Monstrous Futures: A Sci-Fi Horror Anthology
Monstrous Futures: A Sci-Fi Horror Anthology

Dark Matter INK

Monstrous Futures: A Sci-Fi Horror Anthology

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The Dark Matter Presents Series

Editor: Alex Woodroe

Foreword: Andrew F. Sullivan

Authors: M. H. Ayinde, P. A. Cornell, Yelena Crane, Rodrigo Culagovski, Koji A. Dae, Kevin M. Folliard, Lew Furber, Andrea Goyan, Ivy Grimes, Kay Hanifen, D. A. Jobe, Wailana Kalama, Rae Knowles, Catherine Kuo, Rich Larson, Avra Margariti, J. A. W. McCarthy, Christi Nogle, Ashleigh Shears, D. Roe Shocky, Lisa Short, Hugh A. D. Spencer, Simo Srinivas, Kanishk Tantia, M. Elizabeth Ticknor, S. J. Townend, Kaitlin Tremblay, Emily Ruth Verona, and Aigner Loren Wilson

Classification: Anthology

Categories: 👽 Science Fiction, 💀 Horror, Short Fiction, Near Future, Cyberpunk, Dystopia, Technothriller, and Suspense

Format:Paperback
Quantity:

29 BRAND NEW SCI-FI HORROR STORIES. The future is now, and it's not what we were promised. The optimistic science fiction of old was wrong. Progress is not linear, technology creates as many problems as it solves, and the concept of a better tomorrow has become an abstraction that is in no way guaranteed. When looking at the future now, we no longer ask what is possible, we wonder how we'll cope. Contained within this anthology are 29 never-before-published works by supremely talented authors. Brace yourself for the all too real horrors of what could very well be our terribly monstrous futures.

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Alphabetical by Last Name

The Authors

Story title in italics.

M. H. Ayinde

Fully Comprehensive Code Switch

P. A. Cornell

The Body Remembers

Yelena Crane

Subscribers Only

Rodrigo Culagovski

You Don't Have to Watch This Part

Koji A. Dae

The Least I Can Do

Kevin M. Folliard

Normalcy Protocol

Lew Furber

My Strengths Include Customer Service and Teamwork

Andrea Goyan

Would've, Could've, Should've

Ivy Grimes

The Wrong Mall

Kay Hanifen

Nanny Clouds

D. A. Jobe

A Front Row Seat for Miss Evelyn

Wailana Kalama

Kill Switch

Rae Knowles

Shiny™ People

Catherine Kuo

About a Broken Machine

Rich Larson

Dissection

Avra Margariti

Who Sees All

J. A. W. McCarthy

Consider This An Opportunity

Christi Nogle

Once a Traveler

Ashleigh Shears

A Smooth Handover

D. Roe Shocky

Scary Canary Actuary

Lisa Short

Father Figure

Hugh A. D. Spencer

The Burn-Outs

Andrew F. Sullivan

Foreword

Kanishk Tantia

I Promise I'll Visit, Ma

M. Elizabeth Ticknor

Inter-Dimensional Travel Solutions

S. J. Townend

All the Parts of a Mermaid That I Can Recall

Kaitlin Tremblay

For Those Not Yet Lost

Emily Ruth Verona

A Flicker

Aigner Loren Wilson

How I Creak for You

Product Details

Editor: Alex Woodroe

Cover Artist: Olly Jeavons

Audiobook Narrator: Cheryl May

Publish Date: ‎April 18, 2023

Format: Paperback

Language: ‎English

ISBN: 9781958598078

Pages: 356

Dimensions: 5.5 in. | 8.5 in.

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D
Daniel
Not Good, but Great Sci-Fi Horror

Dark Matter Presents continues to kill it with this second installment of their Monster anthologies. The best writers are brought together with their best horror/sci-fi works to an amalgamation of speculative terror that is so visionary, but never farther than the tips of our fingers.Good sci-fi horror faces us with future possibilities that places a glaring mirror to our past, the deepest, darkest, immutable flaws of humanity, and our capability and capacity for innovation and advancement without care for cost or consequence. Mostly in the name of capitalism, and occasionally in the grandmother’s clothes of progress, comfort, and convenience. Great sci-fi horror does all this, but in such believable scopes that the dreadful premises of both the technological and societal advancements seem to be not only attainable, but are just around the corner. Things you’ve heard about in the news or on your twitter feed, that we are inching closer and closer towards. Stories that feel more like predictions than speculations. Even the outlandish and surreal anchored and rooted from a world we know as our own to a future that makes us believe that the course is already set and doomed.This collection is great sci-fi horror.Editor Alex Woodroe compiles a wide variety of stories and voices that explore every possible timeline of our horrific futures. The breadth of imagination, identity, diversity, and creativity are truly what lay the foundations of this mind-blowing anthology. There are explorations of household machines gone mad in ways that will chill you and break your heart—should your vacuum really be intelligent?—, body augmentations and implantations with unsettling repercussions (How much do you want to assimilate into acceptable cultural behavior? How closely do you want to watch your kids?), horrific and inhumane (and inhuman) forms of punishment and rehabilitation, deadly effects of entertainment gone wrong or way too right, and the entirely disturbing ways that humans are beginning to approach medicine, healthcare, and death.Even when the speculative elements and stories are the more far-fetched ideas—the time travel autopsies, astral projection nightmares, and cheeky surrealist capitalist apocalypses—every single one of the 29 stories herein strike home in such a meaningful, familiar way. You’ll find reflections of yourself and the world you know, and it will scare you, break your heart, and blow your mind. You won’t leave this collection unscathed.I face the same issue I had with the preceding Human Monsters anthology: that the entire anthology is so good from start to finish that it’s quite impossible to choose favorites. Some of the stories that continue to live rent-free in my head include but are not limited to: “Fully Comprehensive Code Switch” by M.H. Ayinde, “About a Broken Machine” by Catherine Kuo, “Who Sees All” by Avra Margariti, “Nanny Clouds” by Kay Hanifen, “A Front Row Seat for Miss Evelyn” by D.A. Jobe, and “You Don’t Have to Watch This Part” by Rodrigo Culagovski. Again, as I said in my HM review, you see how many I just listed? You see how impossible it is to select standout stories from such an across the board slam dunk anthology?If you’re a fan of sci-fi, if you’re a fan of horror, if you’re a fan of looking to the future with any mixture of hope, curiosity, dread, outrage, and dismay, you’ll love this collection. If you’re a fan of great story telling, emotional impact, and rich, diverse voices, you’ll love this collection. I cannot commend Woodroe’s hard work enough, and I cannot recommend this anthology enough. Read it now, before the futures within come to pass.

T
Tom Sterling
A Fun and Scary Collection of Stories!

Monstrous Futures is a fun and sometimes scary collection of stories that take place in the near-future, or possibly somewhere on a parallel Earth. Each tale explores some unique and unexpected direction that new technologies and our society might take us. Some of those visions are pretty frightening. I loved it!

The Editor

Alex Woodroe is a Romanian writer and editor of dark speculative fiction. She’s the author of Whisperwood, and has several short stories published in venues like Horror Library and the Nosleep podcast. Alex lives in the heart of the Transylvanian region of Romania.

The Cover Artist

Olly Jeavons is a UK-based artist, illustrator, and creator.

The Narrator

Cheryl May is an international award-winning voice talent who has spent years in the studio performing voice-over work and lending her musical voice to projects for over twenty-five years.

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