
Arley Sorg
Assistant Editor at Locus Magazine
Co-Editor-in-Chief at Fantasy Magazine
assoc agent, kt literary; co-Editor-in-Chief @fantasymagazine Senior Editor @locusmag Do stuff @LightspeedMag @fandsf @clarkesworld 2014 @OdysseyWorkshop He/Him
Articles
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1 month ago |
clarkesworldmagazine.com | Arley Sorg
Skip to content Interview Jane Espenson grew up in Ames, Iowa. At roughly thirteen-years-old she read an article about how M*A*S*H producers read submitted scripts—it was a description of the normal process of hiring writers, but it was, at the time, something she hadn’t heard about.
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1 month ago |
clarkesworldmagazine.com | Arley Sorg
Interview David Barr Kirtley was born in Philadelphia but his earliest memories are of Katonah, in northern Westchester, where he lived through high school. On his site, his parents are described as “two PhD scientists fond of books, the outdoors, travel, current events, and classical music” and he says that at a young age they read him things like “the novels of Robert Heinlein, Madeleine L’Engle, William Sleator, and J.R.R. Tolkien . . .
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2 months ago |
clarkesworldmagazine.com | Arley Sorg
Interview Natalia Theodoridou was born and grew up in northern Greece. He graduated with a BA in Theatre from the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, then moved to the UK to earn his MRes in Drama (Asian ritual theatre) at Royal Holloway University of London. As a Fulbright recipient he did an MA in Religion at the University of Chicago.
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2 months ago |
clarkesworldmagazine.com | Arley Sorg
Skip to content Interview Ai Jiang was born in Fujian, China, and moved to Canada with her family at age four. As a child, she briefly lived in Chinatown in downtown Toronto, then moved to Scarborough, Ontario. She later returned to Toronto to earn a BA in English Literature at the University of Toronto St. George; she also earned a Creative Writing Certificate from Humber School for Writers.
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Mar 27, 2025 |
lightspeedmagazine.com | Wendy Wagner |Arley Sorg
Amplitudes:Stories of Queer and Trans FuturityEdited by Lee MandeloPaperbackISBN: 978-1645660866Erewhon, May 2025, 384 pgsSome readers may know Lee Mandelo from his recently lauded books Summer Sons (Tordotcom, September 2021), Feed Them Silence (Tordotcom, March 2023), and The Woods All Black (Tordotcom, March 2024). If you’ve had your eye on speculative magazines for a little while, you will have caught his short fiction in Apex, Uncanny, our own Nightmare, and other notable venues.
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this was a really enjoyable session! some great questions, and working with the @InkedVoices folks has been lovely! still have classes, sessions, and appearances coming up soon - Cascade, Gen Con Writers Symposium, and more! https://t.co/8KkjnrqO4Y

Timing is Everything! Come hang out and let's talk about information in story! : ) https://t.co/n003ajkT1m https://t.co/d0DfuO1OKp

RT @prideukorg: 👏👏👏 https://t.co/p1KqkSt6hn

many articles & resources document the impact of bias in the US - incl efforts in SFF, like the BlackSpecFic report - https://t.co/tlaJodqBVq it's more convenient for some to pretend biases don't exist, to benefit from bias, AND complain about DEI, than to try to eliminate bias.

DEI & predecessors (Affirmative Action; EEOC) were responses to racial bias Racial bias & discrimination has always been a huge problem in the US - this hasn't magically vanished Removing DEI is not a return to "merit"; it is unfettering the practice of preferencing whiteness