Here are some fiction and non-fiction pieces I forgot to post about...LATEST POP CULTURAL PRECURSORS NEWSLETTER: Before there was Battle Bots or Real Steel or Pacific Rim or even Robot Jox, there was the Critter Crunch. Read the epic story of the world’s first robot death match at the 1989 Denver MileHiCon. I’m trying out a different format for this post—an online version of an 8-page zine. Read it here.
FLASH PIECE: I have a story in Flash Fiction Online’s November 2025 “”FamPunk”” issue, guest edited by the incomparable Emma Burnett. “So many spec fic stories go big,” she writes in the issue’s intro. “They get larger and larger, up to and involving saving the world/galaxy/universe. They expand and expand, and… then what? Who ever really gets to be a main character in that story? Can you really imagine yourself there? And, is the science/fantasy element really important to the story, or is it just the same old hero story dressed up in spaceships and lasers? In this issue, we wanted to subvert some of the assumptions built into sci-fi and fantasy, the need to be expansive and overblown. Go small and go home.” You can read it here
. “Would You Marry Theda Bara, Vampire Woman? The wickedest face on the shadowy screen.”—Fox studio “Her eyes have the cruel cunning of Lucretia Borgia.”—Louella Parsons “She is the arch-torpedo of domesticity.” —Photoplay Read the full story and see more amazing clips, photos, and hilarious vintage articles about Bara here.
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I write speculative fiction, cultural criticism, humor, and journalism, with a particular interest in retrofuturism, video games, fandom, and forgotten corners of pop culture history. My work has been published by Wired, Rolling Stone, Slate, McSweeney’s, Alta Journal, Flash Fiction Online, Underland Press, and Shacklebound Books. I also publish the newsletter Pop Cultural Precursors.
Read my dystopian sci-fi horror about End Times Reply Guys. "I don’t enjoy playing the role of That Annoying Internet Guy who reflexively replies with hectoring know-it-all comments like 'Why are you surprised?' or 'How is this news?' But people force me..." Read it here
Sorry, Villeneuve and David Lynch. This version wins even though it never made it past pre-production... Read about it in my newsletter.
NEW NEWSLETTER: In 1985, an ambitious game simulated the ruinous long-term effects of a conservative political agenda on a Midwestern city. It now feels less like dystopian sci-fi and more like current events. Read it here.