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aimiller 's review for:
Recognize Fascism: A Science Fiction and Fantasy Anthology
by Julie Capell, Octavia Cade, Lucie Lukačovičová, Jennifer Shelby, Leonardo Espinoza Benavides, Rodrigo Juri, Crystal M. Huff, Hal Y. Zhang, Jaymee Goh, Blake Jessop, Selene dePackh, Alexei Collier, Lauren Ring, Dianne M. Williams, Kiya Nicoll, Laura Jane Swanson, Meridel Newton, Phoebe Barton, Sam J. Miller, Justin Short, Nina Niskanen, Brandon O'Brien, Jonathan Shipley, Luna Corbden
emotional
reflective
tense
medium-paced
I received a copy of this book through LibraryThing's Early Reviewers program, and I'd like to thank the publishers for the opportunity to read this book.
This was a good and interesting collection; in some ways the theme I think made at least some of the stories feel kind of similar in a way that made them blur together, and some of the recurring themes (we get it, "augmentation" is a metaphor and rarely about disabled people or reflecting how ableism works.) But I think it's still definitely an interesting read, and folks might appreciate seeing other people recognize fascism in fiction as we face it in our current moment.
This was a good and interesting collection; in some ways the theme I think made at least some of the stories feel kind of similar in a way that made them blur together, and some of the recurring themes (we get it, "augmentation" is a metaphor and rarely about disabled people or reflecting how ableism works.) But I think it's still definitely an interesting read, and folks might appreciate seeing other people recognize fascism in fiction as we face it in our current moment.