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She is Here
(2026)(Book 34 in the Outspoken Authors series)
A collection of stories by Nicola Griffith
Widely acclaimed as a novelist, here Nicola Griffith displays her power, precision, and clarity of thought in multiple modes and forms.
Known for her gorgeously supple prose that soars effortlessly over genre boundaries, Griffith is also an incisive essayist whose ground-breaking, data-driven work on gender bias in the literary ecosystem sparked self-searching conversations worldwide. In this heady mélange of essays, poems, art, and storiessome seen here for the first timethe author makes foundational assertions about love versus ownership (‘Wife’), advocates for the writer as explorer (‘Branding: It Burns’), and points out the gaping hole in our literary landscape where we’d expect to find disability fiction (‘Overwriting the Old Story’). These and other public-facing essays are followed by four powerfully intimate poems. Returning to prose, Griffith immerses us so seamlessly in her viscerally imagined fiction that we feel how it is to be hurled like light through the stars in ‘Glimmer,’ hunted through the urban alleys of ‘Cold Wind’ during a holiday blizzard, swept along irresistible currents of ‘Down the Path of the Sun,’ and, in ‘Many Things in Dumnet,’ a novella published here for the first time, brought ashore as a stranger to land where something is very wrong.
Finally, ‘Otherwise Unremarkable,’ series editor Nisi Shawl's interview with the author, teases out sometimes startling and always satisfying answers to questions on power, activism, immigration, cognitive poetics, and art.
Genre: Science Fiction
Known for her gorgeously supple prose that soars effortlessly over genre boundaries, Griffith is also an incisive essayist whose ground-breaking, data-driven work on gender bias in the literary ecosystem sparked self-searching conversations worldwide. In this heady mélange of essays, poems, art, and storiessome seen here for the first timethe author makes foundational assertions about love versus ownership (‘Wife’), advocates for the writer as explorer (‘Branding: It Burns’), and points out the gaping hole in our literary landscape where we’d expect to find disability fiction (‘Overwriting the Old Story’). These and other public-facing essays are followed by four powerfully intimate poems. Returning to prose, Griffith immerses us so seamlessly in her viscerally imagined fiction that we feel how it is to be hurled like light through the stars in ‘Glimmer,’ hunted through the urban alleys of ‘Cold Wind’ during a holiday blizzard, swept along irresistible currents of ‘Down the Path of the Sun,’ and, in ‘Many Things in Dumnet,’ a novella published here for the first time, brought ashore as a stranger to land where something is very wrong.
Finally, ‘Otherwise Unremarkable,’ series editor Nisi Shawl's interview with the author, teases out sometimes startling and always satisfying answers to questions on power, activism, immigration, cognitive poetics, and art.
Genre: Science Fiction
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