Published in Asimov’s, March 2006.
The back story to the novel.
(This story is collected in The Turing Test from Elastic Press)
Blog, books, stories.
Published in Asimov’s, March 2006.
The back story to the novel.
(This story is collected in The Turing Test from Elastic Press)
Published in Asimov’s, December 2005.
(This story is collected in The Turing Test from Elastic Press)
Published in Interzone, May-June 2005; 3rd place in annual Interzone reader’s poll.
(This story is collected in The Turing Test from Elastic Press)
Published in Asimov’s, October-November 2004
(This story is collected in The Turing Test from Elastic Press)
Published in Asimov’s, March 2004
“From the writer’s bio we learn that Chris Beckett has been a social worker, a career that judging from “Tammy Pendant” lends a tint of gritty nastiness to one’s worldview. The title character is a problem teen caught in the ministrations of the British social service. We meet her in between foster homes, suffering the attentions of psychologists and caseworkers. Tammy is bitter and angry. She alienates everyone who might otherwise care for her. All the kids at the center where Tammy now lives know about the Shifters, a group of people who can move between worlds. Here’s Tammy’s self-defined salvation. She seduces a Shifter, steals his bag of magic pills, and takes one, only to be caught by the police and brought to the hospital to have her stomach pumped. The system, it seems, won’t let her go. Does the experience change Tammy? That would be telling. Suffice it to say that this is an excellent story with a mean streak that’s true to the very end.” – Jeremy Lyon, Tangent
Published in Interzone, February 2003
(This story is collected in The Turing Test from Elastic Press)
Published in Interzone, October 2002
(This story is collected in The Turing Test from Elastic Press)
Published in Interzone, June-July 2002
Published in Interzone, November 2001; 4th place in annual Interzone reader’s poll.
Published in Interzone, October 2001; 1st place in annual Interzone reader’s poll.
(The starting point for the novel of the same name)