

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. Please subscribe or donate to Mithila Review to help us bring you diverse, original and impactful stories from from around the world.
Want to contribute? See our submission guidelines here.
ISSUE 13: CONTRIBUTORS
Priya Sarukkai Chabria, Theodore Singer, Vanessa Fogg, H. Pueyo, Donna J. W. Munro, Hannah Frankel, Yilin Wang, Lynne Sargent, Mack W. Mani, Adele Gardner, Mary Soon Lee, Mari Ness, Ishita Singh, Gautam Bhatia, Chaitanya Murali, D. P. Singh, Tarun K. Saint, Rajat Chaudhuri and Jvalant Nalin Sampat
ART by John Glover
SUBSCRIBE NOW Patreon | Gumroad | Weightless Books
BUY THIS ISSUE Gumroad | Amazon (Kindle) | Weightless Books | Instamojo
Ishita Singh “All true knowing is mutual…”: Notes on Vandana Singh’s Ambiguity Machines and Other Stories
Gautam Bhatia A Delicate Magic: Iona Datt Sharma’s Not For Use in Navigation
Chaitanya Murali Avatar: An English-Italian Anthology of Contemporary Science Fiction from India
D. P. Singh Science Fiction Writings in Punjabi: The Contemporary Scenario

Sami Ahmad Khan: A Maoist Caliphate Near India’s Borders? Science, Fiction and Geopolitics in ‘Baramulla Bomber’
Geopolitical flashpoints are not always unusual spaces of stunning, ethereal beauty. The state of Jammu and Kashmir is an exception: a strategic flashpoint etched on unsuspecting travelers’ minds as “a heaven on Earth,” the Kashmir Valley is a seismic zone of...
Saima Afreen: Song for a Watch Repairer
Song for a Watch Repairer Saima Afreen Beyond the horizons of red butterflies Lies seashore of your eyes with hour glasses sleeping softly they were filled with moon dust That pagan goddesses exhaled With Galileo you, too, counted threads of light Till they became...
Vajra Chandrasekera: Caul
Editor's Note: "Caul" has been withdrawn from Mithila Review by the author.
Josh Brown: Apocalypse Later
Apocalypse Later why prepare now when I can prepare later why do today what can be done tomorrow I’d rather go fishing or for a walk than prepare for the end of the world. I’d rather go for a Sunday drive or maybe visit my parents than stockpile food and ammunition...
Melissa Frederick: Moving the Earth
Moving the Earth Melissa Frederick February 7, 1812 The farmers of New Madrid felt the first shudder of Manifest Destiny like Jesus crashing to earth like fierce fists striking the iron gates of heaven. It was the land, this time, that rebelled: tremors swept through...
Mark A. Fisher: Mazenderan
Mazenderan Mark A. Fisher was it love? that in darkness bound them or fear? that drew them together to become monsters phantoms in dark passages to dash romantically within a bubble of ignorance dressed-up illusions for a band of bigots and dumb-asses mere Keystone...
Abhishek Bhatt: Choose Your Killer
The biggest release of that year was a murder mystery. Three minutes into the movie, a cherubic cat named Nina was horrifically skinned alive and killed on camera for a snuff film. The next eighty-seven minutes gave you equally incriminating evidence against three...
Two Poems by Vinita Agrawal
Old Fabric Between the forefinger and thumb lie the creases of an appeal for Godknowswhat. A parchment collaged with wrinkled post-its, paper chits, yellow square one-D windows of years gone by. The chintz sofa of a shared life is worn Its Persian rug threadbare –...
Joshua Oppenheimer: Memories of Screams and Silence
In 2002, Joshua Oppenheimer arrived in Indonesia to instruct some workers on methods of documentary filmmaking at a plantation. What was meant to be a small trip turned into a long journey into Indonesia’s violent past that consists of one of the most horrifying...
Theodora Goss: Her Mother’s Ghosts
Her name is Ilona. The other children at school call her Smellona. She is not me, but I have been her. Here are the things I remember most clearly: _ She lives in a townhouse in Washington D.C. with her mother and younger brother, whose bangs are always cut crooked....
Theodora Goss: Writing My Mother’s Ghosts
This essay was presented as part of a panel called "Reeling Beyond Realism: But to Reel in What?" proposed by Rusty Morrison and Ken Keegan of Omnidawn Publishing for the 2008 Association of Writers and Writing Programs conference in New York City. I'm grateful to...
Oliver Buckram: Presidential Cryptotrivia
Washington, D.C. is filled with grand monuments to our cherished history. Behind closed doors, however, dark secrets fester in the shadowy bowels of the American body politic. As the world's leading cryptohistorian, I've recently uncovered startling facts hitherto...
The Shortest Editorial Ever!
WE WANT YOU! Mithila Review is open to submissions! See Guidelines
Two Poems by A.J. Odasso
The Woman and the Serpent I prize the taste of this rare fruit above the sting of carnal knowledge: the tang of these teeth as they pierce, then sink like lodestone in the deep, I learned to breathe underwater for the sake of our joining. I wonder, do serpents take...
“The Giftie” by John W. Sexton
The Giftie On the front step are three fruit: an acorn, an apple, a sloe. The autumn sun gutters in the grey sky. I take the apple, but throw the sloe and the acorn to the hedge. As I eat the apple I look into the sun. Dark filaments, like cancers, pass through its...