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16+ Works 871 Members 31 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Laurie Penny was born in London in 1986 and grew up on the Internet. Her blog, Penny Rea, was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize for political writing in 2010. She is a contributing editor at New Statesman magazine and editor at large at the New Inquiry, and has written for the Guardian, Salon, the show more Nation, and others. She is also the author of Meat Market female Flesh Under Capitalism, a collection of her columns; Penny Red: Notes from the New Age of Dissent; Discordia: Six Nights in Crisis Athens (with Molly Crabapple): and Cybersexism, an original e-book from which this book draws. Follow@PennyRed. show less

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Works by Laurie Penny

Associated Works

The Wicked + The Divine, Vol. 5: Imperial Phase, Part 1 (2017) — Contributor — 364 copies
Some of the Best from Tor.com: 2016 Edition (2017) — Contributor — 136 copies
Worlds Seen in Passing: Ten Years of Tor.com Short Fiction (2018) — Contributor — 128 copies
I Am Heathcliff: Stories Inspired by Wuthering Heights (2018) — Contributor — 28 copies
The Best American Magazine Writing 2018 (2018) — Contributor — 22 copies
The Year's Best Science Fiction & Fantasy, 2020 Edition (2020) — Contributor — 21 copies
Tor.com Short Fiction: Fall 2019 (2019) — Contributor — 13 copies

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Silenostar | 6 other reviews | Dec 7, 2022 |
This is a short story about angels and demons that work in a call center. About an angel in particular, that is our narrator. The premise is really good and I thought this was going to be a comedy, but it turns out it had serious moments and surprising sex scenes too.

The story starts with the line “All prayers are answered, but sometimes the answer is no” and with a depiction of how it’s like to work in a call center. Having worked in two of those myself, those scenes were particularly funny. Besides those moments, the narrator also tells about their past sexual involvement with humans and how all of those ended.

I really enjoyed this story but it felt very much like a draft of an idea instead of a complete work and that is a shame. The characters and themes weren’t fleshed out enough and there was very little world building. I seldom have that last complain about anything, but by the end of this story I had so many questions about how this call center worked and how it came into existence and what was the actual purpose of it all. I really wish this story was longer.
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elderlingfae | 5 other reviews | Aug 11, 2022 |
I love goodreads. I hadn't heard about this novella before a review by Alice showed up in my feed. Thanks to her review I got to read this thought provoking SF novella.

There's a lot of ideas to think about, the one that struck me while reading, is how the powerful have always stolen the time of the less powerful, be they the slaves, peasants, factory workers or just the working class. In reading the acknowledgments the author points out a real world inspiration As I write, a public inquiry into the misuse of powers by undercover police officers in the United Kingdom is ongoing. Which I hadn't considered.… (more)
 
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kevn57 | 5 other reviews | Dec 8, 2021 |
Angels work. Of course we do. We’re all on zero-hour contracts. Time, after all, is a human idea.

We get twenty-five minutes of it for lunch, with deductions for any bathroom or smoke stops we might have taken. Hating your boss is also a human idea.

The day everything changes, I spend my lunch in the break room with Gremory. There are many rooms in my Father’s house, but only one with a functioning coffee machine.


Meh. (FWIW, angel fiction is generally meh, from my perspective.) If angels and demons working a call center following a heavenly merger (and all that that implies) sounds good to you, YMMV. Available free from Tor:

http://www.tor.com/2016/03/15/your-orisons-may-be-recorded/
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amyotheramy | 5 other reviews | May 11, 2021 |

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Works
16
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10
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Rating
3.8
Reviews
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ISBNs
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Favorited
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