Aurealis #185

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Short Description

So rich, so rare, so exhilarating – Aurealis #185, our October 2025 issue, is all of that with exciting fiction from John Pegios, Ella T Holmes and Caroline Barnard-Smith, plus fascinating non-fiction from Claire Fitzpatrick, Andrew Kolarik and Trevor Howis. Our stunning internal art is from Rayji de Guia, Simon Walpole and Rebecca Stewart. Aurealis – the universe is ours.

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The Moon in SF

With the recent eclipse, Aurealis has been turning its mind to the great lunar-related SF novels. Here’s a selection.

1. The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress. Robert A Heinlein. Heinlein’s libertarian dream, revolutions and liberty, aided by an AI that just wants to be a real boy.

2. The First Men in the Moon. HG Wells. The first men in the moon are stranded, get lost in the wilds of a lunar jungle, and meet intelligent, cave dwelling beings. Wow.

3. Sea of Tranquility. Emily St John Mandel. In the end, a colony on the moon is a dark place to be.

4. A Fall of Moondust. Arthur C Clarke. Lunar tourism goes bad, rescue is launched, things go wrong in a hostile environment. Almost writes itself.

5. Red Moon. Kim Stanley Robinson. A cross-cultural lunar murder mystery. What’s not to like?

Read any or all of these by the light of the full moon and a wonderful time is guaranteed for all.

All the best from the cloud!

Michael Pryor

From Birdie by John Pegios

About John Pegios

John Pegios is an Australian writer with Japanese and Greek heritage. He holds a Master's in Creative Writing and has published fiction and non-fiction, most recently in the AI, Robot anthology by JayHenge Publishing. If full-time work as a copywriter doesn’t get to his soul first, he’ll one day definitely maybe write the epic fantasy he has in his head.
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Somewhere between the end and the new beginning, Jesse golfed through the ruined streets of Naarm.

He took no notice of the steel coffins towering over him and focused on hitting the ball with his bent driver. The ball bounced off destroyed cars, gutters and walls. Each hit reverberated a hollow sound that shimmered an echo through the broken monuments of a bygone era.

From Catch and Consume by Ella T Holmes

About Ella T Holmes

Ella T. Holmes always dreamed of being a Mad Hatter, Trojan horse, or a cunning princess who is definitely not a witch, but reality intervened. Fortunately, she's got a knack for escaping it!
Ella maintains corporeal existence by patting cats, writing, and being confused about human behaviour.
Her work has been published in Antithesis, The Bitchin' Kitsch, Portside Review, and Orca, among others.
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I was twenty-six when my boyfriend stood up from a dead sleep and left for the nearest body of water. In the early days, it was unnerving the way they’d grab their rods and bait and blindly grapple for door handles and steering wheels, deaf to the questions of ‘Where are you going? Why now?’ Then, spotlights, blinding white across beaches and lakes, illuminating a new normal.

From Hooked by Caroline Barnard-Smith

About Caroline Barnard-Smith

Caroline Barnard-Smith lives in the wild valleys of Devon in the UK. She's written horror, dark fantasy, and sci-fi. Caroline’s short stories have appeared in Crawling, Annihilation Radiation, and many other places. The effort might tip her over the edge. You can visit Caroline on the web (cazzysmith.neocities.org), and read free fiction on her Substack (carolinebarnardsmith.substack.com).
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“Do you want to touch it?”

I did not want to touch it. I knew it would be hard and unyielding, like a polished bone clamped to the wrong side of her body.

From Frankenstein in Pop Culture: From 1910 to Now (part 3) by Claire Fitzpatrick

About Claire Fitzpatrick

Claire Fitzpatrick is a speculative fiction author, a pop culture writer, and a PhD candidate. She's won two Shadows Awards, a Ditmar Award, and is a Bram Stoker Award finalist. Due to the odd circumstances in her life, she believes she may have been cursed by a witch. She lives in a house with two kids, nine chooks, her partner, and a ghost. Visit her at www.clairefitzpatrick.com.au.
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Although the depiction of Boris Karloff as Frankenstein’s Monster had been an iconic pop culture reference for over a century, between the 1950s and 1980s, the image of the bolt-headed Monster moved away from Universal Pictures and into mainstream pop culture.

From Unholy union: Inchoate rage drives biomechanical change in Tetsuo: The Iron Man (1989) by Andrew Kolarik

About Andrew Kolarik

Hailing from Croydon, Andrew Kolarik spent ten years writing post-punk lyrics for live performance in London and Cardiff. He has written poetry, short fiction and film criticism. Outside his writing, Andrew is a musician and student of Vietnamese Tai Chi. He lives in Cambridge, UK.
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How many films have captured the quality of nightmare?

From Exceptions to Reality – An Interview with Alan Dean Foster Part 2 by Trevor Howis

About Trevor Howis

Trevor Howis (Writer–Metal Head–Troublemaker) has recently interviewed Dean Rankine in Jimmy Hornet Magazine #10. He is a quarter-finalist in the 2025 Final Draft Big Break Competition. His debut fantasy novel Broken By Magick is due for release at the end of the year.
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Alan Dean Foster is first and foremost a storyteller.