is 72% done
My process for short fiction and novels can be pretty different, but what they both have in common is that I can’t begin anything until I see, smell, taste, hear, and feel a moment experienced by the protagonist. For stories, almost always the beginning. For novels, either the beginning or end; both would be great, but that’s rare.
— Jan 10, 2026 06:37PM
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Thia Reads A Lot
is 72% done
Extraordinary Things: A Conversation with Nicola Griffith: "My protagonists are not victims. They never suffer because of who they are, for being queer or crips or Black or broke, or whatever; their problems (and solutions) and conflicts (and triumphs) arise from what they do or don’t do, the decisions and mistakes they make. They are subjects, not objects."
— Jan 10, 2026 06:29PM
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