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Adam-Troy Castro leads off our April issue with “Hiding Place,” another of his unique novellas about investigator Andrea Cort. This time the problem concerns a crime, but before its legal status can be determined, she has to figure out exactly who is who—and when—in a time and place when identity is nowhere near as simple as it once was. When two or more individuals can become one, in a more literal sense than ever before, things get a lot more complicated!
Twin brothers Gregory and James Benford, well known in both science-fictional and scientific circles, team up for a fact article on “Smart SETI,” wherein they look at the problem of attempts at interstellar contact from a basic but seldom-considered angle: the economic. It sounds simple: somebody has to send a signal, and somebody else has to receive it. But how much will it cost to send such a signal, and who will consider it worth the expense?
And, of course, we have quite an assortment of other fiction, by such writers as Paul Levinson, Thomas R. Dulski, Jerry Oltion, Edward M. Lerner, Dave Creek, and Larry Niven.
Analog is Up In Space!
Chosen for the library
on the International Space Station.
"phantom sense" by Richard A. Lovett & Mark Niemann-Ross
I’ve never understood how it could be stalking if all you’re trying to do is keep her safe. I just want to be a good father. Make up for all those years of being AWOL because CI-MEMS is a full-time job. You can’t be a father and CI-MEMS. That is, you can be one...
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NOTICE TO CONTRIBUTORS: WE ARE NOW ACCEPTING ELECTRONIC SUBMISSIONS
As of 11 AM Eastern Standard Time on Tuesday, February 22, Analog will accept--and prefer--submissions
in electronic form. Electronic submissions will be accepted through http://analog.magazinesubmissions.com,
where full instructions can be found.
Please note that while we welcome electronic submissions, they must be made through the designated website,
and not as attachments to regular e-mail.
If you have a print copy of your story currently under consideration, please do not resubmit the story electronically.
I will respond to those stories via the traditional SASE.
We look forward to getting the new system rolling, and hope it will make things easier for all of us.
Stanley Schmidt
Editor
Hiding Place
by Adam-Troy Castro
And you thought human relations were
complicated now?
The only prisoner in the interrogation room consisted of two women and one man.
The women, Mi and Zi Diyamen, appeared to be identical twins of either the natural or cloned variety. White-haired despite their apparent youth, wispier in form and more delicate in appearance than any of the handful of cylinked people I’d met (who, starting with my lovers the Porrinyards and continuing through the various others I’d encountered in the last few years, had always tended toward the physically robust), they seemed to exist only as pale echoes of the man who sat between them. Their skin was so pale that it was possible to follow the thin trace of veins at their temples, and their eyes were a shade of blue transparent enough to disappear against their irises.
Ernest Harriman, who sat between them, was a bear: round shouldered, ruddy faced, massive without crossing the border into fat, either old enough or sufficiently well-removed from his most recent rejuvenation to look like he could have been father to the two women beside him. His impressive physical presence and the defiant cast of his smile belied the features of an otherwise weak man: watery eyes, flabby cheeks, and a chin that receded from his lower lip as if eager to join the thick curve of his neck.
The Diyamens bracketed Harriman at the table where all three sat, resting their delicate hands on his thicker wrists.
It was impossible to behold this cozy triptych without considering the women nothing more than Harriman’s personal accessories, but I knew enough about the nature of the acquired condition the three shared to know that this was no more than an illusion, one that they might well have been cultivating for psychological advantage over their jailers.
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