Tag Archives: free

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!

Erotic science fiction and fantasy flash fiction advent calendar?!

We get email… some of which is unprintable, naturally, but some of which is more… well, I think I’ll just let this one speak for itself:

‘Tis the season for gift-giving and independent publisher Circlet Press is in the spirit. Each day of December up to the 23rd, a free story will appear at circlet.com in what the publisher calls their “Erotic Sci-Fi Advent Calendar.”

Just like the advent calendars which deliver a chocolate treat each day, circlet.com will have one delicious short story of erotic fantasy or erotic science fiction. Stories will only be up for 24 hours, though, so visitors must return each day to collect their next gift.

The selection will be as eclectic as the publisher, including all sexualities and orientations, and a range of science fiction and fantasy topics from vampires to artificial intelligence. Some of the stories will be from Circlet’s new line of ebook publications, others will be drawn from anthologies the publisher has produced over the past 16 years.

There you have it, folks. I swear this season gets weirder every year…

NEW FICTION: WILLPOWER by Jason Stoddard

I’m willing to bet a pretty big percentage of people reading this have harboured the fantasy of being an astronaut, even though you knew it was a virtually unattainable dream. But sometimes dreams can come true by the least expected route possible… even when those dreams are not necessarily your own.

Jason Stoddard is no stranger to the pages of Futurismic or numerous other science fiction publications, both online and off – and with good reason. In “Willpower” he walks the talk of his own ‘Positive SF’ manifesto, balancing old-school optimism and sensawunda with a plausible (and far from utopian) future setting. Enjoy!

Willpower

by Jason Stoddard

Michael Delgado needed something to do. Today. His last willfare job had ended last Friday, which meant tomorrow morning was contract breach. The foodcard would stop working, and the ever-efficient borgots of the Balboa Arms would be down to usher him out of his 300-square-foot studio apartment. Not that he’d miss it, with Van Nuys cranking to 105 today and him with only a swamp cooler.

He scanned quickly through the willfare crapwork and sinkers:

Job2309170342546

Dog walking, Cerritos area, 0.5D willfare credit (4 dogs, large, aggressive). ACCEPT >>

No way. Not for a half-day credit.

Job2309170342554

Street cleaning, crew of 16, Chinatown and surrounds, multiday contract. ACCEPT >>

(Currently 11 accepted)

Surrounds, as in southeast LA, no way.

Job2309170351565

Research assistant, UCLA medical campus, great status! Includes transpo and housing. Minimum 45-day contract (90 willfare creds), extensible to 90-days. Standard disclaimers. ACCEPT >>

And take a chance that the cancer they infect you with they might not be able to cure? Oh, no.

Michael Delgado frowned, the chant of the taxpayers echoing in his head. WE pay your salary, so you do what WE want. We want you to cut our grass, you get out here pronto! And Congress agreed. Needed for a smooth transition to a post-scarcity economy, they said. Allows them the dignity of productive work, they said. Gets them off the streets, they said. They who drove comfortably to jobs not-yet-outsourced in SUVs with large leases not-quite-paid.

And then:

Job2309170355443

Take my place on the Ares. 180 day contract. I’ll vouch for the full 720 willfare days, even if I have to pay ’em. I’m done. ACCEPT >>

Michael felt something like an electric shock as he eyeblinked on ACCEPT. Strange shivers worked up and down his spine. He heard something like a whisper, deep within his mind. He felt suddenly strong, powerful, alive.

Oh, no. Continue reading NEW FICTION: WILLPOWER by Jason Stoddard

Friday Free Fiction for 28th November

All is quiet on the blogosphere… at least until tomorrow, when the States have recovered from Thanksgiving, I expect! Still, in the meantime here’s some free fiction to keep you busy until the bloggers get their engines cranked back up to speed.

There’s nothing from the big two this week, so let’s get straight to the webzines:

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Afterburn SF presents “Gliese 581” by Lee Gimenez.

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News from Paolo Bacigalupi:

Thanks to Lou Anders at PYR Books, my short story “The Gambler” which appeared in the original anthology Fast Forward 2 is now available online for free reading at PYR’s website.

A great story by a great writer in a great anthology. If you follow just one link from this week’s Friday Free Fiction, let it be this one.

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Strange Horizons presents “Up In the Air” by Richard Larson

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Tor.com presents The Buried Pyramid by Jane Lindskold. (Download for registered users only, but that don’t cost you nuthin’, mister.)

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COSMOS Magazine presents “Loop” by Peter J Bentley“Being ‘born again’ and having the opportunity to live your life all over again sounds like a great idea – until it actually happens.”

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Electric Velocipede presents “Season of the Long Now” by Robert J Howe

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A handful via SF Signal, without whom we’d miss a great deal:

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And it just wouldn’t be a Friday without a little bit of Friday Flash Fiction, would it? Let’s see: Neil Beynon is “Remembering Lisa“, while Gaie Sebold is “Empty“.

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And that’s your lot, folks – your tip-offs and plugs are always welcome, though. I hope none of our American readers have mortally injured themselves by overindulging in seasonal NOM NOM NOM action, and that everyone has an equally great weekend.

Friday Free Fiction for 21st November

Here’s a suggestion: don’t read the news. It’ll only make you miserable, and there’s no point wasting emotional energy worrying about stuff that’s way beyond your control.

So why not read some free science fiction instead, eh? That’ll keep you distracted at no cost whatsoever! Get clicking…

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Manybooks has an old-school bit of satire in the form of “The Last American: A Fragment from The Journal of KHAN-LI, Prince of Dimph-Yoo-Chur and Admiral in the Persian Navy” by J A Mitchell

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At Apex Online:

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If you’re not yet experiencing a severe case of undead ennui, John Joseph Adams has unleashed some more free stories from his zombie anthology The Living Dead:

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At Subterranean Online:

Noted Steampunk aviatrix Cherie Priest debuts what she calls The Clockwork Century (“Combat dirigibles skulk across the sky and armored vehicles crawl along the land. Military scientists twist the laws of man and nature, and barter their souls for weapons powered by light, fire, and steam.”) in the novelette, “Tanglefoot”, the story of a gentle, tragic mad scientist and his boy assistant.

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Here’s a new free fiction start-up (downloadable PDF rather than in-browser HTML), Arkham Tales:

Presenting Issue #1 of Arkham Tales! 100 pages of the best weird fiction on the market right now, and all free for your reading pleasure!

This issue bears cover artwork by Ivan Green, and contains fiction by Mike W. Barr, Scott Bastedo, Steve Calvert, Robert Masterson, Benjamin W. Olson, Derek Rutherford, Jenny Schwartz, and Jeffery Scott Sims.

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Via Gwyneth Jones:

And now, six weeks before publication, & to celebrate the first sighting of a copy of the printed ARC on ebay, here’s Part 1 of [Jones’s forthcoming novel] Spirit set free again.

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Via Gareth L Powell, and many others:

The November issue of Concept Sci-Fi is now available to download as a free pdf file.

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Via John Jarrold:

Saxon Bullock has put the prologue and opening chapter of his wonderful SF novel, The Hypernova Gambit, up on his website.

Best. Author name. EVAR.

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Via The Scalzi:

The fabulous Sarah Zettel writes to inform me of BookViewCafe.com, a collaborative site filled with lots of fiction and other cool stuff, from a whole bunch of famous/interesting writers including Ursula Le Guin, Vonda McIntyre and Anne Harris

And Futurismic regular Nancy Jane Moore is involved on the organisational side as well, which is a fine thing. BVC has been added to the sidebar of justice, so go take a look.

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Via Paul McAuley:

I recently blogged a six-part illustrated short story, “Edna Sharrow”, here. I’ve now archived the whole story on the web site, under a Creative Commons license… go straight to the first part. Enjoy!

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Via Cheryl Morgan:

Kelley Eskridge has posted the full text of her novella, “Dangerous Space”, on her blog. This is one of her stories about Mars, a character whose gender is never specified. I am in awe of how Kelley manages this. It is also a really good story.

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Here’s a couple of things we’d have missed, but for the ceaseless vigilance and generosity of the gang at SF Signal:

  • The latest edition of Antipodean SF features fiction by Mark Farrugia, Kurt Kurchmeier, Jillian Moffatt, Richard Ridyard, Shaun A Saunders, Greg Wickenhofer, John Craig, PS Cottier, Adrian Gibb, and James C Clar.
  • A now-complete serialised novella from Alan BaxterA ‘Verse Full of Scum.

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As mentioned earlier in the week, Filipino genre fiction mavens Charles Tan and Mia Tijam have co-edited an entire virtual anthology of speculative fiction written in English by Filipino writers – a great way to expose new writers to an otherwise hard-to-access market.

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Finally, here’s a smattering of Friday Flash Fiction for you: Sarah Ellender displays her quintessential Britishness with “Tea and Vigilance“, while Gareth D Jones considers “The Blue Men

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That’s all, folks! Don’t forget to hit us up with your plugs, tip-offs and shout-outs. In the meantime, have the best weekend you can.