![]() ![]() Sometimes they ask, why sci-fi? If it’s a human story you’re telling, why is it necessary to put it in a science fiction world? But to me, that’s like asking why anyone should tell a story at all. ![]() Here we are in this otherworldly place in a time and universe we can’t quite fathom, and yet this universal, eternal experience of love still binds us to each other and makes us who we are. But by the end of the book, I found it powerful enough to rival some of the best love stories I’ve ever read. ![]() It’s odd, sure, and not the usual romance by any stretch (whether you’d call it a “happily ever after” is questionable). Corey’s Leviathan Wakes, between Detective Miller and Julie Mao, comes to mind as well. The tragically satisfying love story in James S.A. That maybe-but-not-quite second chance romance opportunity adds a spicy and relatable flavour to the challenges faced when exploring the boundaries of technology and humanity. For example, the simmering tension between Kelly Grayson (Adrianne Palicki) and Ed Mercer (Seth MacFarlane) in The Orville. These labels would be wildly inaccurate, of course, but stereotypes are stereotypes and they take a long time to change.īut I love a good love story in a sci-fi setting. I’ve often wondered if it may have something to do with science fiction sometimes being thought of as a “boys’ genre”, where romance is a “girls’ genre”. When I tell people I write sci-fi romance, they mostly look at me confused. Welcome Lyndi’s Adventurous Friend JL Peridot! ![]()
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