Q&A with the Editors of Sunvault: Stories of Solarpunk and Eco-Speculation

“We dug deep and pushed seeds / from locked away vaults / into the earth so gentle we pushed / and we wondered if the past / could be reborn.”
~ from “Fairy Tales & Other Species of Life” (Chloe N. Clark)
in Sunvault: Stories of Solarpunk and Eco-Speculation


When I met my husband, we got to know each other by talking about all the plays and musicals we acted in during high school (Him: Guys and Dolls. Me: Li’l Abner. Him: Oliver. Me: Greater Tuna). We had a lot in common, until later when we talked books. He asked if I’d ever read Douglas Adams’ The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. I said no. He balked, I shrugged. We still got married.

brightly colored cover image for Sunvault

I didn’t read science fiction then, and I don’t read much now. But when I heard about Sunvault: Stories of Solarpunk and Eco-Speculation (Upper Rubber Boot Books, 2017), I was intrigued, especially with the subtitle.

I’ve enjoyed speculative fiction over the years (Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, Hillary Jordan’s When She Woke), and I know of the word STEAMpunk (though I can only envision what it looks like, not how it reads). How “solar” and “eco” fit into the mix, I wasn’t sure. At first glance of Sunvault’s cover, though, I was ready to dive into the pages. The Editors’ Note, then, ensured I knew what to expect:

Often [in Science Fiction], the environment was an antagonist, already destroyed to the point of no return, or simply not a consideration. . . . [Solarpunk] emphasizes innovative interaction with both our communities and our environment; socio-environmental thought and creation, rather than merely survival in a decaying world….

These days, a positive focus on the connection between human and environment is worth investigating. Sure the stories may be fiction, the art futuristic, but as Donald Maass says in The Emotional Craft of Fiction, “the purpose of stories is not only to change characters, but also to point the way to a change in us all.”

Meaning, a story imagined is still built on some thread of truth; we should pay attention.

The stories, poems, and art in Sunvault look to a future when humans cooperate with the natural world rather than use and abuse it, and the book as a whole paves way for discussion of such possibilities. In today’s Q&A with Editors Phoebe Wagner and Brontë Christopher Wieland, we learn more about the genre, the stories, and the aspirations behind the collection. Plus, there’s a giveaway: you just might win a copy of Sunvault, with its cool cover and wonderful works! CLICK HERE to enter the giveaway (deadline: Aug. 29th).

Now welcome Editors Phoebe and Brontë!

Christi Craig (CC): There’s plenty to love about Sunvault, from the introductory notes on the genre of Solarpunk (for new readers like me) to the stories and poems (of course!). But what struck me immediately when I cracked open the pages was the list of contributors–such diversity! Writers of color, international authors, an excellent balance of men and women. Can you tell us a little about how this project began and one of the keys to reaching such a wide range of writers and artists?

Phoebe Wagner (PW): When Brontë and I met in fall of 2015 in Iowa, we bonded over our love of speculative fiction—we were the only two fiction writers dedicated to the genre in our year. Especially in 2015, the speculative trend involved a lot of negativity and dystopian settings, which, don’t get me wrong, I love a good dystopian romp, but I was tired of feeling hopeless. I love happy endings, and I grew up on positive stories like The Lord of the Rings and A Wrinkle in Time. Brontë and I had been tossing around the idea of editing an anthology together (because graduate students have loads of downtime), when I came across a post by Kdhume on Tumblr about solarpunk. The –punk genres have always inspired me, and this new –punk genre with a focus on environment, socio-environmental issues, community, and positivity seemed like something I wanted to be a part of.

As for the diversity, we are both passionate about seeing diversity in publishing, particularly in our home genre of SF. To that end, we commissioned work which helped set the atmosphere when submissions opened. Solarpunk naturally attracts a diverse audience since the genre is dedicated to diverse communities, and we wanted to honor that. Consider that the first true solarpunk anthology was published in Portuguese in 2012 (though World Weaver Press is working on translating it!). This movement is global.

Brontë Christopher Wieland (BW): From the beginning, we knew we wanted this anthology to represent as many perspectives, places, genders, and groups of people as possible, so we made sure to reach out to various communities and ask explicitly to see work from them. In our call for submissions, we encouraged writers from marginalized and underrepresented communities to submit. We also worked hard to spread our message widely on social media, especially Twitter where there’s a thriving and beautiful community of SF writers.

Cropped version of Carlin Reynolds' drawingCC: Speaking of artists, I’ve been studying the artwork you include (Carlin Reynolds’ “Radio Silence” [see cropped image to right] is one of my favorites). The pieces appear to be drawings in pencil or ink, a simplicity in the choice of medium that matches many of the stories as they focus on new beginnings and a back-to-basics kind of living. The images themselves, though, are all but simple; full of intricate detail, they each warrant thoughtful discussion on their own. In your original call for artwork, did you aim for a certain style? Or, what did you hope to receive?

PW: “Radio Silence” was a perfect submission since it fit so well with Iona Sharma’s “Eight Cities.” Solarpunk does have roots in art nouveau style, which we mentioned, but more broadly, we wanted to see how artists interrupted the ideas of solarpunk. Since we were limited in the types of images we could print (mainly black and white), we pitched the idea of the art being like coloring book pages, so each reader could, if desired, personalize Sunvault.

BW: Mostly, I think we hoped to see what images solarpunk conjured in artists without our stylistic input. We wanted to see how many interpretations of the ideas we described were out there, and we found some really beautiful work!

CC: Kristine Ong Muslim’s “Boltzmann Brain” is a powerful piece of flash, depicting one after another of ecological disaster but maintaining a sense of optimism to the end. I love, too, how each new section opens with “We hope you are out there, and you are reading this message.” What do you hope readers will take away from this collection?

PW: I hope readers feel encouraged to become engaged, that it isn’t hopeless. We have a hard road ahead when it comes to climate change and social justice. This summer has seen America pull out of the Paris Climate Agreement, and I’m still sick over the domestic terrorism in Charlottesville. It does not feel like a hopeful time. I hope the stories, poems, and art in Sunvault will encourage small and large actions, encourage resistance, and bring joy. It’s hard not to smile when I look at Likhain’s bright cover.

BW: Hope, courage, inspiration, and new ways of thinking about how we approach our world, especially in terms of physical and social environments. Much of the work in Sunvault revolves around fighting for a better, more just world, and that message is even more valuable now than it was when we started work on the book.

CC: What did you love most about editing this collection as a team?

PW: First off, it was just plain old fun. While I love working with Brontë in general, having someone with different interests, experiences, strengths was vital. It was nice to tag team with him, too, since grad school has a tendency to dictate when you can do stuff. If one of us had a stack of papers that needed to be graded, the other could shoulder more work.

BW: Having a separate perspective on each piece illuminated my own thoughts about each submission. There were times that Phoebe saw value in a piece that hadn’t initially grabbed me (and vice versa), and it always lead to lively discussion and important time spent rereading stories and expanding my idea of what the book would be. Sunvault would look so much different if either of us had done it alone, and it’s much, much better because we worked together.

CC: Now that your editing work on Sunvault is done, what are you reading these days?

PW: I finished The Dispossessed by Ursula K. Le Guin and it blew my mind. While not exactly solarpunk, there are a lot of similar themes. I’ve also been on a YA reading streak these days and loved Daniel Jose Older’s Shadowshaper.

BW: As always, I haven’t been reading as much or as widely as I’d like to be. Recently I’ve been diving deeply into Paulo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed and Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz’s An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States, both of which I’m using to shape my teaching for the upcoming semester. I also just finished Wizard of the Crow by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o and When the Ground Turns in Its Sleep by Sylvia Sellers-García.

Phoebe Wagner grew up in Pennsylvania, the third generation to live in the Susquehanna River Valley. She spent her days among the endless hills pretending to be an elf, and, eventually, earned a B.A. in English: Creative Writing from Lycoming College. She is an MFA candidate in Creative Writing and Environment at Iowa State University. Follow her on Twitter: @pheebs_w.

Brontë Christopher Wieland is an MFA candidate in Creative Writing and Environment at Iowa State University where he thinks about how language, culture, and storytelling shape the world around us. In 2014, he earned his Bachelor’s degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in Mathematics and Lingustics. His fiction has appeared in Flash Fiction Online and Hypertext Magazine. Follow him on Twitter: @BeezyAl.

REMEMBER: Enter the giveaway for a chance to win a copy of Sunvault!

50 Author Interviews At Your Fingertips

Since 2010, I’ve interviewed 50 authors about their novels, memoirs, collections of short stories, poetry, and more.

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In these Q&A’s, we’ve talked things like influences of the universe, how change is inevitable, and that rats are not all bad. Plus, there’s plenty of advice on writing throughout the whole bunch.

Now, you can find links to these past interviews (with more to come!) under a tab of its own on my website: Author Interviews.

Click away, explore new books, and get to reading!

Q&A with Robert Hill, author of The Remnants

There are acts that happen upon us, and moments that happen for no reason, and if we are to survive what comes our way to finish our rotations around the sun…then we who are able must deliver ourselves from the aftermath to where we need to go. it was true with the serpent in the garden and it has been true ever since. The snakebite is not what defines a life; what defines it is how we extract the venom.
~ from The Remnants by Robert Hill

Don’t ever loan me a book. Especially if it’s a good one. I will break the spine and earmark pages and underline passages on every other page to get at the story within.

Remnants-Front-Cover-web-sized-200x300Like many good novels I’ve held, my copy of Robert Hill’s The Remnants (to be released by Forest Avenue Press on March 15th), has been studied in such a way, the corners of the pages no longer crisp. But The Remnants is not your typical read. Brandi Dawn Henderson on Poslit compares Hill’s story to dark chocolate, saying it’s “single-source…dusted with gold flake and basil sugar…not for people who like milk chocolate.” And she’s exactly right.

The Remnants is a story about the tiny town called New Eden and its odd inhabitants, whose devotion to each other both sustains and destroys them. Hill addresses themes found throughout literary fiction–love, incest, reclamation of self…heavy hitters, but he paints the story with language that rolls across the tongue and through the mind so easily, you float along unaware at first. Then you pause to take it in. But never do you close the cover. Because the story, told through the eyes of True Bliss and Kennesaw Belvedere who are both on the cusp of their hundred-year birthdays, gives us a clear understanding of how a man’s sins may mark the course of another’s living, but they don’t have to claim the ending.

I’m honored to host Robert Hill for a Q&A and excited to offer a book giveaway. It’s simple to enter: just drop your name in the comments. The deadline is Tuesday, March 15th. Now, welcome Robert Hill.

CC: The Remnants is written in a unique style of prose that’s delightful, whimsical, almost musical at times. Yet, the story itself touches on very serious themes of love, lust, heartache and guilt. These two elements of style of theme work so well together in the book, and I’m impressed with the art and craft you put into the story. What prompted you to approach it in such a way?

Robert-Hill-author-web-sized-300x199RH: My writing idiosyncrasy is that I write out loud, and more often than not, what I write is written to be read out loud. When I used to write advertising copy, I had to hear “the sell” land; when I wrote grants, I had to hear the compelling argument build to a crescendo, out loud. For some reason, I need to hear the syllables hit certain highs and lows, each word build on that, each sentence climb a fence, each paragraph leap over and land. If it isn’t right from the first syllable/word, if the textures don’t jingle and thump and coo and roar or whatever, I have to start over. Because I heard stories before I read them (as a child), the auditory must have imprinted on me more strongly than when I learned to take in the written words quietly with my eyes. It’s probably a kind of literary ADHD. It can be maddening at times, and certainly makes for slow going in the writing process, having to hear everything, and hear it again, and again, and again until something in the rhythm of it all clicks for me. A psychiatrist could no doubt write a prescription that would cure me of this, but I already have too many co-pays.

Because of writing like this, everything I write takes on a musical quality – sometimes more so, sometimes less. That’s my style. When I began The Remnants, I had a single character in mind, a couple of shadows of two other characters, and a kernel of an idea of what their world was, but when I sat down to write the first thing that happened was the music took off immediately. In fact, in an early draft, I described the mating rituals of the town; the sounds coming from clandestine get-togethers, as a cacophony of old time instruments, harmoniums and wheezing pump organs, things like that. After the sound established itself, the next surprise was the darkness at the heart of the town. That opened up everything for me, and helped to ground what could have been a trifle of a story into something much deeper for me, truer, and speaking to a bigger humanity.

CC: In the early pages of your book, Kennesaw Belvedere sets off for his birthday tea at True Bliss’ house, embarking on an odyssey of remembering and letting go. I recently read an introduction to another book in which Neil Gaiman says, “Fiction is a lie that tells us true things, over and over,” and this got me thinking about Kennesaw, True…all the characters in New Eden who–with their strange genetic oddities–reflect the sins of common man. What’s one true thing from The Remnants that you hope stands out for readers?

RH: That nobody starts out bad. That everybody needs some kind of connection with another. Be it through love or friendship, through sex, heartbreak, memory, thought, by birth or community. No one wants to be lonely when they hear the screech in the night.  For the characters in The Remnants, there is the unspoken hope that those connections will last through eternity.

CC: In this interview about your first novel, When All Is Said And Done, you mention how your friends staged a “creative intervention” that set you on your path to becoming a novelist. We all need friends like that; I had a similar experience. While I have yet to publish a novel, I wouldn’t be where I am today without one friend’s not-so-gentle nudge to quit complaining and get writing! Community is crucial when it comes to writing. How has your tribe of writers grown or changed since publishing your second novel?

RH: My first novel happened because friends directed me to Tom Spanbauer’s “Dangerous Writers” workshop, and I owe everything to that experience. Since then, I’ve been part of small writing group, all of us disciples of Tom’s, and all of us still seeing each other’s work through Tom’s eyes and heart. Having feedback and encouragement from a group of writers whom I respect and trust has made, and continues to make, a huge impact on me as a writer and as a person. I love these people dearly, and I continue to write because they are in my life.

CC: What are you reading these days?

RH: Currently reading Sunil Yapa’s Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist. For my book group, just read Elizabeth Strout’s My Name is Lucy Barton, which followed on the heels of Phil Klay’s Redeployment. Also, just read two books by Lori Ostlund, her new novel, After the Parade, and her re-issued short story collection, The Bigness of the World, which won the Flannery O’Connor Award. Both beautiful, with a hugeness of heart at their core. On my “to be read” stack are W.G. Sebald’s On the Natural History of Destruction, and that leviathan of the moment, Hanya Yanagihara’s A Little Life. And, then, there’s my little guilty pleasure: small collection of verse “written by” and dedicated to cats, called I Could Pee on This. Having had many cats in my life, I can speak to the raw honesty of the verse. Truer words were never meowed.

CC: What’s one bit of writing wisdom you hold on to as you dive into a new story?

RH: Every single moment of life, every person you’ve ever known, every odd look cast your way, every mistake you’ve ever made, every surprise, every faked orgasm, every selfless act, every single thing from the moment your memory started – it’s all going to go into your writing if you are writing about something honest and true. Writing is like Method Acting: you have to put your own experience behind a moment to realize the truth of it and make that truth evident to the reader. Doesn’t matter if you’re writing about a soccer mom or a Viking warrior. You know what love feels like, what hate feels like, jealousy, greed, rage, sorrow. You have to be able to tap into all that inside of yourself. And you have to respect that those experiences you’re tapping into matter enough that they will bring something worthy to your writing and to the reader.

But even more important: you have to write for you. And you have to love the process, as aggravating and lonely and long as it can be. You can’t think about getting published or making money from it or any commercial end result. If you’re not enjoying the process of writing while you’re writing, if you’re not making yourself laugh and cry and ponder while creating, and surprising and delighting and sometimes astounding yourself with what is coming out of you, then no one else is going to feel anything from your work, let alone want to publish it, or buy it, or read it.

Robert Hill is a New Englander by birth, a west coaster by choice, and an Oregonian by osmosis. As a writer, he has worked in advertising, entertainment, educational software and not-for-profit fundraising. He is a recipient of an Oregon Literary Arts Walt Morey Fellowship and a Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference Fellowship. The Remnants follows When All Is Said And Done (Graywolf, 2006), Robert’s debut novel, which was shortlisted for the Oregon Book Awards’ Ken Kesey Award for Fiction. Learn more at his website.

Don’t forget: Drop your name in the comments for a chance to win a copy of The Remnants. Deadline to enter is Tuesday, March 15th!