The title says it all; Sir Arthur C Clarke, living legend of science fiction, turns 90 on 16th December 2007 – that’s this coming Sunday. The Astronomical Association of Sri Lanka (where Clarke has been resident for many years) have set up a special blog where you can leave a message for the man himself. [Via SpaceElevatorBlog]
All posts by Paul Raven
Friday Free Fiction for 8th December
Having been doing FFF for a few months now, it seems the free fiction online quota works in bi-weekly cycles … after last week’s bumper crop, there’s a comparatively sparse selection this week.
But only comparatively – there’s got to be at least a week’s worth of reading among this little lot:
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A hefty selection of old-school material from Manybooks.net:
- “That Sweet Little Old Lady” by Randall Garrett (1959)
- “Viewpoint” by Randall Garrett (1960)
- “Anchorite” by Randall Garrett (1962)
- “Breakaway” by Stanley Gimble (1955)
- “A Matter of Importance” by Murray Leinster (1959)
- “The Leader” by Murray Leinster (1960)
- “The Mississippi Saucer” by Frank Belknap Long (1951)
- “A Filbert Is a Nut” by Rick Raphael (1959)
- “I Was a Teen-Age Secret Weapon” by Richard Sabia (1959)
- “The Big Fix” by George O. Smith (1959)
- “The Circle of Zero” by Stanley G. Weinbaum
- “Summit” by D.M. Reynolds
- “Old Man” by Daniel Keys Moran
- “A Martian Odyssey” by Stanley G. Weinbaum.
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Via Nick Mamatas, fiction editor for Clarkesworld:
… this month’s Clarkesworld theme is death and wrestling!
- Fiction: “The Buried Years” by Loreen Heneghan.
- Non-fiction: Steel Chair through the Looking Glass: The Fractured Fantasy World of Professional Wrestling by Jason R. Ridler.
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Subterranean Online keeps up its remorseless pace of output:
Now we’re on to the Winter 2008 issue, where the first few features are posted, including a brand new short story (actually, an excerpt from his novel, Black & White, by Lewis Shiner) and a column by SubPress favorite Joe R. Lansdale. In the coming weeks and months, look for new fiction by Michael Bishop, Rachel Swirsky, a novella by Thomas M. Disch, an audio of what just might be Charles Stross’ funniest story, and much more.
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And last but by no means least, the Friday Flash Fictioneers ride forth:
Neil Beynon is afraid of attics. Why? “Because“.
Gareth L Powell reminds us that, in space, no one can hear your stomach rumble: “The Long Walk Aft“.
(Both Neil and Gareth have stories in the current issue of Aphelion webzine, too, so go take a look – congratulations, guys.)
Martin McGrath is fully on board with the creepy themes this week … what’s that noise? “Scritch-Scritch“.
Shaun C Green takes a dark look at corporate control in “Terminator“.
And yours truly takes a look at a reaction to corporate control in “Father and Son“.
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That’s your lot for this week, ladies and gents. Don’t forget you can alert me to stories by you or anyone else and have them included here, as long as they’re free and legally available to read on the web. Just drop me a line.
Have a great weekend!
Some statistics about the publishing industry
FreelancingBlog has collected some statistics that should be of interest to any aspiring writers, of fiction or otherwise. It’s kind of a mixed bag – some of them are quite heartening, like this one:
“Book sales account for 25-30 billion dollars in annual revenue?”
While others make you realise that there’s a lot more to getting published than simply bashing out a manuscript:
“Out of every 10,000 children’s books [written], 3 get published.”
As the post says, you’ve got to have guts and perseverance if you want to make it through.
Any writers among Futurismic’s readers who’d care to share their experiences? [Image by dbdbrobot]
The good books: church converted into bookstore
Love books? Like baroque architecture? Then you’ll probably squee with delight at the thought of this Dominican church in Maastricht that has been repurposed as a bookstore. [Image credited to Roos Aldershoff; copied from linked article]
I wonder if they have the complete works of Richard Dawkins in stock?
SciVee – YouTube for science research
The title should say it all: via Warren Ellis (via Paul Di Filippo), I give you SciVee – a video-sharing community site devoted to the dissemination of scientific research.