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Devour a seafood tower with Samantha Mills in Episode 257 of Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Eating the Fantastic, Samantha Mills    Posted date:  July 3, 2025  |  No comment


It’s time to return one last time to Balticon 2025 by taking a seat at the table for the third and final conversation I wrangled for you there. You’ve chatted and chewed with Kemi Ashing-Giwa and Silvia Moreno-Garcia, now it’s time for lunch with Samantha Mills.

Mills is a multiple award-winning author living in Southern California. Her debut science fantasy novel, The Wings Upon Her Back, came out in 2024 and won the Compton Crook Award for best SFFH debut in 2025. Her short stories have appeared in Uncanny Magazine, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Strange Horizons, Escape Pod, and other venues.

In addition to winning the Nebula, Locus, and Theodore Sturgeon Memorial awards for her short story “Rabbit Test” in 2023, Mills has also been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, made the Locus Recommended Reading List and the BSFA long list multiple times, and was included in the best-of anthologies The New Voices of Science Fiction and The Year’s Best Science Fiction & Fantasy 2023.

She graduated from the University of Santa Cruz with a B.A. in Pre- and Early Modern Literature, and received a Master’s in Information and Library Science from San Jose State University. In the other half of her life, she’s a trained archivist specializing in primary documents, with a particular focus on local historical societies. When she isn’t working, writing or taking care of children, she’s watching B-movies, binding books, and crocheting stuffed animals.

We discussed how the eighth novel she wrote became her award-winning debut novel, what she means when she says that novel was “kind of” outlined, the way fascism takes root in a society, the trickiness of writing a narrative with split timelines (and why she’s never doing it again), how being an archivist helped her write about a world where archiving matters, the secret to writing believable fight scenes, her technique for switching up writing time between novels and short stories, the early influence of Xena: Warrior Princess, how years of research resulted in her award-winning short story “Rabbit Test,” the way an early pregnancy test led to a worldwide frog apocalypse, navigating the difficulties of the modern short story market, the organizing principle of her upcoming collection, how she was able to power through her initial rejections, and much more.

Here’s how you can join us for lunch at Nick’s Fish House —

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 256 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 Nick’s Fish House —

Samantha and I shared the Cold Seafood Platter, which consists of —

A difficult thing to photograph! But I hope these will give you some sense of the environment in which we spent our meal —

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, in the first of three episodes recorded during the Nebula Awards weekend, you’ll be able to have Kansas City BBQ with Aimee Ogden, whose debut novella, Sun-Daughters, Sea-Daughters was a Nebula finalist, and whose latest novella, Starstruck, was released last month.

Thanks for listening!





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