Stelliform Opening to General Submissions September 1
Good news, writers! We’re opening for submissions from all writers, agented or non-agented, on September 1, 2021. We’ve been closed to general submissions for about a year, accepting submissions only from BIPOC writers. Now we are looking for 2-3 novellas, novels, or short story collections to publish in 2022 or 2023. BIPOC, LGBTQ2S, disabled and other marginalized writers are still very much encouraged to submit.
If you’re not familiar with what we’ve published before, have a look at our books here. On that page you can find links to excerpts and video readings, plus all the usual synopses and cover art. If you’re thinking of submitting, please read about the press and the kind of work we’re interested in, and our submissions guidelines. You can also read about our editorial, publicity, and design team here.
We recently did an interview with Toronto’s Word on the Street team, and this video gives a great overview of the press and some of the stories that we’ve already published. Publisher and Editor-In-Chief Selena Middleton and authors Sim Kern (Depart, Depart!) and Cynthia Zhang (After the Dragons) talk climate fiction, the power of speculative fiction, and the connections between these genres and subgenres and queer stories.
See you in the slush pile!
Cynthia Zhang Reads from AFTER THE DRAGONS
We’re currently holding our second giveaway of advance review copies of Cynthia Zhang’s tender queer fantasy novel, After the Dragons. If you haven’t already heard the buzz about this book, we invite you to watch this video of the author briefly talking about her intimate approach to the fantasy genre, and reading a short excerpt. After the Dragons is a queer romantic fantasy novel which will be published by Stelliform Press on August 19th. The book is Cynthia Zhang’s first novel.
The video reading includes captions for those who prefer or require them and the full text of the excerpt is provided below. Be sure to sign up for the contest, or learn more about AFTER THE DRAGONS and pre-order a copy here. Also, signing up for our newsletter will keep you in the loop about our upcoming launch event which will include some fabulous opening acts, and a chance to talk about the book with the author and publisher.
It’s dark inside the store. A few dragons chirp in protest when Kai flips on the light, but the room is otherwise silent.
Kai glances around the shop, assessing the lines of cages and tanks. Then, without saying a word, he closes the door, slips his sketchpad under the front desk, and walks decisively toward the back of the shop.
After a moment of hesitation, Eli follows. “Do you want any help?” he asks as Kai slips a thick, leather glove over one hand.
“What, and have the whole shop escape? You can stand there, and if I need anything from the top shelves, you can take it down for me.”
“I think I can pull that off,” Eli says as Kai steps toward a cage in which a blue dragon sits atop a pile of rocks, preening the scales on its back. Compared to the tianlong Eli sometimes sees clustering on rooftops and stop lights, this dragon is larger and sleeker, the size of a hawk with a narrow chest and long curving wings. Feathery frills circle the dragon’s head, giving an appearance halfway between a lion’s mane and an Elizabethan neck ruff worn by a draconic poet.
Kai makes a high, clicking sound, and the dragon raises its neck toward him, imperious as a little monarch. “Hello to you too, your highness,” he says, unhooking the door and sticking his gloved hand inside. The dragon glances at the glove, then back up at Kai: and?
Rolling his eyes, Kai takes a dead mouse from one pocket and dangles it in front of the cage. The dragon cocks its head to one side, politely uninterested. “Oh, come on now,” Kai says, shaking his hand. “Cixi, baobei, piece of shit, don’t be like that —”
“Cixi? Like the empress?”
“Just like the empress,” Kai confirms, eyes intent on the dragon as she gingerly steps onto his wrist to take a bite — the smallest bite — of the mouse. “Almost as bad as the human one, too. Bossy little thing,” he says, carefully lifting his hand out of the cage, spindly dragon and all. “Isn’t that right, princess?”
In response, Cixi trills, licking her snout as she snatches the mouse and swallows it whole. Her eyes are tawny, and in the dim light, they gleam like gold coins against delicate whiskers and blue scales.
“She’s beautiful,” Eli says, leaning forward. “What is she?”
“A pain in the ass? Careful — this one does bite,” Kai warns as he hands Eli a strip of dried meat.
Eli offers it to Cixi, who sniffs the jerky before deigning to take it from him.
“In terms of breed, feilong, which goes a long way toward explaining the sense of superiority since they supposedly only appear to ‘great men’ in the wild.” Kai strokes her neck, Cixi leaning into the touch before snapping at his fingers. “Doesn’t do anything to explain the stubbornness or complete lack of manners.”
“Like owner, like dragon, maybe?”
Kai glances up, and for a second, Eli is unsure whether he’s earned the right to say what he did — but then Kai laughs, a short, surprised sound that turns into a wry smile. Eli can’t help smiling back. And then, with no warning whatsoever, Cixi swoops off Kai’s wrist and out the door, a glistening blue blur with Eli’s jerky between her teeth.
“Oh, fuck,” Kai mutters before sprinting after her.
Thanks once again to Literary CelebrAsian for helping us to reach more readers, especially those interested in exciting new takes on Chinese dragons and LGBTQ issues in Beijing.
We’re doing another AFTER THE DRAGONS Giveaway!
We gave away two copies of Cynthia Zhang’s queer fantasy novel AFTER THE DRAGONS in June, but we’re keen to get this book into more hands before its August 19th release date. So we’re teaming up with Literary CelebrAsian to hold another giveaway from July 5 to 11, with winners contacted on Monday June 12.
If you’ve already heard about this sweet and tender book, skip down to the sign up form below. We’re using Rafflecopter for the first time in hopes to make entering the contest quick and easy.
About the Book
In an overheated Beijing, researcher Elijah Ahmed and activist Xiang Kaifei join forces to save the city’s beleaguered dragons and find a cure for Kai’s illness. Grief hangs over their relationship and Eli and Kai must confront hard truths if there is any hope for themselves or the dragons.
After the Dragons is a tender story, for readers interested in the effects of climate change on environments and people, but who don’t want a grim, hopeless read. Beautiful and challenging, focused on hope and care, this novel navigates the nuances of changing culture in a changing world.
Readers are loving this emotional romantic fantasy. Check out reviews on Goodreads and NetGalley, and an incredible endorsement from the incomparable Mary Robinette Kowal:

How to Enter the Giveaway
Use the widget below to enter the giveaway. Complete as many entry options as you like. All options are good for one entry, save for signing up for the Stelliform newsletter, which will get you two entries.
Good luck to all entrants! Be sure to check out Literary CelebrAsian on the web, on Twitter, on Instagram, and Tumblr for more great literary content by Asian authors.
Happy Indigenous People’s Day
June 21 is Indigenous People’s Day in Canada. So here are some recommendations for books I’ve loved by Indigenous authors. Some of these books are speculative, some literary, some non-fiction, some poetry. This is by no means a comprehensive list of all the amazing Indigenous literature that has come out in the last few years and beyond – just some recent titles to check out. Add your own favourites in the comments!
Moon of the Crusted Snow by Waubgeshig Rice
Waubgeshig Rice’s MOON OF THE CRUSTED SNOW is a near-future post-apocalypse (though it’s more like a during-apocalypse) but it feels so real and current, the intimate details of community collapse creating a foreboding pressure. It’s one of the most intense books I’ve read in a while.
Future Home of the Living God by Louise Erdrich
FUTURE HOME OF THE LIVING GOD by Louise Erdrich is about a pregnant adoptee reconnects with her birth family & community as the world around them both ecologically devolves and descends into reproductive fascism. The connections Erdrich makes with this book’s many angles are stunning.
Islands of Decolonial Love by Leanne Betasamosake Simpson
ISLANDS OF DECOLONIAL LOVE by the brilliant scholar, writer, poet, musician Leanne Betasamosake Simpson is a perspective-shifting narrative and poetic journey, a vulnerable opening to intense intimacy. Also a fascinating hybrid project with an accompanying album.
A History of My Brief Body by Billy-Ray Belcourt
A HISTORY OF MY BRIEF BODY by Billy-Ray Belcourt is a queer memoir that is so rich that it feels almost academic, but like how academic texts should be: profoundly vulnerable, using narrative and emotion to slowly draw the reader into both a history of ideas & new ways of thinking.
A Mind Spread Out on the Ground by Alicia Elliott
A MIND SPREAD OUT ON THE GROUND by Alicia Elliott is a collection of essays which connect pop culture with its deeper implications. There is a wide range of topics presented here – parenthood, mental illness, poverty, etc – but each is delivered with raw honesty and a touch of generative rage.
Havoc In Silence by Tiffany Morris
Finally, I want to give a a shout out to the wonderful
Tiffany Morris, whose chapbook HAVOC IN SILENCE stuns with its visceral imagery and experimental language and structures. I felt like I read this whole short chapbook while holding my breath. Get a copy here.
SFRA21 Book Sale
One of the best things about conference season is browsing the book tables to find new avenues for research or just your next favourite read. It’s the Science Fiction Research Association’s annual conference weekend and in lieu of an in-person book table, Stelliform Press is offering our biggest sale yet: 20% off all our titles, even preorders, plus free shipping. Click here to access the sale and use the code SFRA21 to get 20% off at checkout. Newsletter subscribers have received an extended code valid until June 27.
Stelliform Press books are not only engaging stories with interesting and diverse characters, but they’re packed with ideas. If you are interested in climate fiction or ecocriticism, you don’t want to miss these books.