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Bewildering Stories

Bewildering Stories’
Third Quarterly Review, 2025

Year 24 of Bewildering Stories

The Editors’ Choices in issues 1098-1108

Lighthouse
by Richard Ong

The Quarterly and Annual Reviews and Bewildering Stories itself
are like lighthouses on the chaotic sea of the Internet.
They signal not danger but “Good landfall” and “Safe harbor.”
Welcome ashore!


Bewildering Stories ends the astronomical season — northern summer or southern winter, according to your hemisphere — with the Review Editors’ selection of their favorites from the Third Quarter of 2025. New readers will have easy access to the recent best of Bewildering Stories, and veteran readers will have a chance to catch up on anything they may have missed.

The Quarterly Reviews are not a contest or competition; they are a special poll. And there are no quotas: anything — from everything to nothing — may qualify in any genre. They answer a practical question: If a friend asked you to recommend something outstanding from the past quarter of Bewildering Stories, what are your favorites? What would you choose? The Quarterly and Annual Reviews bring you the editors’ answers.

The Reviews also make a public statement: Bewildering Stories takes itself very seriously. And they answer a general question: What is a “truly Bewildering story”? Our webzine’s semi-humorous title refers to writing that provokes thought and raises questions; in that sense, the title is an example of itself. Stories that merely raise questions about their coherence are more properly known as “befuddling stories.”

As always, the Review Board’s discussions have been extensive and lively. A big Thank You to Edward Ahern, Bill Bowler, Gary Clifton, Charles C. Cole, Jeffrey Greene, Gary Inbinder, Bill Kowaleski, Alison McBain, John Stocks and Lewayne L. White.

At Bewildering Stories, nothing is the proverbial tree falling unheard in a forest. Every week, we receive thank-you notes from contributors who are grateful that real people have given their works a thoughtful reading, regardless whether the authors agreed with the readers. Those notes are appreciated all the more because they tell us we’re fulfilling our mission.

The Review Editors and Associate Editors — our review readers — have functions that are entirely different but equally important. The Review Editors determine how Bewildering Stories shall carry its flag; the Associate Editors determine what Bewildering Stories shall be. Their insightful critiques of submissions help us set what we like to think is an Internet standard for editorial practice and for service to our contributors and readers.

Our special editors also deserve a vote of thanks: Coordinating Editor Jeff Greene, Flash Fiction Editor Charlie Cole and Poetry Editor John Stocks. They provide the kind of personal touch Bewildering Stories takes pride in, and they make the administrative work not only easier but possible. Our special gratitude goes to Michael E. Lloyd, the designer and manager of the indispensable Titles, Authors, Genres Index master index of all of Bewildering Stories. As an index, it’s a work of art, and the Managing Editor, who consults it every day, recommends it to everyone.

The Quarterly News

We think our Review Editors reflect the range of opinion to be found among our readers. In the past 11 weeks, the Review Editors cast 728 votes on 78 titles, 36 of which have qualified as Editors’ Choices. We congratulate the authors and hope they will inspire all our contributors.

The Order of the Hot Potato is hot this quarter, with 13 titles.
The Order of Merit is a special acknowledgment to our contributors. It’s a kind of “surprise package” that links to the most highly rated works in this Quarterly Review.

We expect to resume regular publication with issue 1109 on September 22, 2025.

Titles selected of titles eligible
Novels
Novellas
Serials


0 of 1
Short Stories
Flash Fiction
Drama
15 of 43
7 of 11
Poetry
Short Poetry
Essays
5 of 12
8 of 8
1 of 3

• Serialized works are eligible only in the quarter in which they conclude.
• All selections are listed in alphabetical order by author unless noted otherwise.
• Authors’ multiple titles are listed in chronological order.

Short Stories

David Barber, The Last Voyage of the Nordstar
Jared Buck, Let's Be Reasonable
Shauna Checkley, Life Turn at the Truck Stop
Gary Clifton, Somewhere, Over the Landfill
Charles C. Cole, Calendula Blooms
Jeff Gaba, On the Spacefront
Ashley Gao, The Mother of Gaia
Robert Granader, Summer in the Hamptons
Jeffrey Greene, The Bite Eric Neher, Not This Tide
Richard Simonds, Eve and the Well
B. Marcus Walker, Roadsong, 1901
Vahid Zakeri, The Eternal Bliss of Siaamaa

Flash Fiction

Charles C. Cole, To Tia Gary Clifton, Bring on the Clowns Matias Travieso-Diaz, The Agile Mongoose and the Cobra

Poetry

Bill Bowler, Woke Up This Morning
David Harker, I Remember
Gary Inbinder, Ishmael
Oonah V Joslin, The First Sestina
Simon MacCulloch, The Last Judgment

Short Poetry

Edward Ahern, The Grip Bill Bowler, On Belching Alison McBain, Grumbles
Gary Beck, Last Stop

Essays

Jeffrey Greene, A Preference for "Green Tea"

Links to the issues
in the Third Quarter

Departments

Link to: Index of Books and Other Reviews

Reviews and Excerpts

Gary Beck, Pirate Spring: a Novel of Haiti
Marco Melfi, Routine Maintenance reviewed by Alison McBain
Nenad Pavlović, Salvation on Peril Island
Douglas Young, Not Just Political

Selected Challenges

Three-Day Count
A Free Ride
The Real Thing
And Then Again...
Toothbrush or Full Brush?
Downside Up
Best Tools
A Good Book

Discussions and The Critics’ Corner

Gary Inbinder, The Rachel in “Ishmael”
Appreciations

Memoirs

Ellen Weisberg, The Foxtrot: My Mother’s Last Dance

The Order of the Hot Potato

Here are the most controversial works of the quarter, the ones on which the Review Editors’ opinions diverged significantly for one or more reasons. The titles are listed beginning with the hottest “potato” and proceeding in order. Three of the titles appear among the Editors’ Choices. Challenge to the readers: why might any of these titles be on the list? Discussions are welcome and may appear in a future regular issue.

  1. Mike Player, Super Bug
  2. J. G. Proctor, The Bandits of White Bend
  3. Olaf Kroneman, A Show of Hands
  4. B. Marcus Walker, Roadsong, 1901
  5. Terry Trowbridge, Anatomy of the Lemon: Carpal Section
  6. Matias Travieso-Diaz, The Agile Mongoose and the Cobra
  7. Linda Strange, Delicioso
  8. Vahid Zakeri, The Eternal Bliss of Siaamaa
  9. Ahmed Al-Khamisi, Two Escapees
  10. Douglas Young, Aunt Lalena
  11. Nenad Pavlović, The Meats of Yesterday
  12. K. Raph Bray, The Future Is in the Past
  13. Ollie Swasey, Newshawk’s Crawl

The Order of Merit

Here are links to the most highly rated works in each genre represented by more than one title in this Quarterly Review. In keeping with Bewildering Stories’ astronomical motif, the winners are indicated by the names of space telescopes. Multiple listings are ties. The most highly rated works in the quarter are designated by the names of arms of the Galaxy.

Short Stories
Flash Fiction
Poetry
Short Poetry
The Sagittarius Arm     The Perseus Arm     The Orion Arm

Featured at Bewildering Press

Bewildering Press
Jack Alcott, Grim Legion
Sam Ivey, Gilboy’s Quest
Martin Kerharo, The Dohani War
Harry Lang, The Mountains of the Eldritch Sea
Danielle L. Parker, In a Pig’s Eye
Slawomir Rapala, Aezubah, the Crimson General
Bertrand Cayzac, Floozman in Space
Michael E. Lloyd, Donna’s Men
Michael E. Lloyd, Missing Emilie
Michael E. Lloyd, Observation One
Michael E. Lloyd, Observation Two
Michael E. Lloyd, Observation Three
Bewildering Press

Grim Legion   Gilboy's Quest   The Dohani War   Mountains of the Eldritch Sea

Donna's Men Missing Emilie   Observation One   Observation Two   Observation Three

In a Pig's Eye   The Crimson General   Floozman in Space   Floozman dans l'espace

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