Copy
Header image featuring the Aqueduct Press logo in grayscale (the press's name running along the top of an ancient aqueduct) against a black block, on which the press moto can also be read in white block letters: "Bringing challenging feminist science fiction to the demanding reader"

"Readers will be delighted
to dive in to Pelot's oeuvre"
 Publishers Weekly


Cover image of the book. In a dark teal square in the middle of the cover it says:Memories of Tomorrow, Short Fiction by Mayi Pelot. Then, under the cropped image of a valve, Translated by Arrate Hidalgo. The background image is a photo of an abandoned, derelict nuclear power plant by the sea, which extends in the back. On top, a dark teal band reads Aqueduct Press: Heirloom Books, 6
 
$16 (paperback)
$7.95 (e-book)
Buy Now

Memories of Tomorrow collects a set of vibrant and enigmatic visions that emanated from one of the most creative minds of contemporary Basque literature. Often unnoticed by the established canon, Mayi Pelot has been uncovered and championed in recent years as one of the first genre authors in the language. Her publications, despite their brief span—from 1982 to 1992—undeniably laid the groundwork for future generations of Basque science fiction writers.

This collection, the first book published by Mayi Pelot, includes six stories that take place in the same galaxy but at different times. Touching on subgenres such as social speculative fiction, the techno-thriller, and space opera, Memories of Tomorrow is, in essence, a poignant political commentary on the oppressive systems that rule our world and their practices of othering, neocolonialism, gentrification, and massive exploitation of natural resources. Pelot often focuses her lens on those questioning and resisting the actions of the powerful and points to the relationship with nature and one another as a healthy, sustainable alternative to our current world structure.

Reviews

“The five sci-fi shorts and one novella in this impressive collection from Pelot (1947–2016) explore the aftermath of a third world war. The flash fiction opener, ‘Miren,’ showcases Pelot’s ability to make a visceral emotional impact in only two pages. ‘Row, row,’ about a girl named Leyre attending a lesson on the futuristic Anti-Pollution Wall, builds on that first story in a devastating way, exploring the interconnectivity of individual trauma. The emotionally authentic ‘Feedback’ follows a Muslim man living in 2039. The standout is novella ‘The Exchange,’ in which an unfaithful man named Wotan pursues the mysterious being Erda, who lives beneath the planet Daleth. The tale is lush and immersive in its illustrative descriptions of other worlds and other beings, and contains the most beautiful prose of the entire collection. Hidalgo’s introduction, which provides fascinating context for Basque science fiction, lauds Pelot as an ‘innovator,’ and these six works prove her worthy of this praise. Readers will be delighted to dive in to Pelot’s oeuvre.” 

  —Publishers Weekly, Feb. 3, 2022

The translation of this book has been subsidized by the Etxepare Basque Institute.

Logo of the Etxepare Euskal Institutua, which represents a flower-like spiral with an "e" at its centre
Want to keep reading? Here is a sample.
New Title: Memories of Tomorrow by Mayi Pelot
View this email in your browser






This email was sent to <<Email Address>>
why did I get this?    unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences
Aqueduct Press · PO Box 95787 · Seattle, WA 98145-2787 · USA

Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp