Category Archives: Blog

Friday Free Fiction for 5th December

It’s the first Friday Free Fiction of the month, which means that lots of webzines have new issues full to bursting of good stuff for you to read. So let’s get to it, eh?

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Here’s a mixed bag of old and new from the nice folk at Feedbooks:

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New stories at Clarkesworld:

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New stories at Apex Online:

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Polu Texni presents “Running Free” by Mark Sherwood

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Strange Horizons presents “The Same Old Story” by Naomi Bloch

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One new piece and one classic at SpaceWesterns:

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New pieces at Lone Star Stories:

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An update from Subterranean Online:

… we’ve just posted a couple of treats for readers — “Spring Training,” by Mike Resnick, being the latest adventure starring everyone’s favorite scalawag, the Reverend Doctor Lucifer Jones, and “The Seed of Lost Souls“, part of the long sold out chapbook that includes the story that was to become Poppy Z. Brite’s acclaimed first novel.

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Fantasy & Science Fiction has posted Charles Coleman Finlay‘s “We Come Not to Praise Washington“. (This news via SF Signal; no-one has actually thought to blog this at F&SF as of yet, apparently. *shrug*)

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Tor.com presents “The Film-makers of Mars” by Geoff Ryman

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Via BoingBoing and SF Signal (and Futurismic reader OldMiser in the comments of my review of Fast Forward 2): the collaborative story “True Names” by Benjamin Rosenbaum and Cory Doctorow can now be found online for your reading delectation. It’s a long story with lots of crazy stuff in it, so strap yourself in for a wild ride.

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A message from Jake Freivald:

This issue of Flash Fiction Online has only one new piece of speculative fiction, this one a little fantasy called “Shelter”, though there are some other fresh pieces of different genres.

I also published a Classic Flash from 1960, though — one of my favorite early flash pieces. It’s called “Earthmen Bearing Gifts” by Fredric Brown.

Cheers, Jake!

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Here’s the stuff that we’d have missed if not for the fiction-sifting internet baleen of the SF Signal hivemind:

  • The Eldritch Dark [website] has a large collection of [Lovecraft contemporary] Clark Ashton Smith stories and poems for online reading as well as audio versions of some stories
  • Reflections Edge has its December issue out with fiction by Angela Ambroz, Stephanie Green, Huw Langridge, and K V Taylor

Plus the Signallers have a humongous list of the latest additions to the Free Speculative Fiction list site, which should keep you busy well past New Year’s.

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And last but not least, a fistful of Friday Flash Fiction:

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And there we have it – that should keep you busy for a while. In the meantime, send us your tips, plugs, blatant self-aggrandisement and digital brickbatsFuturismic‘s your site too, y’know. Have a great weekend!

US Army jumps on the Second Life bandwagon… just as it stops moving

I’m not sure whether to be amused or baffled by the news that – just as almost every other big organisation has given up on Second Life being anything more than a virtual playground – the United States Army is going to set up a recruitment station there. Is there a suitable military acronym for the sensation of having missed the boat… or (perhaps more aptly) having missed the point?

Sub-orbital tourism prices fall

Space tourism business RocketShip Tours offers 38 miles straight up into space for less than half the cost of Virgin Galactic‘s 62 miles. Hopefully this is the first of many tumbles down the supply demand curve towards mass market space tourism, from PhysOrg:

Per Wimmer, a Danish investment banker holds the first reservation for the Lynx sub-orbital flight expected to launch sometime in 2011.

Mr. Wimmer hedged his bet by plunking down the necessary reservation fee to Richard Branson´s Virgin Galactic and another rival for commercial space travel, Space Adventure. According to Wimmer, “It will be a real race to see which one goes up first”. The main difference between the XCOR Lynx is its ability to launch on any 10,000 foot runway with clear air space.

Just to remind us the future is nearly here, there is a computer generated (natch) video of what it’ll look like:

[via PhysOrg][image from Marxchivist on flickr]

Time to end prohibition?

marijuana traffic lightsDid you know that alcohol prohibition ended in the United States seventy-five years ago this month? Me neither; following on neatly from the Swiss legal heroin program story comes news of a US organisation called Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, whose name should tell you exactly what they’re advocating: legalised regulation of all drugs. Here’s their pitch:

After nearly four decades of fueling the U.S. policy of a war on drugs with over a trillion tax dollars and 37 million arrests for nonviolent drug offenses, our confined population has quadrupled making building prisons the fastest growing industry in the United States. More than 2.2 million of our citizens are currently incarcerated and every year we arrest an additional 1.9 million more guaranteeing those prisons will be bursting at their seams. Every year we choose to continue this war will cost U.S. taxpayers another 69 billion dollars. Despite all the lives we have destroyed and all the money so ill spent, today illicit drugs are cheaper, more potent, and far easier to get than they were 35 years ago at the beginning of the war on drugs.

They’ve got a lot of facts and figures there, that’s for sure… and they’ve also just released a report that claims ending the war on drugs will boost the US economy by at least $76 billion a year, in addition to putting criminal cartels out of business.

LEAP are far from the first to make similar claims, of course, but their point about the economic effects is well timed and calculated to appeal to the status quo. Whether it will have any effect of the entrenched ideas of policy makers remains to be seen… over here in the UK, our government is trying to reclassify cannabis on the same level as methamphetamine, so I’m not exactly hopeful for a spontaneous outbreak of common sense in the halls of power. [image by aforero]

Book publishing implosion – how can you help?

If you follow almost any industry or author blogs at all, you’ll be aware that things are looking pretty bleak in the world of book publishing right now, with resignations and lay-offs and all the rest.

Although it’s probably fair to say he has a certain degree of bias, Scalzi has some sensible advice for those of you who’d like to help mitigate the situation – buy more books. Even if you don’t care about the state of the publishing industry, they’re an affordable gift for a hard-times holiday season.