Appearances can be misleading, and nowhere is that more unsettling than in this darkly playful science fiction tale. And All The Girls Were Nude explores what happens when curiosity, secrecy, and technological ingenuity collide in the hands of someone the world has learned to ignore. What begins as a private indulgence quietly expands into something far larger, raising unsettling questions about privacy, desire, and the unintended consequences of unchecked invention.
This story balances satire and discomfort with a sharp edge, revealing how society reacts when a hidden obsession is suddenly exposed. It is humorous in places, unsettling in others, and always aware of the fine line between fascination and condemnation. Beneath its clever premise lies a cautionary tale about observation, power, and the dangers of believing that knowledge can remain harmless when kept secret.
Richard Magruder crafts the story with a confident narrative voice and a keen sense of irony. His work reflects a mid-century science fiction tradition that uses exaggerated situations to critique human behavior, social hypocrisy, and moral panic. And All The Girls Were Nude stands as a memorable example of how classic science fiction could be provocative, satirical, and uncomfortably revealing all at once.




















