Erica Satifka

Erica Satifka’s short fiction has appeared in Interzone, Clarkesworld, and Daily Science Fiction. She is the author of the British Fantasy Award-winning Stay Crazy (Apex Publications) and the ruralcyberpunk novella Busted Synapses (Broken Eye Books). If you want to read more of her stories, catch ‘em all at ericasatifka.com.

Her story, “Where You Lead, I Will Follow: An Oral History of the Denver Incident”, appears in the Weird World War III anthology.


Tell me about yourself. Where are you from? What’s your background?


I’ve been publishing science fiction since 2007 (with frequent hiatuses). My first pro-published story was “Automatic” in Clarkesworld Magazine, and since then I’ve also been published in Lightspeed, Interzone, Shimmer, and many other places. In 2016 Apex Books published my urban fantasy (or so people tell me) novel Stay Crazy, the story of a schizophrenic teenage stocker at a big-box store who is contacted by a mysterious force… or is it just all in her head? This novel won the British Fantasy Award for Best Newcomer the following year, which is probably one of the top three moments of my life. Sometime soon (likely in 2020) Broken Eye Books will publish my “rural cyberpunk” novella Busted Synapses, which is set in a near-future West Virginia. I’m originally from Western Pennsylvania and my work definitely reflects that, for better or for worse. I currently and permanently live in Portland, Oregon with my husband and four strange cats.


Which of your short stories is your favorite? Why?


They are all my children and I love them equally! But the one I’m probably proudest of is my novelette “The Goddess of the Highway,” which was published in Interzone in 2017. The protagonist is a long-haul trucker with a poorly-functioning brain implant who meets up with a young woman with a well-functioning brain implant. That’s not a coincidence; in the world of the story the brains of everyone in North America got scrambled by a mysterious fog, which is implied to be the work of rich elites. It’s a political story, but also kind of a funny story, although keep in mind that I have a strange sense of humor. The titular goddess might be real, or she might be a hallucination caused by trucker speed, but either way people are losing fingers and fomenting revolution. (This makes sense in context. Probably.)


What’s the craziest thing you’ve ever done?


In 2014 my husband and I moved across the country to Portland, Oregon, without any jobs and three cats in tow. That’s pretty crazy! We’d moved to Baltimore for a job that didn’t work out, and while we considered returning to where we came from, we had the feeling that there was something else out there. I’d always wanted to live on the West Coast (despite having never been to the West Coast until the previous year), and we had some money saved up, so why not try it? I don’t know if I really expected to stay here permanently when we first moved out, but we did, and I’m glad we did.


What author has had the greatest influence on your writing? Why?


Without a doubt, Philip K. Dick. I “discovered” him in college (he had already been dead for twenty years at that point) and his work clicked with me immediately, there was just something about the style of writing that I found so compelling. Of course the technological and drug-related aspects of his writing are important (especially these days, where “social credit” and facial profiling and algorithms threaten to doom us all), but beyond that I really felt a strong connection to his characters. They’re flawed individuals, all of them, and in a way you don’t often see in science fiction. Some of his lesser-known novels, like Dr. Bloodmoney or We Can Build You, are basically literary novels set in future societies with a commercial writing style, and there’s few things like them. I like his more SFnal novels too, but working-class schlubs just trying to get through their tedious days in the future is my ultimate jam. (Cross-promotion time: I have an essay about PKD coming out in a book by PM Press later this year, with special attention to the politics in his work.


Many of your stories, including your story in Weird World War III, involve the sinister side of technology. How concerned are you about real-world technology?


Extremely concerned! I keep thinking about something said in passing on Twitter about how anonymity will soon be a thing of the past due to facial recognition programs, cameras being in everything, and the cashless economy, and it makes me really anxious. Not because I necessarily want to fall off the map, but sooner than we think it won’t even be an option. Combine this with social credit and you get a dystopia of our own making, and none of the political parties in any country seem like they want to take this problem on at all. And it doesn’t feel like anyone really benefits in the long run; sure, there’s money to be made, but the people who designed and profit from these systems have to live in them too. The Internet is possibly the greatest thing humans ever made, but it opened a Pandora’s box of unintended consequences. I don’t know how this can be fixed without deliberately nerfing technology, and who decides what technologies are nerfed and how? In my story, catastrophe happens because people aren’t skeptical enough about technology. Hopefully, we can turn the tide before something similar happens in real life.


Story’s Soundtrack

Each of the stories in this volume evoked certain themes and emotions that can sometimes be approximated with music. The below video is the editor’s best interpretation of the feelings and themes that this author’s story evoked. Please note that this is only the editor’s interpretation. The author did not know this portion of the blog post existed until the editor published it.


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Stephen Lawson

Stephen Lawson served on three deployments with the US Navy and is currently a helicopter pilot and commissioned officer in the Kentucky National Guard. He earned a Masters of Business Administration from Indiana University Southeast in 2018, and currently lives in Louisville, Kentucky with his wife. Stephen’s writing has appeared in Writers of the Future Volume 33Orson Scott Card’s InterGalactic Medicine ShowGalaxy’s EdgeDaily Science Fiction, and at Baen.com. He’s written two episodes of The Post-Apocalyptic Tourist’s Guide, which he also edits. His blog can be found at stephenlawsonstories.wordpress.com.

His story, “No Plan Survives First Contact”, appears in the Weird World War III anthology.


Tell me about yourself. Where are you from? What’s your background?


I live in Louisville, KY now but I’ve been all over. I grew up in small towns in Ohio as a Methodist preacher’s kid, joined the Navy at 18, got out five years and three deployments later, and enrolled at Asbury University in Wilmore, KY. After college I joined the National Guard, went to flight school, and started writing amidst active duty work and getting an MBA from Indiana University Southeast. I fly helicopters and I do commissioned officer stuff when I’m not writing. Sean (the editor) and I were in volume 33 of L. Ron Hubbard’s Writers of the Future, and attended the Dave Farland/Tim Powers workshop together. Sean’s been a good friend ever since.


Which of your short stories is your favorite? Why?


They’re all special to me–even a few that I haven’t found a market for. Those are my weird little children and I love them. The story that’s done the best is “Homunculus.” It’s a hard science fiction story about a fledgling colony on Titan, and I did a lot of research for it. It won the 2018 Jim Baen Memorial Short Story Award, and was selected for volume 5 of The Year’s Best Military and Adventure Science Fiction edited by David Afsharirad. Maybe that’s my favorite? Ask tomorrow and I’ll tell you something different.


What author has had the greatest influence on your writing? Why?


In short: C.S. Lewis, Robert Heinlein, Michael Crichton, and team writers Douglas Preston & Lincoln Child. I love Lewis’s casual and accessible theology woven into adventure stories. “Out of the Silent Planet” is in a genre all its own, but it’s one I’m attempting to expand. Robert Heinlein is the master of adventure SF, and Michael Crichton the master of making you feel quite a bit smarter after you’ve read his work. I’ve been a huge fan of Preston & Child’s Pendergast series for several years, and I strive to create characters and places the way they do, especially in “Relic” and “Reliquary.”


Tell me about a time you almost died.


There have been a few. One that sticks out is the first and only time I went skydiving, when I was maybe 19. I saw this guy come in for a graceful deceleration and landing on the drop before my group. I decided I wanted to tip-toe onto the earth like a butterfly also, so when I was about a hundred feet from the ground, I pulled on both of the steering toggles at the same time to brake the chute. It did, in fact, slow down, but in shutting off the airflow through the chute’s cells, I collapsed the chute and went back into freefall. The guy on the little radio they gave me instructed me to, “Let go. Right now,” which I did. My chute reopened, but I hit the ground pretty hard—NOT like a delicate butterfly–and forward-rolled before landing in a heap. I did not break any bones, thankfully, but I decided not to try to be a pro on the first attempt at anything ever again.


Tell us something about you that very few people know.


I have a pet rabbit. I got him for my wife, but he’s my writing assistant most of the time. He basically litter-trained himself and is fairly low maintenance. A lot of writers seem to have cats. Rabbits do not jump on your keyboard while you’re writing. They just bug you for snacks and occasional cheek rubs. Rabbits are the perfect writer’s pet that the world doesn’t know about.


Story’s Soundtrack

Each of the stories in this volume evoked certain themes and emotions that can sometimes be approximated with music. The below video is the editor’s best interpretation of the feelings and themes that this author’s story evoked. Please note that this is only the editor’s interpretation. The author did not know this portion of the blog post existed until the editor published it.


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Latest Weird World War III Features: September 28, 2020

Weird World War III was featured on the Town Square Delaware and Delaware Live websites, and the Angels to Aliens and Writers & Illustrators of the Future podcasts. Check them out.

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Xander and Marina Lostetter

Marina J. Lostetter lives with the subsequent geek, as well as two capricious house cats. She enjoys globe-trotting, board games, and all things art related. Marina’s numerous original short stories have appeared in venues such as LightspeedOrson Scott Card’s InterGalactic Medicine Show, and Uncanny Magazine, while her sci-fi novels, including NOUMENON and NOUMENON INFINITY, are available from Harper Voyager. She has also written tie-in materials for the Aliens and Star Citizen franchises.  Marina tweets as @MarinaLostetter and her website can be found at http://www.lostetter.net.

Dr. Xander Lostetter earned his doctorate in microelectronics-photonics engineering from the University of Arkansas in 2003. He subsequently took his research commercial, building a tech company that developed state-of-the-art power electronics solutions for military and defense programs, spacecraft, satellites, renewable energy, and electric vehicles. Dr. Lostetter has been awarded over two dozen patents, is the author of more than one hundred engineering publications, and has been the recipient of three international R&D 100 Awards for top technology breakthroughs. He currently lives in Arkansas with his wife, Marina, where the two love strategy games, arguing Kirk vs. Picard, and spending their time engaging in all things geeky.

Their story, “Tap, Tap, Tapping in the Deep”, appears in the Weird World War III anthology.


Tell me about yourself. Where are you from? What’s your background?


Xander: I’m from a tiny blue-green rock orbiting your average yellow dwarf star at a distance of approximately 8 1/2 light minutes. On that tiny rock, I live in Fayetteville Arkansas in the United States. I have a doctorate degree in microelectronics engineering, but can often be found secretly building Legos by moonlight.

Marina: I live with that weirdo. I write sci-fi and fantasy full time.


What authors have had the greatest influence on your writing? Why?


Xander: Terry Pratchett, because well, he’s pure genius. Philip K. Dick for his mind blowing philosophy. Stephen King is the ultimate in the study of character psychology. And Tim O’Brien has the uncanny ability to get to the core of very dark but real human experiences.

Marina: Tolkien made me fall in love with SFF, Tanith Lee and Madeleine L’Engle made me want to become a writer, and Dan Simmons made me fall in love with space-opera–the formatting of his novel, Hyperion, had a huge influence on my own space-opera series, Noumenon.


Besides yourself, which other contemporary authors would you recommend?


Xander: Stephen Baxter’s Manifold series and the Hyperion series by Dan Simmons are two of my all-time favorites, since I love well written hard science fiction. I like Max Brooks for his zombie work, especially World War Z. Katherine Applegate’s The One and Only Ivan and Siobhan Dowd’s / Patrick Ness’ A Monster Calls are both amazing works on the nature of humanity.

Marina: Nicky Drayden writes great genre-mashups, like The Prey of Gods; JY Yang writes brilliant fantasy, such as the Tensorate series; Megan O’Keefe performs incredibly skilled unreliable narrator work in Velocity Weapon; and Max Gladstone and Amal El-Mohtar have done fascinating epistolary work in This is How You Lose the Time War


What kinds of stories do you write? Why?


Xander: I am always fascinated with science fiction and fantasy, because it allows you to push the boundaries of “what if” beyond any limits of the imagination. To me, these are the ultimate playgrounds for creative exploration.

Marina: I tend to write stories about re-establishing understanding. That might mean a sci-fi story where the characters think an alien megastructure is meant to do one thing, but instead it does something completely unexpected. Or a fantasy story where magic seems to play by one set of rules, but the character’s conception of their world is all wrong. I try to tell stories with layers, where the over-arching conflict, personal conflict, and inner conflict are all intimately entangled.


What’s your favorite book? Why?


Xander: The Hobbit, because at the age of 10 it introduced me to the amazing world of fantasy literature. Star Trek, though not one book, is also a sentimental favorite. At that same early age of 10, it was the inspiration that filled me with the passion to pursue the path of becoming an engineer and loving all things “space”. When I was young, and the original TV show was in reruns, I gobbled up Star Trek books as fast as they could publish them.

Marina: Hyperion gets a hattrick here. I also love Vellum by Hal Duncan because of how masterfully complex it is; Vicious by V.E. Schwab is super-anti-hero melodrama at its finest; and Wolf Tower by Tanith Lee is my go-to comfort read.


Story’s Soundtrack

Each of the stories in this volume evoked certain themes and emotions that can sometimes be approximated with music. The below video is the editor’s best interpretation of the feelings and themes that this author’s story evoked. Please note that this is only the editor’s interpretation. The author did not know this portion of the blog post existed until the editor published it.


Order Weird World War III Now


2020-10-06T00:00:00

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