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Magic vs. Reality: The Totally Logical Guide to Magic Systems

  • Posted by Augur Blog
  • On June 7, 2019
By Jorie Rao I love the idea of magic so much that every time I pass by an odd looking tree or old piece of furniture, I touch it just in case it is a portal to another realm or a magical artifact that will endow me with powers. Hey, you never know, right? Growing […]
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Gods and Disorders in Akwaeke Emezi’s Freshwater

  • Posted by Augur Blog
  • On June 5, 2019
By Anna Bendiy Ada, the protagonist in Akwaeke Emezi’s debut novel, Freshwater, is born “with one foot on the other side.”  And as the hypnotic chorus of “We” comes to tell us, this means she will go mad. What follows is an intense and brutal journey of a woman who struggles to find her footing […]
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Relatable Heroes: Minority Representation in Genre Fiction

  • Posted by Augur Blog
  • On May 29, 2019
By Radhika Tyagi Of the thirty-nine books I read in 2018, eight were written by people of color, eleven were written by women, fourteen featured female protagonists, and fifteen featured minority protagonists (that’s almost forty percent!). While I actively seek out books written by and about women and minorities, the growing availability of these books […]
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This Little Everything: Trauma’s Persistent Presence in Natalia Hero’s Hum

  • Posted by Augur Blog
  • On May 24, 2019
Reviewed by Kate Finegan The hummingbird in Natalia Hero’s debut novel, Hum, is persistent, inescapable, an ever-present reminder of what the narrator has endured, even when she doubts her own experience. In reliving that night, trying to remember if she said “No” or only meant to, her thoughts are cut short. She “can’t stay with […]
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Beautiful and Challenging Work: A Conversation on Speculative Poetry, Part 3

  • Posted by Augur Blog
  • On May 22, 2019
By Terese Mason Pierre This is the final part of Augur’s blog series on speculative poetry. I wanted to talk to the poetry editors of speculative lit magazines about their thoughts on this kind of work. First, we discussed what made a poem speculative. Then, we spoke about the kinds of speculative poetry we liked […]
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Larissa Lai’s “Rachel” and Cyborg Identity

  • Posted by Augur Blog
  • On May 17, 2019
By Ben Berman Ghan Larissa Lai’s short story “Rachel”  is a brilliant blended retelling of both Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep (1968) and Ridley Scott’s film adaptation Blade Runner (1982). It operates as a sort of mutated replicant text of its source material, becoming what post-humanist Donna Haraway, whom Lai quotes […]
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Witchcraft and Matrix Glitches: A Conversation on Speculative Poetry, Part 2

  • Posted by Augur Blog
  • On May 15, 2019
By Terese Mason Pierre In Part 1 of this series, the poetry editors of Strange Horizons (Romie Stott), FIYAH (Brandon O’Brien) and I talked about what we thought made poems speculative. The conversation shed light on our personal and professional experiences with this amazing kind of literature. Here, we’ll move into what we value about […]
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Providing a Gateway: A Conversation on Speculative Poetry, Part 1

  • Posted by Augur Blog
  • On May 10, 2019
By Terese Mason Pierre What is speculative poetry, anyway? As Augur’s poetry editor, this question comes up a lot. I reached out to my fellow speculative poetry editors—Romie Stott of Strange Horizons and Brandon O’Brien of FIYAH—for their experiences and opinions on the form of literature we edit and love. I wanted to interview them […]
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The Machine of the Devil

  • Posted by Augur Blog
  • On May 3, 2019
By Maria Haskins Jacob is searching for the word he lost: for the sound of it, the feel of syllables and consonants and vowels in his mouth, for the noise and tremble it made in his throat and inner ear as he spoke it long ago. The sparrow is watching him. It’s perched on the […]
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Write For Us!

  • Posted by Augur Blog
  • On April 12, 2019
Augur Magazine is expanding our list of bloggers!  We are looking for versatile and engaging writers who would be interested in contributing 500-700 word nonfiction for our blog. If you like what Augur publishes—that is, dreamy realism, fabulism, slipstream and speculative fiction with a focus on intersectionality—you’re already a great fit. The kind of blog […]
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