A Journal of International Science Fiction & Fantasy. Estd. 2015.
Mithila Review publishes excellent science fiction, fantasy, poetry, reviews, excerpts, and articles from award-winning and emerging writers around the world. We seek to publish stories that birth creative thought and positive action. Stories that accurately describe our world, triumph over fear, mistrust and despair, and guide the future. Because the world needs saving, and honestly, nothing seems to work better than amazing stories. Please subscribe or donate to Mithila Review to help us find, create, publish and spread original voices and impactful stories.
FICTION, POETRY & MORE

A Delicate Magic: Iona Datt Sharma’s Not For Use in Navigation
Iona Datt Sharma’s Not For Use in Navigation is a mélange of earthy magic, queer protagonists, love stories involving sentient spaceships, fables in the distant future, and much else.

Discover the secret origins of Tarun K. Saint’s Avatar and The Gollancz Book of South Asian Science Fiction
The stories in Avatar focuses on SF’s transformative role in negotiating changes ushered in by digital world and social media, as well as the advances in biotech and surveillance mechanisms augmented by technology, besides the perils of climate change.

A Literary “Sci-Fi” Conversation Between Two Indian Science Fiction Writers: Rajat Chaudhuri and Jvalant Nalin Sampat
Rajat Chaudhuri and Jvalant Sampat discuss science fiction (“sci-fi”), cli-fi (climate fiction), solarpunk, classic sci-fi films, and their respective books:The Butterfly Effect and The Chronicler.

Science Fiction Writings in Punjabi: The Contemporary Scenario
Science fiction writing in Punjabi is in its infancy and has a great potential for writers to make their contributions.

From scientific haikus to epic poems, Mary Soon Lee effortlessly navigates between genres, fiction and poetry
I kept returning to The Sign of the Dragon because I got completely caught up in Xau’s story. It was almost an obsession. I thought about it when I was vacuuming, or brushing my teeth, or grocery shopping.

Odysseus Grins at Fate and the Gods
For all my guile, there have been times when my own wit / has thrown me into far worse danger. / Polyphemus laughs, despite his blindness, / to think what ill I wrought upon myself.

Strange Recollections of Brook Farm
The looking glass now contained a love letter to a boy in Waltham, a maudlin faun pining while he held his pipes, and a thousand other faces and images. Whatever had infected her and Cora had spread and crept over Brook Farm like vines on an old stone.

Sparrow
The boss has with his back to you. He grips a machine shaped like a hexagonal ship’s wheel. You saw an image of it recently in a trade magazine in his office: a newly-invented window cleaning drone. Unlike he said days ago, he isn’t firing you because he found cheaper labor, but because he has decided that a robot is better than you.

The Breaking
I’d been dreaming of something red that morning. Fire. Explosions, plumes of thick smoke. And for a moment, I saw again a line of trees catching light, blazing up into torches. A wall of roaring flame along the highway. I was in the car with my family; we were trying to escape, Dad driving as fast as the traffic allowed; and I whimpered and squeezed my eyes shut but even so I could feel the Angels watching through the flame.

Super Mario; Or, Everything I Needed to Learn About Relationships
Photograph by June Intharoek All relationships can be linked to Super Mario (who is you — implicitly an immigrant, only ever seen as a stereotype to those of the “kingdom,” and all your friends are toads and your clothes are never in style but styled old) Mushrooms,...