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Strange Horizons is on the hunt for new volunteer first readers to join our fiction team.

Our first readers read some of the incoming fiction submissions and decide whether to pass them along to the fiction editors. We are therefore looking for people who like what Strange Horizons publishes.

We highly encourage Black, queer, disabled, and/or neurodiverse first readers to apply. We especially welcome readers from outside the US and UK.

Responsibilities

  • Read a minimum of 10 submitted stories each week and write a brief summary and comment for each, including characteristics we may be looking for.
  • Pass good and interesting stories along to editors.
  • Send rejection notes for stories you decide not to take.

Requirements

  • Ability to work well with others in an online setting.
  • Discretion; for example, we’ll ask that you not blog about the details of your job, though it’s fine for you to publicly say that you have the job.
  • Reliability: the fiction department depends on first readers. We prefer a reader who reads a small number of stories week after week to a reader who reads a large number randomly.

Time commitment

You will need to read, summarize, and comment on at least 10 stories a week. In our experience this equates to around five hours per week of reading, plus up to three hours per week of writing summaries, comments, and rejections. Expect the job to take at least five hours a week; don’t expect to be able to squeeze it in during occasional spare moments.

We prefer applicants who can commit to stay on for at least six months after an initial one-month trial period.

How to apply

If you’re interested, send an email to fiction@strangehorizons.com with the following subject line: FR CANDIDATE: your name here (with “your name here” replaced by your actual name, of course).

Any of a multitude of salutations within the body of the email are fine, but please don’t address your application to just one fiction editor; all of them will be reading your application (generally “Dear Editors” is a good choice).

In the email, introduce yourself, tell us about your relevant experience (if any), let us know a little about why you’d like to join us, and list three to five authors whose short stories (not novels) you particularly like (with emphasis on authors who write speculative fiction). You don’t have to have previous first-reading experience or be a writer—we want to hear from anyone interested in the position.

Then provide a list of three to five of your favorite stories that SH has published. For each story, provide a brief comment, roughly twenty to fifty words, about what you liked about it. Tell us what you really think rather than what you think we want to hear; the main point of this exercise is to help us (and you) decide whether your tastes are likely to match ours, in which case there will be some more screening to make sure we work well together.

We’ve had the good fortune of working with many talented and hardworking first readers over the magazine’s history, and we look forward to adding to their numbers.



Aigner Loren Wilson (she/her) is a queer Black writer and editor of literary speculative fiction. Along with her work with Strange Horizons, she’s been an associate editor for the horror podcast NIGHTLIGHT, a guest editor for Fireside Fiction, and a judge for the NYC Midnight contests. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Interzone Magazine, WIRED, Lightspeed Magazine, and many more.
Current Issue
31 Mar 2025

We are delighted to present to you our second special issue of the year. This one is devoted to ageing and SFF, a theme that is ever-present (including in its absence) in the genre.
Gladys was approaching her first heat when she shed her fur and lost her tail. The transformation was unintentional, and unwanted. When she awoke in her new form, smelling of skin and sweat, she wailed for her pack in a voice that scraped her throat raw.
does the comb understand the vocabulary of hair. Or the not-so-close-pixels of desires even unjoined shape up to become a boat
The birds have flown long ago. But the body, the body is like this: it has swallowed the smaller moon and now it wants to keep it.
now, be-barked / I am finally enough
how you gazed on our red land beside me / then how you traveled it, your eyes gone silver
Grannies Against Oppression 
Here, I examine the roles of the crones of the Expanse space in Persepolis Rising, Tiamat’s Wrath, and Leviathan Falls as leaders and combatants in a fight for freedom that is always to some extent mediated by their reduced physical and mental capacity as older people. I consider how the Expanse foregrounds the value of their long lives and experience as they configure the resistance for their own and future generations’ freedom, as well as their mentorship of younger generations whose inexperience often puts the whole mission in danger.
Wednesday: Under the Eye of The Big Bird by Hiromi Kawakami, translated by Asa Yoneda 
Friday: The Book of Disappearance by Ibtisam Azem, translated by Sinan Antoon 
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Podcast read by: Emmie Christie
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By: Alexandra Munck
Podcast read by: Claire McNerney
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Issue 20 Jan 2025
Strange Horizons
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Podcast read by: Emmie Christie
Issue 13 Jan 2025
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