Short Stories

Short Stories 

  • L’Appel Du Vide” is a near-future Singapore story about a mother trying to make sense of the death of her child in a decentralized, distributed society where everything – even death, has been gamified. First appeared in Fish Eats Lion Redux (Singapore: Epigram Books, Nov 2022) Editor: Jason Eric Lundberg
  • Carry that Weight“, my first work of climate fiction, is a short story about two brothers who run a regenerative aquaculture farm in the Philippine sea — and how they try to escape their family’s hyper-violent, crypto pirate past in a world where nation-states are failing due to disastrous climate change. It first appeared in Future Fiction Vol 106. Meteotopia: Futures from climate (in)justice. Published by CoFutures (University of Oslo) and Future Fiction (Rome), editors Bodhisattva Chattopadhyay, and Francesco Verso, and Ana Rüsche, Aug 2022. You can download the ePub for free here
  • The Easiest Way to Solve a Problem” is a short story about adding the consciousness of expat Filipino PMET workers to a massive corporate AI in Singapore. It appeared last April, 2022 in the book Get Luckier: An Anthology of Philippine and Singapore Writings   (Singapore: Squircle Line Press, 2022), edited by Migs Bravo Dutt, Claire Betita de Guzman, Aaron Lee Soon Yong, and Eric Tinsay Valles. Read it online here
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  • As If We Could Dream Forever“, is a near-future SF story. Set 150 years into Singapore’s future, this work deals with Automation, the concept of Free Will, teenage angst and compulsory National Service. This story was inspired by the work of pioneering Singapore novelist and dramatist, Goh Poh Seng, and the Filipino short story writer Gregorio Brilliantes. It first appeared in Vol. 17 No. 1 Jan 2018 of the Quarterly Literary Review of Singapore. You can read it here.
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  • “Father is the Blood, Mother is the Wine”, is a “bamboo punk” story set in a Pre-Hispanic Philippines about a young girl and a household god (called an Anito) that hides both the key to an ancient library and a frightening secret.  It first full version appeared in LONTAR Volume 9, Autumn 2017. An earlier version also appeared in The Philippines Graphic in March 2017 and in the anthology Steampunk Universe in January 2018 (as a shorter version of the story with a different ending called “My Father Is Made Of Light”).
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  • “Infinite Degrees of Freedom”, my first YA Story (featuring mythical Sigben monsters on a spaceship), was published in anthology Science Fiction: Filipino Fiction for Young Adults last June 2016.   It was later translated into Chinese and appeared in Science Fiction World‘s March 2017 issue.
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  • “Mene, Thecel, Phares”, an Alt.history story that may or may not be about Jose Rizal, Freikörperkultur, Uranian Poet-Assassins and Adolph Hitler’s mother was published in Philippine Speculative Fiction Volume X in May, 2016.
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“Picking a favorite here is impossible for me. But the last story in the collection, Brother to Space, Sister to Time by Filipino author Victor Fernando R. Ocampo, sticks in my mind. It is the most hard-science science fiction story in the collection, taking place, as it does, on the fringes of a black hole; and involving, as it does: time travel, tachyon particles, neural computer interfaces, hyperspace, rickety spaceships, and the whole range of fan-servicing verbal engineering one expects and enjoys. More than anything, “Brother to Space, Sister to Time,” tells the story of three Filipino siblings under stress, with an interstellar backdrop. In the exploration of alternative realities, Ocampo never loses touch with the idea of family and roots, literary and national.” – Eric Norris reviewing LONTAR Volume 6 for Singapore Poetry.

  • “The Old Blue Notebook”, a mystery tale about the Filipino diaspora in the UK and some mysterious men in black appeared in Daily Science Fiction in February, 2016.
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  • “Panopticon” , a Filipino cyberpunk revenge story, first appeared in Philippine Speculative Fiction Volume 9 in October 2014 (Editors: Andrew Drilon and Charles Tan). A longer version of this story also appeared in the Fixi Novo urban Trilogy Heat, Flesh  & Trash in March 2016. Here is a great review by Joel Wijisuria of the Star Malaysia.
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“Panopticon”, a sci-fi tale of rebirth and punishment by Victor Fernando R. Ocampo weaves an intricate narrative of a man who dies, only to find himself born again, disposed of by a vengeful ex-love, and doomed to repeat over and over. Ocampo’s world is vivid and technicolored and terrifying. A brilliant read.”  – Joel Wijesuria, reviewing the Fixi Novo Anthology Trash for Star Malaysia

  • “I m d 1 in 10”  , my experimental story inspired by Anicius Manlius Severinus Boëthius’ De Consolatione Philosophiae, first appeared in the July 2014 issue of The Future Fire (Editor: Djibril al-Ayad). It was written with Latin, L337, IM and SMS speak, emoticons and a Filipino argot called Jejemon. In 2015 it was anthologized in the Best New Singaporean Short Stories: Volume Two by Epigram Books. It has also been published by the critical SF magazine Big Echo (editor William Squirrell).
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“Victor Fernando R. Ocampo’s “I m d 1 in 10. What a state-of-the-art kick-in-the-ass for the genre!” – Ernest Hogan writing in The Future Fire.

  • “Blessed are the Hungry” , a Filipino space opera set on a generation ship, first appeared in Apex Magazine issue 62 in July 2014 (Editor: Sigrid Ellis), along with a short interview. The work was translated into Mandarin Chinese by Hu Shao Yan (one of the translators for George R. R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire) and was published in the March 2015 volume of Science Fiction World. It was reprinted once again in Eclectic Dreams, A Milford Anthology (Editors: J.W. Anderson, Pete W. Sutton, and Liz Williams) in 2023. Kiwi author Olivia Cade included this story in her analysis of Food & Horror: Short Stories and Transformation at Book Smugglers.
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“The other standout stories here for me are “Blessed are the Hungry, in which Victor Fernando R. Ocampo puts himself pretty firmly on my map of SF authors to watch (read that story and Andrea Johnson’s author interview and tell me I’m wrong)” – Lisa McCurrach reviewing Apex Magazine Issue 62  for Over The Effing Rainbow.

  • “Entanglement”, a gas-lighting SF love story in Seguin, Texas, first appeared in the second volume of LONTAR: The Journal of Southeast Asian Speculative Fiction (Editor: Jason Erik Lundberg, Math Paper Press) in May 2014
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  • “How my Sister Leonora Brought Home a Wife” , my SF tribute to the great Manuel E. Arguilla, first appeared in the inaugural issue of Lakeside Circus in March 2014 (Editor: Carrie Cuinn).
  • “A Secret Map of Shanghai” , an allegorical fantasy inspired by Tang Dynasty poetry and Rudyard Kipling’s “The White Man’s Burden”, first appeared in the 18 November 2013 issue of Strange Horizons (Editors:Brit Mandelo, An Owomoyela and Julia Rios)Podcast also available here  (Podcast Editor: Anaea LayCited in Lois Tilton’s 2013 Reviews in Review by Locus Magazine. This story also appears in Unconventional Fantasy: A Celebration of Forty Years of the World Fantasy Convention (Editors: Peggy Rae Sapienza and Bill Campbell) in November 2014.
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“‘A Secret Map of Shanghai’ by Victor Fernando R Ocampo: A symbolic history of the imperialist making of the city and its remaking as a dominant power. The god of Shanghai, having once been formed by his Western dominatrix goddess, is now in the ascendancy.  Recommended” – Lois Tilton, reviewing Strange Horizons, November 2013 issue for Locus.

  • “Synchronicity”, my initial stab at Weird Fiction, first appeared in issue #507 of Bewildering Stories online magazine in December 2012 (Editor: Don Webb). It won a Mariner Award in the short story category that same year. This story also appeared on the World SF Blog in May 2013 (Editor: Sarah Newton) and again in Outpouring: Typhoon Yolanda Relief Anthology (Editor: Dean Alfar) in January 2014.
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  • “Big Enough for the Entire Universe” , an apocalyptic disaster story set in Singapore, first appeared in the anthology Fish Eats Lion: New Singaporean Speculative Fiction November 2012 (Editor: Jason Erik Lundberg, Math Paper Press). This story was optioned by an award-winning Singaporean film maker. Principle photography was completed. Sadly, the movie remains stalled in post-production due to funding issues.  Review
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  • “Resurrection”, my first published work of fiction, appeared in the anthology Philippine Speculative Fiction Volume 6, September 2010 (Editors: Nikki Alfar and Kate Osias, Kestrel). It was listed as an honorable mention selection for Ellen Datlow’s “Best Horror of the Year” 2011. Subsequently it was published in e-book format by Flipreads in 2012. An updated version “Resurrection 2.0 “ first appeared in The Philippines Free Press, January 2012 (Editor: Joel M. Toledo). A slightly different version also appeared in the July 2013 edition of Expanded Horizons (Editor: Dash).
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