
K.G. Anderson (she/they) is a speculative fiction author and anthology editor. She writes fantasy, space opera, alternate history, mystery, and near-future political fiction (ranging from humorous to dystopian). Many of her stories reflect her work in tech, Eastern European heritage, and time spent living in coastal cities from Genoa to Seattle—as well as activism on behalf of women, elders, and universal healthcare. She attended the Columbia Journalism School and the Taos Toolbox, Viable Paradise, and Cascade Writers workshops. She is a member of SFWA, Broad Universe, and the National Book Critics Circle. A former Clarion West board member, she currently helps organize the Two Hour Transport online readings series.
Check out her upcoming and recent appearances and readings. This page lists her publications and narrations, including stories available free online as text or audio.
• Patti 209: Fifteen Tales of the Very Near Future
The 15 short stories in the new collection by K.G. Anderson tackle the classic science fiction query: “What if this goes on?” Her answers span magic realism, humor, science fiction, horror, and fantasy. Each story is firmly rooted in the familiar present and moves seamlessly into a very near political future—chilling in most cases, but darkly humorous in others. Stories include:
- “A Sign of the Times”—A Seattle protestor is tried under the new Corporate Personhood laws
- “Wishbone”—An elderly woman faces euthanasia under the Age Equity Act designed by her politician grandson
- “The Bodies We Carry”—A young widow bankrupted by medical bills joins a “death camp” protest in front of the mansion of an old college friend who is now a healthcare CEO
- “Unwanted Visitors”—Seattle is declared a “terrorist zone” and the new Federal Security Agency comes calling
- “Yoga for Protesters: A Field Guide”—Advice for combining political fury with physical fitness
- “The Right Man for the Job”—Summoned by desperate Democrats, the ghost of Lyndon B. Johnson returns to haunt the Trump White House
- “Unnoticed”—The teenage daughter of worried immigrant parents demands her native identity
“K.G. Anderson is unmatched in her ability to present life in the context of the political background. The politics are there, but the story comes first.” —Bob Brown, B Cubed Press
“Karen Anderson’s story collection offers compelling narratives centered around current political issues. She skillfully writes about controversial themes with well-developed characters, making unsettling predictions about our future.” — Karen Herbert, The Internet’s Best Karen
Links to purchase ebooks and print editions on Amazon, Apple Books, Bookshop.org and more.
• The Alternative Liberties anthology
Alternative Liberties, edited by K.G. Anderson, Lou Berger, Debora Godfrey, Phyllis Irene Radford, Cliff Winnig, and B Cubed Press founder Bob Brown, gathers together some of the finest minds in speculative fiction to address the implications of politics in 2025 and beyond. Stories, poems, and essays by Louise Marley, Harry Turtledove, Jim Wright, David Gerrold, Adam-Troy Castro, and many more address the questions “What if this keeps on?” and “What can we do about it?” More about the book.
• The Southern Truths anthology
Southern Truths, edited by K.G. Anderson and Bob Brown (B Cubed Press), looks at Southern politics through the lens of speculative fiction, essays, and poems. In Jim Wright’s essay “Antipodes,” a North Florida bicycle trip reveals the sociology of MAGA politics. David Gerrold’s “The Trouble with Dribbles” and Adam-Troy Castro’s “Mascot” are science fiction stories of a near-future South—one hilarious, one bone-chilling. Stories by Cliff Winnig, Larry Hodges, Allan Dyen-Shapiro, and many more.
• “Zorg’s Reviews: The End of the Earth (Two Stars)”
Excellent cinematography. Weak plot. Keep adding carbon dioxide to the atmosphere and…
The Book of 42², edited by B.A. Mullin, offers 1,764 short stories edited by a staff of 42. Titles are approximately 42 characters, and the biographies are 42 words long. Find out the thinking behind the book here. You’ll find K.G.’s story “Zorg’s Reviews: The End of the Earth (Two Stars)” in the Apocalyptic section which, while it is about endings, is at the beginning of the book.
K.G. chats with B.A. Mullin about the book, and writing in general, in this YouTube video.
Read “Zorg’s Reviews” in The Book of 42² , along with 1,273 other charming stories—including one by Jane Yolen.
• “Seeing Someone Else”
Blinking back tears, Crystal May tugged her card from the café’s reader and fumbled it into her wallet. She picked up her drink and stumbled to a table in the far corner, Jason Stillman’s words playing in her head, over and over: Seeing someone else. Seeing someone else.
Jason had just dumped her—by text. She sank into a cold metal chair and stared at the tabletop. Could it get any worse?
Yes! Because Crystal uses a co-worker’s beta-version app to erase her feckless ex-boyfriend from all her photos and videos and replace him with a generic avatar. (At the time it was written, this story seemed far-fetched. Now…it verges on the disturbing plausible.)
Read “Seeing Someone Else” in Dragon Gems Summer 2024. The anthology, from Water Dragon Publishing, has stories by writers including Melinda Brasher, Jacob Heijndermans, Keira Reynolds, Bruce Golden, William Shaw, and Camden Rose. A number of the stories involve cats.
• “The Light of Two Moons”
His plans for escape had faded long ago. His dreams of home, the Shar resistance, his beloved Majsi’s laughter, had given way to nightmares from which he awoke, shivering, in the cold desert air.
Read “The Light of Two Moons” in Two Hour Transport 2 (2024), edited by NIB, Ramona Ridgewell, and Keyan Bowes. The book includes short fiction by Karen Joy Fowler, Nisi Shawl, Eileen Gunn, Evan J. Peterson, Elly Bangs, Andy Dudak, Cliff Winnig, Patrick Hurley, and others. “The Light of Two Moons” appeared originally in Ares Magazine online.
• “A Meeting in the Cemetery in Łódź”
(Nonfiction) In 1985, an artist I was visiting in the Polish city of Łódź took me to what had once been the largest and grandest Jewish cemetery in Europe. While exploring the hauntingly overgrown walled cemetery, I encountered a group of Holocaust survivors: three local men—and a woman from Beverly Hills.
You can read “A Meeting in the Cemetery in Łódź” and more than a dozen other articles on the Holocaust theme in Journey Planet #81: The Holocaust, edited by James Bacon, Christopher J. Garcia, and Steven H. Silver. Free download.
• “The Second Term”
Cautious party leaders are standing in the way of history. But the United States is going to have a woman as president—and much sooner than anyone suspects.
Read “The Second Term” in Madam President, edited by Debora Godfrey (B Cubed Press). What can happen when women take the wheel—in outer space, in the White House, and at the local homeowners’ association. Stories by David Gerrold, Patrick Swenson, Edd Vick and Manny Frishberg, Soumya Sundar Mukherjee, Liam Hogan, Janka Hobbs, and more.
• “The Audition”
She strode to my desk, gave me a nod, threw back her head, and opened her red lips. The sound that emerged was an odd mixture of owl, wolf, and 1960s folksinger.
Tabitha McBain aces her audition at the Hollywood casting agency, but her dark magic has only just begun.
Read “The Audition” in 99 Fleeting Fantasies edited by Jennifer Brozek (Pulse Publishing). Featuring stories from the wild imaginations of Cat Rambo, Charles Stross, Seanan McGuire, Wole Talabi, Rosemary Claire Smith, Dawn Vogel, Raven Oak, Elizabeth Walker, Clay Vermulm, Liam Hogen, M.E. Garber, Amanda Cherry, and more.
• “The Solstice Guest”
Angry gusts and fitful rain worried the manor house eaves and rattled the panes of the upstairs windows. On the second floor, Tick Wiltshire moved through the rooms of her ancestral home, checking the window locks and letting curtains fall to shut out the dark December night.
On the eve of the winter Solstice, a young witch prepares to summon her lover back from the dead. But she’s not prepared for what her spell brings back with him.
Read “The Solstice Guest” in Literally Dead: Tales of Holiday Hauntings from Alienhead Press. Edited by Gaby Triana and John Palisano, with stories by Ramsey Campbell, V. Castro, Lisa Morton, Stephanie Wytovich, Jonathan Janz, Hailey Piper, Clay McLeod Chapman, Chet Williamson, and more.
• “The Call from Delia Shea”
A retired political activist reduced to housesitting for the wealthy, Kate has resigned herself to the indignities and invisibility of old age. But when a friend from her past calls for help, invisibility becomes Kate’s secret super power. No one would ever suspect the quiet housesitter of…murder.
Read online: “The Call from Delia Shea,” at The Last Girls Club.
• “Isadora’s Trunk”
“Turning to piracy, are we, Captain?” Huw Jones, slight but wiry, frowned at the old-fashioned slat trunk that took up the better part of my cabin. “That trunk looks like it should be filled with gold doubloons.”
1937. Southhampton, England. Leland Clayburn, captain of the freighter Atlantis Quest, has received a trunk from a woman who was, decades earlier in New York, his fiancee. It comes with a tag marked “DO NOT OPEN. EVER!” and the request that he throw it overboard as the ship passes Gibraltar. But Captain Clayborn is curious. And the lock is quite flimsy…
Read “Isadora’s Trunk” in From the Depths from Wyldblood Press. Edited by Mark Bilborough, with stories by Michelle Tang, Chloe Smith, Hesper Leveret, and more. Available in ebook or paperback.
• “My Aunts and the Cornwall Horror”
Lovecraft, the author’s name was. Howie Lovecraft. Never heard of the man, but my aunt assured me he’d be the talk of the London literary scene in no time.
Clueless bon vivant Artie Whitsmer has breezily promised his aunt that he’ll interview H.P. Lovecraft for her ladies’ magazine. Now he and his valet, Leeds, are motoring across the moors of Southwest England, trying to find the American author—before strange and horrible creatures get to him.
Read “My Aunts and the Cornwall Horror” in LOLcraft: A Compendium of Eldritch Humor from Dragon’s Roost Press. With stories by Liam Hogan, Dawn Vogel, Lena Ng, J.D. Harlock, Stewart C Baker, and more. Available in ebook or paperback.
• “A Call from Beyond”
The boy who appeared at the end of the evening quickened Gina Mondauf’s broken heart. He’d thrown together a Halloween costume from a man’s threadbare raincoat and a battered brown fedora. He looked to be about 13—her brother Ethan’s age.
In the quaint New England town of Whitcomb, it’s believed the dead return to visit the living on Halloween. So Gina Mondauf waits anxiously for her brother, her father, and her mother, who died the previous winter. There’s something she needs to tell them.
Read “A Call from Beyond” in Holiday Leftovers from B Cubed Press. With stories and essays by Jim Wright, Tim Kane, Megan Miller, Gerri Leen, Debora Godfrey, Phyllis Irene Radford, David Sklar, Benjamin C. Kinney, Alicia Hilton, and others. Available in ebook or paperback.
• “Leeli’s Choice”
“Do you realize that if you were to get an abortion—which you will not do—just the fact that you and I even talked about it could put both of us in prison?”
Leeli’s a high school senior, pregnant after a friend of a friend drove her home from a party and they had sex in the back of his car. Her mom, who wrote their state’s extreme anti-abortion statutes, is running for governor.
“Choice isn’t about what someone else dictates. Choice is what is meaningful to you, in your life, and that’s what Leeli’s Choice is about.” — Amazon Review.
Read “Leeli’s Choice” in Post Roe Alternatives: Fighting Back from B Cubed Press. With stories, essays, and poems by Jim Wright, Adam-Troy Castro, Jane Yolen, Rebecca McFarland Kyle, Larry Hodges, Liam Hogan, Stephanie L. Weippert, Marlene Barr, Dasola Tewogbade, and more. Available in ebook or paperback.
• “Pieced Together”
Galen’s heart melted at the sight of the tables heaped with Khantian tiles, glass, and ceramic, in the bright blues and greens and coppers of home. She hadn’t seen such beauty since her mother’s workshop. It all rushed back to her; the smell of the glues, the soft clicks and clinks of the tesserae. The snaps of the blades as they cut the mosaic pieces.
Read “Pieced Together” in The Art of Being Human from Fablecroft Press. Edited by Tehani Croft with Stephanie Lai, with stories and poems by Joyce Chng, Aiki Flinthart, Ephiny Gale, Gerri Leen, Spencer Nitkey, Angela Slatter, and others.
• “Yoga for Protestors”
Pose to Protest Inequality: Place your mats on treacherous, uneven ground. Balance on one foot (Tree pose, or, if you are adventurous, Warrior III). Struggle to keep your hips level. Remain on one foot until the imbalance causes you to crash to the ground. Perform this pose in groups, mats close together—note that when one person falls, others are taken down with them.
Read “Yoga for Protestors: A Field Guide” in The Protest Diaries from B Cubed Press. Edited by Vanessa Cozza, with stories and poems by Susan Murrie Macdonald, Liam Hogan, Irene Radford, Rebecca McFarland Kyle, Philip Brian Hall, Mike Adamson, Jane Yolen, and others.
• “A Sign of the Times”
Kate Morales’ office wasn’t much to look at. The dark furniture and leather chairs were new, but you could see peeling paint and hear the old radiators wheezing to keep the place warm on a rainy afternoon. They’d said she was good with my kind of case. And that I could, possibly, afford her.
Joe Henry is caught red-handed, holding a protest sign that violates the new Corporate Hate Crimes statutes. He’s made history, and it may cost him everything.
Read online: “A Sign of the Times. In Quaranzine, a publication of Third State Art.
• “Delicious”
While they cooked on the old black stove in Marissa’s pine-paneled kitchen, the man talked about the distant places where the spices were grown. Places he’d seen in his travels.
A strange man comes to town and wins a woman’s heart, transforming her kitchen with exotic spices and culinary talents that just might be magic. Yet she can’t help but worry about his intentions…and the locked suitcase he keeps in their closet.
“a magical tale of the power of love as an ingredient in preparing meals. Meals that become simply… delicious.” — review on Amazon.com

Read an updated version of “Delicious” in the anthology Grandpa’s Deep-Space Diner (JayHenge Publishing). Edited by Jennifer Augustsson with stories by Laurence Brothers, Mike Adamson, Holly Schofield, Dawn Vogel, Liam Hogan, Wendy Nikel, Jennifer Lee Rossman, and others.
Read “Delicious” (original version) in the anthology Triangulation: Appetites (Parsec Ink). Edited by Frank Oreto and Douglas Gwilym. Stories by Holly Schofield, Jack Lothian, and others.
• “Late Bloomers”
While the elderly vertaines chatted over hors d’oeuvres in Master Rem Kardamian’s elegant living room, I stood upright by the door, my face a mask of attention and respect.
Set in a mythical Russian Far East, “Late Bloomers” is a tale of art and romance deferred—and rediscovered.
Read “Late Bloomers” in Runs Like Clockwork, edited by Mark Bilsborough (Wyldblood Press, UK). With stories by Jennifer Lee Rossman, Dawn Vogel, Holly Schofield, Wendy Nikel, Liam Hogan, and more.
• “The Bodies We Carry”
My husband stopped breathing just after midnight. Kaylee and I sat by the bed for several minutes choking on our sighs and sobs. The wind that had rattled the windows of the house during our vigil had died as well. We were left floating in a pool of silence. My daughter spoke. “Go ahead, Mom. You promised. You promised Dad.”
Read “The Bodies We Carry” in Alternative Deathiness, edited by Phyllis Irene Radford and Bob Brown (B Cubed Press). With stories by Jim Wright, James Van Pelt, Frances Rowat, Paula Hammond, Larry Hodges, and more.
• “Miss Hackenberry Brews Tea”
“That man renting the Caldwells’ farmhouse doesn’t seem right to me, Mildred.” Sally Parsons tugged her bulky hand-knit sweater closer around her bony shoulders. “They said to watch out for anything unusual, you know.”
Spies? Aliens? In their tiny village? Mildred Hackenberry knows exactly what’s going on—and what she’s going to do about it.
Read “Miss Hackenberry Brews Tea” in 99 Tiny Terrors, edited by Jennifer Brozek (Pulse Publishing). Featuring chilling stories from the devious minds of Seanan McGuire, Rosemary Claire Smith, Ruthanna Emrys, Bev Vincent, Meg Elison, Bradley H. Sinor, Wendy N. Wagner, Premee Mohamed, Scott Edelman, Cat Rambo, Tim Waggoner, and more.
• “Louie’s Turn”
“Go on, dude.” Carmen Caldoforno tugged a black knit cap over his greasy curls and peered out of the alley. “This one looks loaded. Go on, man. You wanted to try it.”
Pizzaiolos Louie and Carmen have been moonlighting as muggers with a highly unusual modus operandi—one that has thus far baffled the cops. Louie’s the driver, Carmen grabs the cash. But tonight it’s Louie’s turn to take Aunt Philomena’s handgun and conduct the holdup. What could possibly go wrong?
Read “Louie’s Turn” in Crimeucopia: As In Funny Ha-Ha, Or Just Peculiar from Murderous Ink Press (UK). With stories by Jesse Hilson, Gabriel Stevenson, Maddi Davidson, Brandon Barrows, Robb T. White, Regina Clarke, Martin Zeigler, Andrew Hook, John M. Floyd, and more.
• “Captain Carthy’s Bride”
The mid-day sun seared the rocky shore. Seaweed baked, periwinkles shriveled in their shells, and the acrid smells of life and death rose and fell on the sighing waves. At the sound of a truck stopping on the road above the beach, Sheila O’Farrell lay back quickly on the narrow spit of sand and closed her eyes.
Sheila O’Farrell poses as a selkie so she can be “captured” by a dashing sea captain—thus escaping a life of drudgery in a small coastal town. Then the dark side of her deception comes back to haunt her.
Listen to K.G. read “Captain Carthy’s Bride” on Story Hour (May 15, 2024).
Listen to “Captain Carthy’s Bride” read by Rebecca Stern on Episode 147 of The Overcast.
Read “Captain Carthy’s Bride” in the Third Flatiron anthology Terra! Tara! Terror!, edited by Juliana Rew. With stories by Marie Vibbert, Steven Mathes, Wulf Moon, SFWA Grand Master Robert Silverberg, and others.
“a pleasing and easy-to-read story that concealed its ending twist well.” — review at Tangent
“a lovely dark twist on a selkie story.” — review in Mad Scientist Journal
• “The Hum of the Wheel, the Clack of the Loom”
She was a fairy—tiny and frail and beautiful with her iridescent wings folded modestly against her shoulder blades. I loved her. I believed her when she said she loved me.
A herdsman in love with a beautiful fairy is raising the magical creatures whose wool she weaves into cloth. But his loyalties are torn when she sets out to rid their town of evil and the wide net she casts captures his childhood friend.
Read “The Hum of the Wheel, the Clack of the Loom” in Space and Time (Volume 140). With stories by Mariah Montoya, Louis B. Rosenberg, Maxwell I. Gold, Flavio Troisi, Nick Marone, Grace Chan (fiction), Alina Maciuc, and others. Edited by Angela Yuriko Smith.
• “Patience”

Trapped for twenty years in the colony, Jac Wuo had grown to loathe Henge. All of it: the wind-scoured planet, his squabbling fellow colonists, and—especially—the silent, towering boulders that proved so impervious to their research. No one in the station would be surprised when they woke in a few hours to find Jac’s terse suicide note on their battered datapads.
The original version of “Patience” appears in the anthology Reading 5 x 5 , edited by B. Morris Allen, with stories by Caleb Warner, L. Chan, Vanessa Fogg, Beth Goder, Karl Dandenell, and others. The anthology asks the question “What if 5 different authors each wrote the same story?”
“Patience” is K.G. Anderson’s version of this “seed” story: Researchers are left on a remote planet to study the phenomenon of apparently sentient rocks. Their research founders for more than a decade and anger simmers as they await the return of the expedition’s flamboyant—and disturbingly evasive—leader.
You can also read “Patience” in Allegory Magazine (Volume 37/64, Spring/Summer 2020). Includes fiction by Steve DuBoi, J.L. Royce, Daniel Olivieri, Mike Lyddon, P.R. O’Leary, Joshua Storrs, E.A. Petricone, Joseph Carrabis, Barry Charman, David M. Donachie, and Gina Easton.
• “Heroes of the Bridge”

“‘Well, I’m all for tearing it down.” The speaker was a busty young woman in a leopard-print trench coat. “There’s absolutely no question that it glorifies oppressive dictatorship.”
The friendship of two iconic artworks in Seattle’s Fremont arts district is threatened when one, a bronze statue of Vladimir Lenin, is deemed politically offensive and is slated for removal. The other statue, a concrete troll, urges Lenin to redeem himself by stopping a troubled man’s suicide attempt.
Read “Heroes of the Bridge” online at The Colored Lens. It’s appeared in the ebook The Colored Lens: Winter 2020. With stories by Jamie Lackey, Michael J. Wyant, Jr., Nick Wisseman, Karter Mycroft, Janna Layton, Stephen Taylor, Douglas J. Eboch and Matt Ingoldby.
• “Invasion 101”

Martian Space Force Commander (Ret.) Ekkeron has fond memories of his cadet days, especially the field exercises in the Terran desert. But when the asteroid miner agrees to take on a last-minute substitute teaching gig for the Martian Academy and the schedule includes Invasion 101, he discovers that things have changed considerably.
Read “Invasion 101” in Space Opera Libretti, edited by Brian McNett and Jennifer Lee Rossman. With stories by stories by James Dorr, Harry Turtledove, Bruce Taylor, Larry Hodges, Dawn Vogel, and others. Available in paperback and ebook editions (2019).
“The stories play with time travel, starship cadet invasion classes, very different aliens, and much more. It provides a lovely mental vacation from the mundane issues of the day.” — Amazon review
• “Where the Train Goes”

Jamie hears trains at night in a dying town that has no tracks. An eccentric teacher tells him where he can find the trains, but warns him: sometimes the train stops and a man invites you to get on…
“A fine little fantasy. Beautifully told.” — review in SFRevue.
“The prose was engaging, and the story’s mystery kept it interesting.” — review in Tangent Online.
“Where the Train Goes” is in the Tangent Online 2019 Reading List.
Read “Where the Train Goes” in Galaxy’s Edge Magazine #41, ebook or print, along with stories by Nancy Kress, Joe Haldeman, Kevin J. Anderson, Mercedes Lackey and others (November 2019).
Read “Where the Train Goes” in Etherea Magazine #6 (ebook), along with stories by Jeffrey Sims, Michael Simon, Jay Caselberg, and others (January 2022).
Hear “Where the Train Goes” read by K.G. Anderson for Story Hour on Facebook Live.
• “Grief”

“Please, Moira! The exopsychologists here at the Council want to study the ambassador, not help zhirm. Please—anything you can do.”
Therapist Moira Clark meets her most challenging client—the surviving half of the alien dyad that serves as the Vedan ambassador to Earth.
Listen to “Grief” on The Overcast podcast, narrated by Rebecca Stern and hosted by J.S. Arquin.
Read “Grief” in Pioneers and Pathfinders, edited by Jessica Augustsson of JayHenge Publishing. This speculative fiction anthology includes stories by Katherine Quevedo, Linda H. Codega, Wendy S. Delmater, Holly Schofield and others (2019).

2016 Aurora Award Winner
Read “Grief” in the Aurora Award-winning Second Contacts anthology edited by Michael Rimar and Hayden Trenholm for Bundoran Press. See the YouTube trailer for “Grief.”
Read the review at All Our Words: Diverse Science Fiction.
“For me the best was ‘Grief,’ which involves an alien race where two entities function as one—not quite Trill, but you get the point. When one dies, the other part is inconsolable, so they get a human grief counselor to help.” — review on Amazon.com
• “Wishbone”

“But don’t you have grandparents, Representative Podestra?” The talk show host leaned forward in an eager posture of faux concern. “How will you explain your proposed Age Equity Act to them?”
Vivian Podestra’s politician grandson has a plan to save the country a lot of money on Social Security and Medicare. It’s probably going to cost Vivian her life.
“The plot winds most satisfactorily to a conclusion that proves that not only politicians can be deceitful and devious.” — review in Tangent Online.
Read “Wishbone” in Infinite Lives: Short Tales of Longevity (print) or in the Third Flatiron Best of 2019 (ebook).
Read “Wishbone,” read by Juliana Rew, at the Third Flatiron podcast page. (Read Third Flatiron’s interview with K.G. about “Wishbone.”)
• “Rowboat”
I’ve never seen an ocean, but I grew up playing ‘Rowboat’ in my family’s cramped living module on level C of Xinxin Colony. The worn blue carpet was the water, the concrete floor beyond it, a sandy shore. With a broomstick as an oar, I pretended I was Gramma Jen, rowing hard against the tide to get us home…
Listen to “Rowboat” on StarShipSofa, a District of Wonders podcast. Narrated by Farah Naz Rishi.
Read “Rowboat” in Metaphorosis (February 2016).
• “I Know How You’ll Die”

I know how you’ll die. Not when, or why, or even where—though I could make a good guess. Based on what I can see. Because what I can see is what you’ll see—in the final moments before you die.
Drownings, car accidents, peaceful passings surrounded by loving family — she can foresee them all, and she’s learned to live with the knowledge. Until she meets a man whose violent death she must try desperately to prevent.
“I Know How You’ll Die” appears in Weirdbook #41 (2019) along with stories and poems by Adrian Cole, Darrell Schweitzer, S. L. Edwards, Aracibo Campeche, Marina Savila and others.
• “The Judge’s Chair”

The door to the Mercantile creaked, interrupting Sissy Davis’ reading of a massive oak dining table from last weekend’s estate sale. It was a strong, hearty piece of furniture, despite some scratches to the finish. Sissy was looking forward to placing it in a good home—once it had told her its whole story.
Sissy’s Antiques in Fraightsville, Texas, teeters on the brink of eviction for failure to pay rent. If only Sissy would stop listening to the strange stories her second-hand furniture tells.
“The Judge’s Chair” appears in Two Hour Transport Anthology 2019, a compendium of science fiction, fantasy, horror and literary fiction from Seattle-area authors including Elly Bangs, Keyan Bowes, Seelye Martin, Patrick Hurley, J. G. Follansbee, Nisi Shawl, Derek Fetters, Tod McCoy, Jon Lasser, Mitchell Shanklin, Andy Dudak, Oscar McNary, Evan J. Peterson, Theresa Barker, Nicole Bade, and Eileen Gunn.
• “Politics As Usual”

As the 2020 elections approach, “lone shooters” stage attacks in major cities. An obscure blogger spots a connection between the killers.
“While all the stories are worth your time, I really appreciated those by Louise Marley and K. G. Anderson. B Cubed Press knocks another one out of the park. — John A. Pitts, Amazon.com review
“KG Anderson’s vision of 2020 kept me awake last night as I considered the prophetic nature of her visions.” — review at Amazon.com
“The chilling ‘Politics as Usual’ by K.G. Anderson hit close to home for me, as I often drive past the Pittsburgh Synagogue used as a backdrop for this story. Interestingly, this is not for a debate about gun control, but rather a cleverly woven timetable that illustrates how voter suppression might evolve.” — review at Amazon.com
“‘Politics As Usual’ by K.G. Anderson, provides a cautionary tale describing a sad end to everything that opposes the current radical conservatism. It could herald a time of sticking your head under the covers, or a time of activism and sharp monitoring. The endgame this story foresees is a continuation of politics as usual. Anderson provides a peek at the road map that goes there.” — review at Amazon.com
Read “Politics As Usual” in Alternative Truths III: Endgame from B Cubed Press. The anthology includes Louise Marley’s eerie prescient “The First Lady Is Missing” and Debora Godfrey’s hilarious “No Excuse,” about the revolving door at the Attorney General’s office (2019).
• “Unnoticed”

It wasn’t that people deliberately ignored me. They just didn’t notice me. Or half the time they thought I was somebody else. “Why did you guys make me so…average?”
Cait’s immigrant parents selected robust but generic DNA so their child could blend in with the dominant population. Now a teenager, Cait refuses to blend in. She’s about to discover the dangers of embracing the family’s ethnic heritage.
Read for free: “Unnoticed” appears at the Factor Four Magazine website.
Buy “Unnoticed” in Issue #5 of Factor Four, with stories by D.A. Xiaolin Spires, Rebecca Birch, Stephen S. Power and others.
• “Escape”

I’d said barely a word to anyone all the way from New York to Santa Fe, but the cowboy’s toothy grin disarmed me. “Where you from, miss?”
Mail-order bride Shulamit Pelz flees New York with her grandfather’s golem, pursued by Kabbalists seeking the creature’s magic. When her stagecoach is robbed in the New Mexico desert she meets a handsome outlaw and embarks on a path that makes Wild West history.
“I very much enjoyed this Jewish speculative Western — the first I’ve ever read of such a genre.” — review at SFFReviews.com
“K. G. Anderson’s “Escape from the Lincoln County Courthouse” is a secret history and a good one at that. Jewish magic and the Kabbala are spliced into the conventional history of Billy the Kid.” — review at MarzAat.com
Read “Escape” at Luna Station Quarterly online.
Buy “Escape” in Issue 35 of Luna Station Quarterly with tales by Beth Goder, Wendy Nikel, Izzy Varju, Erin K. Wagner and others.
“Escape from the Lincoln County Courthouse” first appeared in 2016 in the Weird West anthology Story Emporium, featuring cover art by M. Wayne Miller.
K.G.’s essay on the lure of the Weird West appears in Nicole Givens Kurtz’s blog Other Worlds Pulp.
• “Different Meaning” (flash fiction)
Screw symbols. Put no faith in them. That arrow carved hastily—or artfully—into a tree? It points the way…
Read “Different Meaning” online at The Drabble.
• “Bad Memories, 2032”

An all-too-plausible glimpse into our future, “Bad Memories, 2032” imparts a shiver of recognition, a twinge of grief, and—perhaps—even a flash of empathy.
Read “Bad Memories, 2032” in the anthology After the Orange: Ruin and Recovery (B Cubed Press; edited by Manny Frishberg). Stories by 29 science fiction authors including Brenda Cooper, John A. Pitts, Bruce Taylor, Elizabeth Ann Scarborough, Paula Hammond, J.G. Follansbee, Kara Dalkey, Edd Vick, Janka Hobbs, Keven David Anderson and Su J. Sokol.
• “The Right Man for the Job”

The chief of staff for a U.S. Senator paused in the kitchen doorway, a bottle of chilled Sauterne in each hand. “I can’t believe we’ve come to this,” he said.
Desperate Democrats on Capitol Hill hold a seance to ask Molly Ivins, Adlai Stevenson II, and Walter Cronkite to do something about the current administration. They send back LBJ—with boots, Scotch, and beagles—to haunt the White House.
Read “The Right Man for the Job” in the anthology More Alternative Truths (B Cubed Press). Stories, poems and essays by Lou J Berger, David Brin, Adam-Troy Castro, Esther Friesner, Manny Frishberg, Philip Brian Hall, Rebecca McFarland Kyle, Vonda N. McIntyre, John A. Pitts, Irene Radford, Mike Resnick, Elizabeth Ann Scarborough, Edd Vick, Jim Wright, Jane Yolen and many others.
“My favorites of the lot are K.G. Anderson’s, ‘The Right Man for the Job,’ in which frustrated Democrats hold a séance in an attempt to find a solution to our Trump problem. It’s witty and fun!” — review on Amazon.com
• “Everything Is Fixed Now”

The device Samantha’s company makes for corporate fitness programs is collecting medical data — without employees’ knowledge. Are “health risks” being fired — or allowed to die?
Read “Everything Is Fixed Now” in the anthology Welcome to Dystopia: 45 Visions of What Lies Ahead edited by Gordon Van Gelder (OR Books, 2017) (available in print and audio). Stories by 45 authors including Elizabeth Bourne, Ron Goulart, Eileen Gunn, Les Howle, Janis Ian, Barry N. Malzberg, David Marusek, Mary Anne Mohanraj, Ruth Nestvold, Marguerite Reed, Robert Reed, Madeleine E. Robins, Geoff Ryman, James Sallis, J. M. Sidarova, Harry Turtledove, Ray Vukcevich, and Jane Yolen.
“K. G. Anderson’s “Everything is fixed now” shows the role private companies are playing in today’s global economy. Through a “Vibrante” device for personal fitness, companies in this story can collect data that provide insight into the health of their users. Companies use this data to save money—on health insurance premiums or sick leave—rather than human lives.”—review in Strange Horizons.
• NARRATION: “The Stone Age Gap” by Meredith Morgenstern
In a time of “enhanced” humans and digital consciousness, one woman fights for her old-fashioned humanity.
K.G. narrates the Star Ship Sofa original story “The Stone Age Gap” by Meredith Morgenstern.
• “Patti 209”

She designed “the elder-care environment of the future,” but finds herself, 30 years later, a numbered inmate in the place. With Medicare and Social Security long gone and dignity a luxury, Patti 209 confronts life-and-death decisions.
Read “Patti 209” in the Alternative Truths anthology. 24 authors had 100 days to write about the 45th president; stories by Jim Wright (of Stonekettle Station), Blaze Ward, Daniel Kimmel, Janka Hobbs, Marleen Barr, and Adam Troy-Castro. Edited by Phyllis Irene Radford and Bob Brown.
“‘Patti 209,’ by K.G. Anderson, is a sad story—and one that may stick with you a while. Like its predecessor, it’s written—and well written, too—from an “if this goes on” perspective.” —review at AmazingStories.com
“‘Patti 209’ and ‘Relics: A Fable’ are good old-fashioned New Wave-style dystopian tales.” — review at Amazon.com
• “Soup”
(POEM – 2017)
“From the sky
to the lake
to the pipes
to the tap…”
Hear (or read) “Soup” online at Poetry on Buses.
• “My Job Is Hell”

Up at 5, take the hellhound walkies, then catch the Underground to Styxbridge for a bagel with sulfur spread. They say Hell is other people, but somehow I’m always alone. I trot along the hot lavawalk to the office, clutching my flaming triple espresso. Sure, we’ve got Eternity here, but I’d rather not be late…
Read “My Job Is Hell” online at Every Day Fiction.
“Corporate Hell, what a concept, with just the right amount of bureaucratic red tape and cynicism.” — comment at Every Day Fiction
• “Unraveling”
A distraught mother of a runaway teen visits her great-aunts’ decaying summer cottage. The great-aunts reveal magical talents and disturbing family secrets, tempting Ellie with glimpses of what her life might have been — and yet could be.
Listen to “Unraveling” on FarFetchedFables, a District of Wonders podcast. Read by voice artist Fran Carris.
Read “Unraveling” in the anthology Triangulation: Beneath the Surface. Stories by James Van Pelt, Sandra M. Odell, Manny Frishberg, and others.
• “The Bookman” (flash fiction)
The stranger at the bus stop held a tattered book with a faded pink-and-white dust jacket — a $950 first American edition…
Read “The Bookman” online at The Drabble.
• “His Last Victim”

Puryear snickered as I took a turn about the hall, swishing my skirts. I came to a stop beside the burly plain-clothes man and smacked him on the arm with a worn kid glove. “That’s ‘Inspector Judy’ to you, Sergeant.”
A young police officer volunteers for a novel undercover role, one for which he is uniquely suited. Thus disguised, he witnesses the Ripper’s last horrific crime — and glimpses the high-level cover-up that drew the curtain over the killer’s identity.
“The police really want to catch the Ripper, and one man decides to embrace his secret side to do so.” — review at EarthandSkye.org
Read “His Last Victim” in The Mammoth Book of Jack the Ripper Stories. Edited by Maxim Jakubowski. Stories by Carol Anne Davis, Martin Edwards, Barbara Nadel, William Meikle, Steve Rasnic Tem, and others.





























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