
Wade Roush
Author of Twelve Tomorrows
Works by Wade Roush
Tasting Light: Ten Science Fiction Stories to Rewire Your Perceptions (2022) — Editor — 42 copies, 1 review
Starstuff: Ten Science Fiction Stories to Celebrate New Possibilities (2025) — Editor — 11 copies, 1 review
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science-fiction short story collection that showcases the possibilities of the near and distant future.
This collection of 10 stories includes entries by a number of popular authors for young people. Most are written in traditional prose, such as A.R. Capetta’s second-person narrative, “The Most Epic Nap in the Universe,” but others branch out: Maddi Gonzalez’s “Zabrina Meets the Retro Club” is a black-and-white comic, and Eliot Schrefer’s “A Proposal to the Animal Congress” show more consists of a dialogue between two forms of artificial intelligence. Standouts include Kekla Magoon’s plot-driven, high-stakes heist story, “The Whistleblowers,” in which two kids battle big pharma to acquire medical research that calls into question the safety of EternaLife, a miracle drug intended to reverse the effects of aging. David Robertson’s “Of What We Never Were” also shines: In it, middle schooler Stacy is a test subject for whole brain emulation, a process in which the neural contents of a deceased person—in this case, Stacy’s best friend, Adam—are uploaded to an interactive AI device. Robertson sensitively raises questions surrounding grief, loss, and what it means to be human. Although several of the stories falter in the face of the challenge of explaining complex scientific theories in an engaging and accessible way to a younger audience, the themes of humanity, morality, and the quest for knowledge will appeal beyond aficionados of the genre. Naturally inclusive diversity is interwoven throughout, for example through the presence of nongendered characters.
Thought-provoking, if inconsistent. (contributor bios) (Science-fiction anthology. 10-14)
-Kirkus Review show less
This collection of 10 stories includes entries by a number of popular authors for young people. Most are written in traditional prose, such as A.R. Capetta’s second-person narrative, “The Most Epic Nap in the Universe,” but others branch out: Maddi Gonzalez’s “Zabrina Meets the Retro Club” is a black-and-white comic, and Eliot Schrefer’s “A Proposal to the Animal Congress” show more consists of a dialogue between two forms of artificial intelligence. Standouts include Kekla Magoon’s plot-driven, high-stakes heist story, “The Whistleblowers,” in which two kids battle big pharma to acquire medical research that calls into question the safety of EternaLife, a miracle drug intended to reverse the effects of aging. David Robertson’s “Of What We Never Were” also shines: In it, middle schooler Stacy is a test subject for whole brain emulation, a process in which the neural contents of a deceased person—in this case, Stacy’s best friend, Adam—are uploaded to an interactive AI device. Robertson sensitively raises questions surrounding grief, loss, and what it means to be human. Although several of the stories falter in the face of the challenge of explaining complex scientific theories in an engaging and accessible way to a younger audience, the themes of humanity, morality, and the quest for knowledge will appeal beyond aficionados of the genre. Naturally inclusive diversity is interwoven throughout, for example through the presence of nongendered characters.
Thought-provoking, if inconsistent. (contributor bios) (Science-fiction anthology. 10-14)
-Kirkus Review show less
Worth reading, worth thinking about, inevitably time-dependent (it's hard to say how useful of a read this will be in 4 years!). It is very hard to choose a top 2-3 stories, which says good things about the collection!
Box 1 - 32
changed 813. 0876 2022 AURA to PZ 648 .23 2022 AURA
changed 813. 0876 2022 AURA to PZ 648 .23 2022 AURA
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- Works
- 4
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 139
- Popularity
- #147,350
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 14









