Sunday, April 27, 2025

Starstuff edited by William Alexander and Wade Roush

Anyone who regularly follows me might remember me mentioning the up-tick in science fiction literature in the kidlit realm. Today's read is another one, which happened across my radar. It's an anthology for middle graders...I don't cover many of those, either. Like never. So, this will be an interesting treat, too, since anthologies offer not only short reads but hold a nice variety...when done right. 

Which I hope this one is. Let's sit back and look!




STARSTUFF
Ten Science Fiction Stories to Celebrate New Possibilities
by Various Authors
edited by William Alexander & Wade Roush
MIT Kids Press
Middle Grade Science Fiction Anthology
288 pages
ages 8 to 12

COMING MAY 20th!!!


In a thrilling follow-up to Tasting Light, ten best-selling and award-winning masters of the form use the possible—and the premise of hope—to explore how science and technology can reshape our world and defy assumptions.

At once a collection of hard science fiction for curious middle-graders and an antidote to despair in the face of dystopian uncertainty, these ten horizon-bending stories may seem unreal, but all follow the rules of physics and biology as we understand them today. These tales of space junk, multiverse navigation, an asteroid named Doomsday, and bees and marmots in space pulse with honesty and optimism. Whether home is a planet, a moon, a space station, or a fleet starship, relatable protagonists of different genders, classes, nationalities, ethnicities, and orientations face challenges—some harrowing, some hilarious—true to their moment in time and space. Brisk plots, resonant themes, and scientific rigor define these forward-facing stories by leading middle-grade authors. Taken together, the tales champion youth agency through characters who approach science in adventurous ways, underscoring that we are all, indeed, made of the same luminous stuff.

With stories
William Alexander * A. R. Capetta * Maddi Gonzalez * Carlos Hernandez * Kekla Magoon * Jenn Reese * David Robertson * Wade Roush * Eliot Schrefer * Fran Wilde





MY TIDBITS


These pages offer a smorgasbord of short stories to delight more than just science fiction fans.

I can't remember the last time I picked up an anthology for the middle grade audience, and I'll admit that I grabbed this one with uncertainty...which was completely misplaced. This is a fun collection of ten short stories surrounding space in various ways, which stretch not only the imagination but add food for thought. The stories hover around twenty to thirty or so pages and are easy to read thanks to the larger font and wider sentence spacing. Even the longer tales are easily enjoyed as shorter reads. The tales hit a large array of directions, everything from aliens to asteroids to space stations and more. Some are more Earth based, while others shoot into the stars and beyond. While there are action packed tales, other head into the drama direction and touch the heart. 

Each story centers around a character, which middle graders can sympathize with. The messages are also appropriate for the age group and will resonate with the intended audience. There's something for everyone, allowing readers to dive into tense scifi moments or take on more true-to-life issues with a galactic twist. I enjoy that the variety demonstrates the broad spectrum science fiction can include as it reaches beyond space ships, lasers and little green men. Instead, it shows the various directions the genre can take. 

This is a lovely collection to pickup and enjoy in pieces here and there, or dive into and enjoy from beginning to end...or simply as the stories catch each reader's attention. 


And here he is...

Wade Roush is a freelance science and technology writer, columnist at Scientific American, and host and producer of the tech-and-culture podcast Soonish. His work has appeared in Science, Xconomy, and MIT Technology Review. He is the editor of the science fiction anthology Twelve Tomorrows (MIT Press).

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