Sriduangkaew began publishing short fiction in 2012, with "Courtship in the Country of the Machine Gods", and established a reputation for herself with a string of high-profile short stories in
Clarkesworld Magazine and elsewhere, which led to her nomination for the John W. Campbell Award. Her first long-form publication was the
urban fantasy novella Scale-Bright, published in 2014. A follow-up to her three
Sun-Moon Cycle stories, it is a love story about a young woman from Hong Kong who has to rescue her sister from Heaven. Reviewing the novella for
Tor.com, Niall Alexander described it as "an achievement without equal", appreciating its "delicately drawn characters", "affecting narrative", and the author's prose skills. Her second novella,
Winterglass, was published in 2017. It is a
science fantasy retelling of the story of
the Snow Queen. A
Publishers Weeklys reviewer considered that the "promising novella" provided "variations on the theme of strong female characters" but was marred by an "uneven plot and some missed opportunities for complex worldbuilding". Her third novella,
And Shall Machines Surrender, was published in 2019. It is a
science fiction story focusing on artificial intelligences and their relationships to humanity. Reviewing the novella in
The Future Fire,
J. Moufawad-Paul wrote: "
And Shall Machines Surrender is the perfect example of how much can possibly be packed into a novella. The equal depth of style, story, characterization, and world-building is quite striking"; and, "Due to the strength of
And Shall Machines Surrender — its clarity and intricacy, its ability to compress complexity into a minimalist structure — it is almost criminal that Sriduangkaew is not a household name". ==Online activity==