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The Great Fall Scifaiku Fest - part 1

26/9/2017

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These are not the sonnets you were looking for: today sees part 1  of our Great Fall Scifaiku Fest, featuring sci-fi and fantasy haiku from Robert Shmigelsky and Guy Belleranti  http://www.guybelleranti.com/  We'll be back with part 2 in a fortnight...

 
Five by Robert Shmigelsky

decommissioned frigate
snippy ship’s AI
calling everyone Bob

brain-splattering round
Computer playing
Russian roulette

vending machine bot
on derelict space liner
still emptying change

haunted skies
ghost planet's
fiery death

black hole bomber
diaphanous driver
bending space


Four by Guy Belleranti

lunch with aliens
avoid seat at head of table
it bites

my alien dog
pulling hard on the leash
commands me to heel

my marvelous clone
even I cannot tell
if I’m me or it

voices in his head
mad scientist opens skull
so others can hear
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BSFA Focus Poetry #67 now out

20/9/2017

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It's been a long time but the poetry section I compile for the British Science Fiction Association BSFA Focus magazine (issue #67) is now out.

Contributors include Frances W. Alexander - Susan Burch - Herb Kauderer - Andrew Darlington - Deborah L. Davitt - Amy Butt - John Calvert - Lauren McBride - Kendall Evans - Guy Belleranti - Jenny Blackford - Amy Grech - Ken Poyner.

​You can read the PDF here. 
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The Third Extension - new flash fiction by Bogi Takács

19/9/2017

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​What if we share this planet with another entirely alien species who understand that the Plant World has a third dimension? That's the premise Bogi Takács sets out in this debut appearance on the Grievous Angel. Bogi Takács is a Hungarian Jewish agender writer and editor. You can also find em at http://www.bogireadstheworld.com, on Twitter at https://twitter.com/bogiperson and on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/bogiperson/

​

​The Third Extension
by Bogi Takács



We seek out cheap rentals – as long as the house has a garden, it will suit. The Chasidic mystics say that to hasten the coming of the Messiah, Jews need to gather the divine sparks scattered across the world. That's the closest parallel we've found, the nearest concept.
    
We are from a faraway place, near but far, the underside of the world. Do you remember that time from your childhood when with much effort you flipped over a large rock, and bugs were massing underneath? The world flips over and there we are. Not insects exactly, but not human either.
    
We take good care of the rentals – patch the walls, put up new shower curtains, fix that persistent leak in the basement. We want to avoid suspicion. On this side, we never speak in chirps.
    
Plants grow with their roots into the earth, with their stalks toward the sky, but it is their third extension that concerns us the most.
    
The third extension grows into the underside of the world where it forms giant caverns if the plants are satisfied, twisty tunnels if they are ailing. We do not live in the caverns or the tunnels – we live on the smooth, warm underside of deserts, and when the rains come and the blooms start, we evacuate with much haste. We grow food in the caverns; our fungal mats need room and shelter.
    
Have you seen what gardens some of these rentals have? There is little in this world that can be as neglected as abandoned artifice. When a garden is set up to be mowed, trimmed, pruned, regularly weeded and aereated and I beg you, do not forget about the mole traps – then it does not maintain its equilibrium on its own.
    
At first, we tried to let our gardens return to their natural state; it does happen with sufficient time. Then the municipality fines started coming in. We ignored the mailings, the warnings tucked under our doors. Then the people brought giant mowers, chewed up vegetation, not letting us have a choice. We were decreasing the value of the neighborhood, they claimed.
    
So now we mow, trim, prune, weed and if the mood strikes us, even aereate, ambling across our lawns with our special aereating shoes. We do not let loose our offspring. We smile at the neighbors and put our gardening tools out of sight.
    
Sometimes, we sneak into recently abandoned lots with our pruning shears; and when we flip the world over and return, we enjoy our bounty. The more brash among us ask if it could be easier to simply get rid of humans once and for all, but we are gentle and mild-mannered.
    
We know these humans will not stay forever.
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New Haiga by John Reinhart

13/9/2017

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New short poetry: Mars, Buck Rogers, Witches & Pink Floyd

9/9/2017

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We've an interesting mix of short poetry for you now, including a couple of tanka and a limerick, from Grievous Angel regulars Christina Sng, Herb Kauderer, Andy Brown, and Gabriel Smithwilson... 


Untitled Tanka
by Christina Sng


Mars beckons
in the near distance
as we leave Earth behind
biting into a blueberry
I water the tomatoes


Untitled Tanka
by Herb Kauderer

 
Buck Rogers buildings
recall long ago futures
turning ghosts of dreams
into fashions drunk on fumes
of old rockets and jetpacks


Fantasy Limerick
by Andy Brown


Young Jenny had upset a witch
By calling the woman a bitch
The hag cast a spell
Which made the girl smell
And gave her an intimate itch


Summer Project
by Gabriel Smithwilson
          

In still-warm midnight hour
Pink Floyd instrumental
Snaking deftly through static
On the garage radio
One last strange piece
Is put into place
And like a solar flare
In neon shades
The homemade flying saucer
Has come to life

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    Welcome to the Grievous Angel – fresh free-to-read science fiction and fantasy flash fiction and poetry, including scifaiku and haiga.

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