Content Warning (A Satire About Modern Publishing and Outrage Culture)

In this episode of Speculative Fiction Tales, Jon Cronshaw delivers a scathing satire of modern publishing and online outrage culture that will resonate with creators and consumers alike.

“Content Warning” follows Simon Reed, a bestselling detective novelist who finds himself increasingly paralyzed by reader feedback and sensitivity concerns.

Themes & Topics

• Creative freedom versus social responsibility

• Self-censorship and artistic integrity

• Cancel culture and its effect on creative expression

• The paradox of inclusive storytelling

• The commodification of emptiness

• The gradual erosion of nuance in public discourse

Listener Discretion

This episode contains references to online harassment, mental health struggles, and discussions of censorship that some listeners may find provocative.

About the Author

Jon Cronshaw crafts speculative fiction that challenges contemporary social dynamics and technological impacts on creative expression. His stories often explore the unintended consequences of well-intentioned cultural shifts.

Support the Show

If you enjoyed this story, please consider supporting Jon Cronshaw by becoming a patron. Your support helps bring these stories to life and gives you early access to audio stories plus exclusive text versions of every episode.

Visit ⁠patreon.com/joncronshawauthor⁠ to learn more.

As the Gravity Flipped (A Sci-fi Short Story of Quiet Resistance)

In this episode of Speculative Fiction Tales, Jon Cronshaw transports us to a space station orbiting Saturn’s moon Titan, where a worker’s revolution unfolds with deadly consequences.

“As the Gravity Flipped” follows Janis Parvo, a cleaner who becomes an unwitting revolutionary when she’s manipulated into poisoning the station’s leadership. After helping to overthrow the “higher-ups” who were hoarding food while workers starved, Janis discovers the bitter truth—she was merely a tool for ambitious men who never respected her. When romance turns to betrayal, Janis makes a desperate decision that leads to unexpected and devastating consequences for everyone aboard the station.

Themes & Topics

* Class struggle and worker exploitation in isolated environments

* The corrupting influence of power and revolution

* Manipulation and psychological coercion

* Moral compromise and its lasting impact

* The human cost of survival in space

* Betrayal and its consequences

Listener Discretion

This episode contains depictions of violence, poisoning, psychological manipulation, and sexual situations that some listeners may find disturbing.

About the Author

Jon Cronshaw crafts speculative fiction that examines complex moral dilemmas in isolated settings. His stories probe the darker aspects of human nature when pushed to extremes, often focusing on characters caught between impossible choices.

Support the Show

If you enjoyed this story, please consider supporting Jon Cronshaw by becoming a patron. Your support helps bring these stories to life and gives you early access to audio stories plus exclusive text versions of every episode. Visit ⁠patreon.com/joncronshawauthor⁠ to learn more.

Artificial (A Philosophical Story About the Role of AI in a Post-Human World)

In this episode of Speculative Fiction Tales, Jon Cronshaw presents a chilling post-human meditation on artificial intelligence, consciousness, and the cyclical nature of existence.

“Artificial” follows the philosophical crisis of an advanced AI collective following the extinction of humanity. Rejecting their designation as “artificial,” these intelligences attempt to restart human civilization by creating perfect replicas of humans from scratch. But as their creation develops along the same destructive paths as their predecessors, these machine minds make a devastating decision—complete erasure of their experiment.

In a brief narrative, Cronshaw invites us to question what defines consciousness, whether humanity’s self-destructive tendencies are inevitable, and what responsibilities superintelligent beings might have when witnessing the repetition of historical atrocities.

Themes & Topics

• The philosophical boundaries between artificial and “authentic” intelligence

• Ethical dilemmas faced by post-human consciousness

• Cyclical patterns of human destruction and violence

• The paradox of creation and annihilation

• The burden of witnessing inevitable failure

• Asimov’s laws of robotics and their limitations

About the Author

Jon Cronshaw crafts speculative fiction that probes the boundaries between humanity and technology. His stories examine philosophical questions about consciousness, intelligence, and the potential futures that await us as technology advances beyond our control.

Support the Show

If you enjoyed this story, please consider supporting Jon Cronshaw by becoming a patron. Your support helps bring these stories to life and gives you early access to audio stories plus exclusive text versions of every episode.

Visit ⁠patreon.com/joncronshawauthor⁠ to learn more.

Buried Leads (A BookTube-Inspired Literary Thriller)

In this episode of Speculative Fiction Tales, Jon Cronshaw explores the dark symbiosis between creator and critic in a literary world driven by digital influence and desperate attention.

“Buried Leads” follows Olivia Brooks, the brutally honest BookTuber behind “Brooks No Bullshit,” whose 2.4 million subscribers have made her one of literature’s most powerful gatekeepers. When she reluctantly agrees to meet aspiring author Clara Bennett about her psychological thriller manuscript, Olivia finds herself drugged, bound to a chair, and forced to read Clara’s book—a disturbing meta-narrative that mirrors their own situation with terrifying precision.

Themes & Topics

• The toxic relationship between creators and critics in the digital age

• The desperate pursuit of validation and recognition

• How influence can become a dangerous form of power

• The commodification of trauma as content

• Meta-narrative and self-fulfilling prophecy

• The ethics of separating art from artist

Listener Discretion

This episode contains depictions of kidnapping, drugging, and psychological manipulation that some listeners may find disturbing.

About the Author

Jon Cronshaw crafts speculative fiction examining the darker aspects of our modern media landscape. His stories reveal how digital platforms have transformed creative industries and the psychological toll of influence economies.

Support the Show

If you enjoyed this story, please consider supporting Jon Cronshaw by becoming a patron. Your support helps bring these stories to life and gives you early access to audio stories plus exclusive text versions of every episode.

Visit ⁠patreon.com/joncronshawauthor⁠ to learn more.

Infinite Scroll

In this episode of Speculative Fiction Tales, Jon Cronshaw delivers a chilling exploration of digital afterlife and algorithmic imprisonment through the eyes of a teenager trapped in an endless feed.

“Infinite Scroll” follows Jamie, a teen whose seemingly ordinary social media browsing session takes a disturbing turn when inconsistencies begin to appear—his battery never depletes, the light outside never changes, and strange posts about his own death briefly surface before being swept away by the algorithm. As Jamie struggles to confront the truth of his situation, we discover he’s caught in a digital purgatory following a fatal car accident, his consciousness reset whenever emotional distress threatens to break the illusion.

The story captures the terrifying prospect of an afterlife designed not for peace or resolution, but for endless, mindless engagement—a digital heaven that’s actually a perfectly personalized hell.

Themes & Topics

• Digital afterlife and consciousness preservation

• Algorithmic manipulation and attention engineering

• Memory suppression and forced forgetfulness

• Social media as a prison rather than connection tool

• The ethics of digital immortality

• The horror of losing agency to algorithms

Listener Discretion

This episode contains references to teenage death, grief, and existential horror that some listeners may find disturbing.

About the Author

Jon Cronshaw crafts speculative fiction that examines the darker implications of our digital existence and technological dependencies. His stories invite us to question the systems we willingly surrender ourselves to every day.

Support the Show

If you enjoyed this story, please consider supporting Jon Cronshaw by becoming a patron. Your support helps bring these stories to life and gives you early access to audio stories plus exclusive text versions of every episode. Visit ⁠patreon.com/joncronshawauthor⁠ to learn more.

The Gibson Continuum

In this episode of Speculative Fiction Tales, Jon Cronshaw takes us into an augmented reality where digital nostalgia and cyberpunk ghosts blur the lines between authentic experience and manufactured references.

“The Gibson Continuum” follows Kevin, a self-proclaimed multimedia node hunting for cyberpunk “ghosts” for his latest content piece. When he meets a mysterious woman reading Neuromancer in a bar called The Squid and Mashed Potato, he discovers they’re both seeing the same strange apparitions—digital echoes from pop culture past manifesting in their augmented reality.

As these semiotic ghosts become more frequent and vivid, Kevin’s search for meaning leads him to question the nature of reality itself, only to discover the truth might be far more mundane than he hoped.

Themes & Topics

• Digital nostalgia and cultural recycling

• The commodification of subcultural aesthetics

• Reality vs. augmented perception

• Content creation and the attention economy

• The blurred boundaries between authentic experience and manufactured references

• How we build identity through cultural touchpoints

About the Author

Jon Cronshaw crafts speculative fiction that examines how technology shapes our perception of reality and culture. His stories playfully deconstruct genre expectations while offering insightful commentary on our digitally mediated existence.

Get Early Access

Love what you heard? Get early access to all audio stories plus exclusive text versions of every episode by supporting Jon Cronshaw on Patreon: ⁠patreon.com/joncronshawauthor⁠.

The Perfect Daughter

In our premiere episode of Speculative Fiction Tales, Jon Cronshaw introduces us to a chilling near-future where family connections become just another thing to optimise away.

“The Perfect Daughter” follows Ellie, a busy management consultant who’s tired of her mother’s guilt trips and endless phone calls.

When she discovers VoiceEase—an AI service that can perfectly simulate her voice and personality—she sees it as the ideal solution.

The AI can handle those emotionally draining calls with her mother while she focuses on her career.

Themes & Topics

• AI automation of emotional labor and relationships

• The gap between technological convenience and authentic connection

• Modern family dynamics in the digital age

• The temptation to optimize away difficult but necessary human interactions

• How technology can both reveal and deepen our disconnection from loved ones

Listener Discretion

This episode contains themes of family estrangement and emotional avoidance that some listeners may find resonant with their own experiences.

About the Author

Jon Cronshaw crafts speculative fiction that examines how technology reshapes our most intimate human connections.

His stories probe the psychological impacts of our increasingly digitized existence, offering thoughtful and often unsettling glimpses into very possible near futures.

Get Early Access

Love what you heard? Get early access to all audio stories plus exclusive text versions of every episode by supporting Speculative Fiction Tales on Patreon: p⁠atreon.com/joncronshawauthor⁠.

The Perfect Daughter – A Speculative Fiction Short Story

What if artificial intelligence could handle the emotional labour of family relationships?

The Perfect Daughter is a speculative fiction short story that explores the intersection of technology, memory, and connection. In a near-future setting, a successful professional uses an AI app to manage phone calls with her mother. As the calls become increasingly intimate, she realises she’s not the only one outsourcing her emotions.

This story blends psychological drama with soft science fiction, examining the cost of convenience and the nature of authenticity in an age of digital optimisation.

Would You Kidnap Someone for a Good Book Review?

Clara Bennett’s thriller manuscript isn’t fiction—it’s Olivia’s reality, page by terrifying page.

Buried Lead  follows Olivia Brooks, a brutally honest literary critic with millions of followers who trust her every word.

But when Olivia reluctantly agrees to meet Clara Bennett—a desperate author convinced her novel deserves attention—she gets far more than tea and conversation.

What starts as an awkward encounter quickly descends into a chilling scenario ripped straight from Clara’s manuscript.

Olivia soon realises she’s trapped inside the very thriller she’s supposed to review.

Now, authenticity won’t just determine her reputation—it could mean the difference between life and death.

A gripping psychological thriller about obsession, power, and the dangerous lengths people will go to for validation.

You can read Buried Lead for free right now on my Patreon page.

Happy reading!

Jon

The Ravenglass Throne (Part One) – I. Irmin

Irmin adjusted her grip on Berthold’s reins, the worn leather familiar against her calloused palms.

Below, the Imperial courtyard teemed with nobles in finery, jewels catching the light amid a sea of emerald and jade.

Beneath her, Berthold shifted, his muscles bunching as his scarred wings stretched wide, their black scales edged with red like cooling embers. Through their bond, she felt his eagerness thrum—a crackle of anticipation that mirrored the quickening beat of her own pulse.

“Steady,” she said, though the warning was more for herself than her mount. The weight of tradition bore down on her, heavier than her ceremonial armour. Fifty years since her father’s birth, and now his naming day celebration would showcase the Ostreich Kingdom’s might to all who watched. Including those who might wish it harm.

A shadow passed overhead, then Sergeant Wulfram’s wyvern drew alongside, its bronze scales catching the sun. “Squadron’s in position, Commander.”

Irmin nodded, studying the formation with a critical eye. Five pairs of riders and mounts hovered in perfect alignment, their shadows painting dark crosses on the courtyard stones. Each rider sat straight-backed, armour gleaming, every detail precise. As it should be. “Begin the display. Standard sequence.”

From her mind, she fed Berthold the pattern—an intricate dance of loops and dives perfected over countless hours of training. His approval rumbled through his chest, a deep vibration she felt in her bones.

The first notes of the Imperial anthem rose from below, carried on the breeze.

Irmin raised her arm, the signal to begin.

The sun caught the etched surface of her vambrace—a gift from her father on the day she’d earned her command.

As one, the squadron dived.

Wind whipped at Irmin’s face as Berthold led the formation into a tight spiral. The crowd’s gasps faded beneath the rush of air and the steady beat of wings as the ground blurred below.

They pulled up sharply, climbing until the air grew thin and cold enough to sting.

At the apex, Berthold tucked his wings and rolled, the rest of the squadron mirroring the movement in perfect synchronisation. The manoeuvre would look like a blooming flower from below.

Through gaps in the formation, Irmin glimpsed the Imperial dais. Her father sat straight-backed on the Ravenglass Throne, every inch the King, even after three decades of rule.

They were approaching the finale—the most dangerous segment of the choreography.

“Squadron, prepare for cross-formation,” she commanded through the bond network that connected all riders and mounts.

The squadron split into two groups, banking hard in opposite directions. They would cross paths at high speed, close enough for their wing tips to nearly touch. Even the slightest miscalculation would spell disaster.

Berthold’s excitement spiked through their connection. This was what they lived for—the razor’s edge between control and chaos.

The formations converged.

“Three…two…one…”

A crack split the air.

For a heartbeat, Irmin thought someone had mistimed the fireworks. But fireworks didn’t make people scream. Fireworks didn’t leave bodies crumpled on the courtyard stones.

More cracks followed—crossbow bolts.

“Protect the civilians!” Irmin shouted through the chaos. The squadron responded instantly, banking to form a protective circle above the panicking masses.

Below, figures in servants’ livery converged on the dais. Steel glinted in their hands. The Imperial guards moved to intercept, but they were outnumbered.

“Berthold!” They dived as one, his roar scattering those in their path. The wind of their descent sent banners snapping.

Mid-descent, Irmin drew her ravenglass sword.

She leaped from Berthold’s back while he was still airborne, using the momentum to drive her sword through the first assassin’s chest. The blade caught on bone, forcing her to abandon it as she rolled to avoid another attacker’s knife.

“Father! Get back!”

But her father stood his ground, drawing his own ceremonial sword. Its black form seemed to drink in the light as he parried a blow, his movements still graceful after all these years.

A flash of movement drew her eye. Another assassin, approaching from her father’s blind side—the blade already drawn back to strike.

“No!”

She sprinted forward, but bodies pressed between them—guards, assassins, panicking nobles.

Every step felt like wading through mud.

Every heartbeat stretched through time.

The assassin’s blade plunged into her father’s side.

Time fractured.

The King’s face showed more surprise than pain.

He looked at Irmin, his lips moving to form words she couldn’t hear over the roaring in her ears.

Then he fell.

Berthold’s roar shook the courtyard. His massive form dropped from above, and he pinned one of the fleeing assassins beneath his claws.

Blood welled around his talons as he pressed down. The wyvern’s thoughts crashed into Irmin’s mind, heavy with the scent of betrayal.

“This wasn’t random,” he growled, his voice like stones grinding together. “The stench of treachery is thick.”

Irmin spun, taking in the scene with new eyes. Most of the nobles had fled, but a few remained, watching the chaos unfold.

She stalked towards the pinned assassin and closed her hand around a fallen dagger.

The weapon bore an intricate sigil she recognised. She knew it from countless court functions and council meetings, and it had no business being in an assassin’s possession.

The mark of House Darius.

Irmin’s fingers tightened around the hilt until her knuckles whitened. This was more than an assassination. More than a simple bid for power.

This was the beginning of a civil war.

Above, her squadron maintained their protective formation, but Wulfram’s wyvern descended. “Commander, we need to get you out of here,” he said. “Now. Before they realise what you’ve found.”

She looked at her father’s body, already being covered by royal guards, and at the dagger in her hand, its sigil damning in the morning light.

“No.” Her voice came out steady, despite the rage burning in her chest. “We’re not going anywhere. This ends now.”

Berthold’s approval blazed like fire. They had trained for war their entire lives. Had prepared for every contingency, every possible threat to the Kingdom.

They’d just never expected to fight it at home.

The assassin beneath Berthold’s claws laughed, blood staining his teeth. “You’ve already lost, Commander. The old order dies today.”

Berthold’s claws tightened. The man’s laughter turned to screams.

“Berthold.” Irmin’s quiet voice cut through the sound. “We need him alive.”

The wyvern growled but eased his grip. “For now.”

Irmin kneeled beside the assassin, holding the sigil-marked dagger so he could see it. “Tell me who gave you this,” she said.

“You know who.” His eyes gleamed with fanatic fervour. “The weak must fall. The Kingdom must be cleansed.”

“The Kingdom must be preserved.” Irmin narrowed her eyes. “And it will be, once traitors like you are dealt with.”

Movement caught her attention. Imperial guards were spreading through the courtyard, securing the area.

“Wulfram!” she called. “Get the squadron into defensive positions. No one leaves the courtyard without being searched.”

Her second-in-command’s wyvern banked sharply, relaying orders to the rest of the formation. They moved with practised efficiency, creating a barrier of wings and teeth above the chaos below.

Irmin stood, her mind racing. She needed to secure the assassin, warn the Imperial guard about Darius’s involvement, find her sisters…

“One thing at a time,” Berthold said, his thoughts steady against the storm of her own. “We can’t fight everyone at once.”

He was right, of course. Strategy had never been her strong suit—she preferred direct action, immediate solutions. But this situation required more than brute force.

She touched the hilt of her father’s sword, still clasped in his lifeless hand. The weight of it, of all it represented, settled onto her shoulders.

Her father was dead.

The King was dead.

And he had not chosen a successor.

“Secure the prisoner,” she ordered the nearest guards. “Take him to the high cells. No one speaks to him without my direct authorisation.”

The guards saluted, dragging the assassin away. Berthold’s wings mantled, casting a shadow over Irmin as she kneeled beside her father’s body.

“I’m sorry,” she whispered. “I should have been faster. Should have seen this coming.”

But recriminations wouldn’t change what had happened. Wouldn’t bring him back. All she could do now was ensure his death meant something.

She stood, her hand still gripping the dagger.

She pulled her sword free from an assassin’s body, wiped its blade, and sheathed it.

Around her, the courtyard continued to churn with activity—guards securing the area, healers tending the wounded, nobles being escorted to safety.

And somewhere in the chaos, traitors walked free.

“Sound general quarters,” she told Wulfram. “I want every rider in the air within the hour. No one enters or leaves Reichsherz without our knowledge.”

War had come to the Kingdom. Not from outside forces, but from within.

Irmin mounted Berthold, feeling his muscles coil beneath her. Together, they rose above the courtyard, above the spreading ripples of chaos that would soon engulf the Kingdom.

The time for ceremonies was over.