Rachel Swirsky received an MFA in fiction from the Iowa Writers Workshop, and has been nominated for the Hugo, Locus and World Fantasy Awards, and twice won the Nebula Award. She recently moved to Portland, Oregon where she is currently in love with the rain (though aware she might not be later). Her books include Placed into Abyss (Mise en Abyse) and A Memory of Wind.
Swirsky's slice-of-life UBI stories present just a few possible effects of this hotly debated topic. Without either political rhetoric or exhortation, these brief glimpses of other lives give readers the chance to see what might be in a world with a social safety net. Highly recommended for readers of political and social science-oriented SF. --Library Journal (starred review) [A] thoughtful novel comprising four interwoven stories framed by the near-future implementation of Universal Basic Income. . . .Fans of plausible political speculative fiction should check this out. --Publishers Weekly Praise for Rachel Swirsky I don't think it's any secret that I think she's one of the best speculative fiction writers of the last decade. -- John Scalzi Rachel Swirsky is among the most talented science fiction/fantasy short story writers working today-one of the new generation that's transforming the genre through a combination of inspiration, renovation, and fresh approaches. --Jeff VanderMeer Rachel's stories are super-smart and gorgeously written. It's [a short blurb], but it has the virtue of being true. --Ann Leckie Swirsky's crisp prose and insightful vision draw the reader in, and her work will amply reward both casual reading and close attention. --Publisher's Weekly starred review on How the World Became Quiet