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Bite into blueberry pancakes with Silvia Moreno-Garcia in Episode 256 of Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Eating the Fantastic, Silvia Moreno-Garcia    Posted date:  June 20, 2025  |  No comment


It’s time for you to take a seat at the table for the second of three episodes of Eating the Fantastic recorded during last month’s Balticon. You’ve already had lunch with Compton Crook Award-winning writer Kemi Ashing-Giwa — and now it’s time for breakfast with Silvia Moreno-Garcia.

Moreno-Garcia is the author of a number of critically acclaimed novels, including Gods of Jade and Shadow (winner of the Sunburst Award for Excellence in Canadian Literature of the Fantastic and the Ignyte Award), Mexican Gothic (which won the Locus Award, British Fantasy Award, Pacific Northwest Book Award, Aurora Award, and Goodreads Award), and Velvet Was the Night (a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and the Macavity Award), plus many others. She writes in a variety of genres including fantasy, horror, noir and historical. 

Her short stories have appeared in such magazines as Uncanny, Lightspeed, Nightmare, Giganotosaurus, and Shimmer, and in such anthologies as The Mammoth Book of Cthulhu: New Lovecraftian Fiction, New Suns: Original Speculative Fiction by People of Color, Gods, Memes and Monsters: A 21st Century Bestiary, and others. She has edited several anthologies, including She Walks in Shadows (a World Fantasy Award winner, published in the USA as Cthulhu’s Daughters). Her most recently published novel is The Seventh Veil of Salome, set in 1950s Hollywood, and a new novel, the multigenerational horror saga The Bewitching, is due out next month.

We discussed how short stories helped her find her voice, the way a gross dream combined with a teen cemetery trip led to Mexican Gothic, her love for abandoned places, why she found Madame Bovary startling when she read it in high school, how to successfully write genres in which the reader is more aware of the tropes than the protagonist, the beauty to be found in flawed characters, how to make sure parallel storylines are equally interesting, one technique she admits doing which makes multiple types of reader angry, the difficulty of resisting branding, the reason the term magic realism is overused, and much more.

Here’s how you can join us for lunch at Baltimore’s Papermoon Diner —

1) Subscribe at Apple Podcasts — or wherever you choose to consume your podcasts — where I hope you’ll be tempted to sample a few of the 255 previous episodes.

2) Listen via the RSS feed of http://eatingthefantastic.libsyn.com/rss on the device of your choice.

3) Or simply use the embed below.

Here’s what you would have seen us nibbling had you been at the table at the Papermoon Diner —

Our Blueberry Pancakes
one photo to represent our matching orders

If you enjoyed this episode and want to support my mission of breaking bread with creators of the fantastic while letting you eavesdrop, there are several ways you can help bring this podcast to the attention of potential new listeners looking for science fiction, fantasy, horror, and comics ear candy —

One is to rate Eating the Fantastic on Apple Podcasts and like it on Facebook.

Also — you could tell your friends about the show by sending them a link to your favorite episode and letting them know what I’m doing here.

Finally — I hope you’ll consider becoming a supporter of Eating the Fantastic, and help this podcast continue.

You could make a small recurring monthly donation over at Patreon, where there are various perks involved depending on your level of support, such as access to a patrons-only blog, getting a shout-out on the show, stickers, postcards, and more.

Or if an ongoing level of commitment’s not for you, or if Patreon’s just not your thing, then consider tossing a couple of bucks in the tip jar instead and making a one-time donation of any size via Paypal.me.

Or you could head on over to https://ko-fi.com/eatingthefantastic and send me the funds to cover the cost of a cup of coffee.

Coming up two weeks from today, you’ll be able to sit in on my lunch with writer Samantha Mills, who won the Nebula, Locus, and Theodore Sturgeon Memorial awards for her short story “Rabbit Test,” and whose debut science fantasy novel, The Wings Upon Her Back, came out in 2024, winning the Compton Crook Award earlier this year.

Thanks for listening!





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