T. C. McCarthy

T. C. McCarthy is an award-winning and critically acclaimed southern author whose short fiction has appeared in Per Contra: The International Journal of the Arts, Literature and IdeasStory Quarterly and Nature. Baen Books released his latest novel, Tyger Burning, in July 2019. His earlier debut military science fiction trilogy (GermlineExogene and Chimera) was released in 2012 and is available worldwide. In addition to being an author, T. C. is a PhD scientist, a Fulbright Fellow, and a Howard Hughes Biomedical Research Scholar.

His story, “Zip Ghost”, appears in the Weird World War III anthology.


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


Originally I’m from Leesburg, Virginia, and I’m a scientist who would rather work full time as a writer. All I want is an unlimited amount of money, absolute power over my own destination, and complete and total creative freedom; that should be easy to obtain, shouldn’t it? In all seriousness, I think that the most fortunate people in the world are those that have the luck or the means to do exactly what they love for a career.


What kinds of stories do you write? Why?


I write stories that have literary merit – that at least try to push the boundary of language just a tiny bit. I do it to show that I can. I see a lot of Tor and Orbit authors claiming the mantle of writing “literary SF” but they don’t; they think that by having the most gay characters in a book, or by having alien races that have no gender is edgy or weird – and therefore literary. But it isn’t. Literary is about bending language almost to the point where it breaks but doesn’t; it works.


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


Two authors: Michael Herr and Guy Sajer/Guy Mouminoux. Michael Herr’s dispatches was the first book to electrify me because of the way it used language to describe war. Herr was an embed in multiple units during the Vietnam War and he brought almost a sense of beatnik descriptive powers that made the war leap from pages of his book, Dispatches. I like Guy Sajer for kind of the same reason, but less so for language. Sajer recounts his experience of trying to survive in one of the most horrific situations one could find himself in: fighting for the Germans on the Eastern Front of WWII. Sajer takes a matter of fact approach that’s like a constant string of gut punches.


Tell me about a time you almost died.


I almost died of thirst in Death Valley; there’s a reason they call it that, in case you didn’t know. I was an undergraduate geologist doing field work and we decided to take a look at the “Race Track” – a dried lake bed where the boulders move on their own and leave tracks. It’s 30 miles off road, in the middle of nowhere. We were in rental sedans and decided to take an off road trail that went over the nearest mountain range, which was fine until we got stuck and realized that the road had washed out and that we couldn’t get back the way we came; on one side was a cliff, on the other was a mountain and one of the professors started crying because they both were convinced we were dead. It was a hundred and fifteen degrees and there was no shade anywhere. As the youngest one in the party, I grabbed the shovel and rebuilt the washed out sections of the road so we eventually got to civilization, which only took us fifteen hours. I was majorly dehydrated.


If you could live in any time period, when would it be? Why?


The 1990s. If I had my way it would be the 1990s all the time. The music was amazing, cell phones weren’t a big thing so you had to interact with people face to face instead of texting, and I was in my 20s. Now that I’m over 50 everything hurts and the world is on fire. 


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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Brian Trent

Brian Trent’s work regularly appears in AnalogFantasy & Science FictionThe Year’s Best Military and Adventure SFOrson Scott Card’s InterGalactic Medicine Show, Terraform, Daily Science Fiction, Apex, Pseudopod, Escape Pod, Galaxy’s EdgeNature, and numerous year’s-best anthologies. The author of the recently published sci-fi novel Ten Thousand Thunders and the dark fantasy series Rahotep, Trent is a winner of the 2019 Year’s Best Military and Adventure SF Readers’ Choice Award from Baen Books and Writers of the Future. He lives in New England. His website is http://www.briantrent.com.

His story, “Shadow Rook Red”, appears in the Weird World War III anthology.


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


I’m a speculative fiction writer from New England, and my work appears regularly in Analog, Fantasy & Science Fiction, The Year’s Best Military and Adventure SF (my story “Crash-Site” won the 2019 Readers Choice Award), Nature, Daily Science Fiction, and more. I grew up with a deep love for sci-fi, fantasy and horror, gleefully immersing myself in the classics and writing my own stories from a very young age. I’m also an obsessive reader of nonfiction. My brand of sci-fi tends to combine technology, history, and society… how they interact, and how they might interact. I consider short stories as laboratories to explore a host of subjects from a future perspective: addiction, war, evolution, threat, sacrifice… all the ingredients that go into the human drama.


If you could live in any time period, when would it be? Why?


It would likely be Alexandria, Egypt during the early Ptolemaic Dynasties. I’m enamored of Hellenism and the scientific and artistic inquiry associated with it. I’d hang out in the scented halls of the Great Library, enjoying access to that repository of knowledge and speculation; in those days, ships visiting port would be searched for books and those books would be copied, so the Library would always be expanding its contents (beyond the new works being written by local scholars). There was also active research going on, and lectures to attend, and warm weather, and a diverse city representing a crossroads of civilization. Yeah, count me in.


If you could live anywhere in the world, where would it be?


Two places tie for this: Italy and Japan. I’ve been to both and find them equally enchanting. Italy is an exquisite array of contrasting regions: Rome, Venice, Florence, Tuscany, Assisi and other locales have the qualities of independent city-states, complete with rich layers of history. The food and wine are reasons enough to go, along with their general celebration of appreciating the moment. Japan also has an extensive history, fascinating culture, and a rather unique duality that I like: Akihabara and Tokyo and Shinjuku seem to exist some 20 years in the future, while Nikko and Kyoto and Hakone preserve an older and rural quality: mist-wreathed village, ancient shrines, and simple elegance. I enjoy that contrast… cyberpunk with a healthy mix of shinrin-yoku. 


What kinds of stories do you write? Why?


My writing preference is sci-fi over fantasy—I like the rational structures of the genre, the extrapolation from current state and fact. My story in Weird World War III is a good example of this preference: postulating how the Cold War of the ‘80s heats up when a new technology is introduced, and how it impacts geopolitical, cultural, strategic and tactical realties. I’m also a fan of worldbuilding, and the research and imaginative exercises that go along with that. A lot (but not nearly all) of my stories take place in the same far-future universe, too—it’s nice to have a sandbox that can yield different tales. Sometimes an oblique reference or seemingly throwaway line will generate its own spin-off. I enjoy the opportunities the genre affords me.


Which of your short stories is your favorite? Why?


I have to list two for different reasons. “The Memorybox Vultures” in F&SF (September/October 2018) is set in the near-future, when people continue to post on social media after their deaths… becoming post-mortem “quasints” based on their online posts made while alive. I like it because it seems inevitable, considering today’s ability of tagging people and scheduling future posts. Our infomorphic identities are already out there, after all.

My other favorite is “An Incident on Ishtar” in Analog (March/April 2018). It’s set on a Venusian aerostat colony in the far future, and on one hand is about a dangerous conspiracy… but fundamentally it’s about how far someone is willing to go for what’s important to them.


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

  days

  hours  minutes  seconds

until

Weird World War III Release Date

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