Category: Non-Fiction
The Other Reel Non-Fiction | Issue 7 | Read now
The Lethal Sun A Review of Into the Night (Netflix, May 2020) In the old days, they used to have something called B-movies.   They were intended to accompany the A-movie, the main attraction, in the double features that played in neighborhood movie houses, before television came along and ate their lunch and closed them down. ...
Interview with Matthew Medney, CEO of Heavy Metal Non-Fiction | Issue 6 | Read now
Heavy Metal Magazine is one of the most influential comic book publications in the field of science fiction. Film directors such as Ridley Scott, Terry Gilliam, and James Cameron have cited it as a major influence on their work, both as a deeper gateway into science fiction and as a visual bible that continuously inspires the look of their films....
Vagabonds Review Non-Fiction | Issue 6 | Read now
Vagabondsby Hao Jingfang, translated by Ken LiuHardcover, April 2020Saga PressISBN-13: 978-1534422087 In Vagabonds, written by Hao Jingfang and translated by Ken Liu, two previously warring factions, Mars and Earth, attempt to ease their mutual distrust by sending a group of Martian teenagers to spend a few years on Earth as part of a cultural exchange....
Going Boldly – Interview with D.C. Fontana Non-Fiction | Issue 3 | Read now
D.C. Fontana is a pioneer and legend in genre television writing. Her incredible career spans nearly forty different series. She was not only one of the first writers on the original Star Trek TV series, but worked closely with Gene Roddenberry as a primary architect of the show....
A Conversation with Javier Grillo-Marxuach & Jose Molina Non-Fiction | Issue 1 | Read now
Originally from the island of Puerto Rico, Javier Grillo-Marxuach and Jose Molina are amongst the most experienced writers working in genre television. Both have scribed, executive produced and served as showrunners for some of the most acclaimed genre TV series, such as: Lost, Firefly, Grimm, SeaQuest, Vampire Diaries, Terra Nova, Agent Carter, Helix, The Tick and many more....
A Vaccine for the Virus of Empire? Non-Fiction | Issue 1 | Read now
Here’s a fun fact: viruses leave pieces of themselves behind. Every once in a while, bits of the DNA code they inject into captured cells to transform them into virus factories stick around after the virus itself is fought off, and sometimes that abandoned code proves beneficial to the organism it’s left in....

 

 


 


 


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