Silk & Steel
A queer speculative anthology of 17 sapphic romances pairing warriors with softer-skilled women across many settings.
Why this is here
Find similar books by
Combine common axes
These books are ranked using the plot structure labels extracted for Forward: Stories of Tomorrow.
Plot structure labels used: standalone stories, episodic, twist ending, reveal-driven, slow build, uneven pacing, anthology structure, short-form
Focused on “varied length” where exact label matches exist.
This does not mean the books share the same plot, setting, quality, or difficulty. It means their plot structure embeddings are close.
A queer speculative anthology of 17 sapphic romances pairing warriors with softer-skilled women across many settings.
Why this is here
Ten Philip K. Dick short stories collected as the source material for Electric Dreams, built around reality, tech, and human anxiety.
Why this is here
A 100-story, author-selected anthology tracing Bradbury’s career across sci-fi, fantasy, horror, and nostalgic human drama.
Why this is here
A 27-story Philip K. Dick collection of early SF tales about warped reality, postwar dread, robots, and what makes us human.
An illustrated anthology of new sci-fi and fantasy voices, pairing contest-winning stories with bonus art, essays, and tips.
Why this is here
A short-story collection of uncanny, twist-driven tales about moral dilemmas, strange encounters, and unsettling human behavior.
Why this is here
A varied manga anthology mixing speculative shorts, music vignettes, and autobiographical tributes from Naoki Urasawa.
Why this is here
A 12-story Connie Willis collection mixing time travel, horror, humor, and haunting speculative setups.
A clone warrior wakes on a far-future Earth and sets out to restore a lost empire amid alien worlds and surreal chaos.
Why this is here
A short story collection of uncanny horrors where identity, perception, and reality keep slipping out of place.
Why this is here
A queer-and-trans speculative anthology imagines futures of resistance, desire, survival, and uneasy hope.
Why this is here
Twelve chronologically arranged Lem stories probe alien contact, AI, and human limits with irony, dread, and invention.
Why this is here