short story of the day #8: folding beijing by hao jingfang, trans. ken liu

Short Story of the Day #8: “Folding Beijing” by Hao Jingfang, trans. Ken Liu

A lot of these early Short Stories of the Day are Hugo and Nebula winners, and Hao Jingfang's "Folding Beijing" is no exception. Ken Liu's 2015 translation won the Best Novelette Hugo, and the story is so enthralling that non-Chinese speakers will wish they could read the original. Why "Folding Beijing"? Many of us have … Continue reading Short Story of the Day #8: “Folding Beijing” by Hao Jingfang, trans. Ken Liu

Short Story of the Day #6: Sometimes Boys Don't Know by Donyae Coles

Short Story of the Day #7: “Sometimes Boys Don’t Know” by Donyae Coles

If you've read the Short Story of the Day series so far, you know I love stories about monstrous women and girls. I shared Carrie Vaughn's take on Alfred, Lord Tennyson's "The Lady of Shalott" last year. Yesterday's pick, Kelly Sandoval's 'What Sisters Take," follows a teenager with a hidden twin who can only survive … Continue reading Short Story of the Day #7: “Sometimes Boys Don’t Know” by Donyae Coles

women in white dress playing with kite on the grass field

Short Story of the Day #6: “What Sisters Take” by Kelly Sandoval

Escape to Witch Mountain taught us that everybody has a twin. The One said we'd have to kill our double to achieve primacy. In Kelly Sandoval's "What Sisters Take," supernatural events lead to the births of three hidden twins, each of whom has only one goal: to siphon life from her human sister. Why "What … Continue reading Short Story of the Day #6: “What Sisters Take” by Kelly Sandoval