Tag Archives: online

Friday Free Fiction for 15 February

Roll up, roll up – get your free fiction right here!

***

A short selection this week from ManyBooks.net:

***

In connection to Manybooks.net, I received an email from the intriguingly-named Argonautica:

“I’ve been reading and reviewing the free fiction released at Project Gutenberg and Manybooks.net (Futurismic’s Free Friday Fiction turned me on to it!) at Free Speculative Fiction.

I became frustrated when I couldn’t find out any information about the (often forgotten) stories online, and consequently had a difficult time picking out stories to read, so I’ve been reviewing them and providing a synopsis as a guide for readers. I only have time to catch maybe 2/3 of them, and I don’t claim my reviews are great literature, but I figure something is better than nothing.

Anyway, I hope you find the site useful.”

Sounds like an interesting resource – thanks, Argonautica!

***

Issue 12 of Apex Digest has been posted and features fiction from Sara King and Jason Sizemore, interviews with Jeremy Shipp, Sara King, and David Wong, and a handful of reviews.

***

You probably already know about Tor‘s free ebooks mailing list, as it has been blogged by many sites more eminent than Futurismic, plus dugg, slashdotted and all the rest.

You might not have heard about the sweepstake to win an Asus EEE that you get entered into by signing up, though – I’ll let Scalzi explain the details, as it’s one of his books going out next week.

Apparently the prize is only on offer to US residents – the rest of us just have to settle for totally free DRM-clean PDF versions of some bestselling science fiction novels every week.

I don’t feel too cheated, myself – but if someone wants to send me an Asus EEE anyway, that would be very kind. 🙂

***

An email arrived from Jetse de Vries, one of the Interzone Fiction Editors. He’s a writer in his own right, too, and Hub Magazine have just republished his story “Transcendence Express” as part of their most recent free downloadable issue.

Hub Magazine will email you their weekly PDF zine, if you like – go sign up on their website.

***

I had a brief email from Shira Lipkin to say that she occasionally posts short fiction pieces on her LJ. How often, and what sort, she didn’t mention – so you’ll just have to go and see for yourself!

***

A new arrival in the sidebar listings of other places that provide free fiction is Dog Versus Sandwich, which tags itself as “a webbed zine”. It looks pretty new, but they seem to be publishing stuff at a pretty fast clip. Go see what you think!

***

Free science fiction comics action! The endearingly irascible Warren Ellis launches Freakangels today.

Freakangels is a completely free web-published comic written by Ellis and (beautifully) drawn by Paul Duffield.

As if a free comic written by Warren Ellis wasn’t inducement enough, here’s three more reasons to go take a look:

  • it’s set in a flooded near-future London;
  • it stars a tough but pretty girl who wears fishnet stockings;
  • the girl in fishnets FLYS A STEAM-POWERED GYROCOPTER.

That last bit is what the marketing people call the USP, I believe. Works for me – here’s episode 1.

***

Before we delve into the weekly flash fiction selection, I should take the time to point out another new addition to the sidebar of justice – 365 Tomorrows publishes a sub-600 word science fiction story every single day, and has been doing so for a couple of years now.

***

And here we have the Friday Flash Fictioneers!

For your delectation and delight this week, we give you:

Jay Lake‘s in convention mode, so he gets a free pass! But here’s his piece from last week: “Feghoot in Uruk

And finally, Dr Ian Hocking has another little slice available in the form of “Stone Sun” – but again with the random timing. I think I’ll email him and get him on board with the schedule …

***

That’s your lot for this week. Do remember we’re always looking for your tip-offs and blatant self-plugging efforts; the Staff page is temporarily devoid of email addresses (in an attempt to cool down the Futurismic servers from an overload of Russian \/14gr/\ spam), but we’re going to have a neat little contact form set up in a few days time.

Until then, happy reading!

Fiction returns to Futurismic in March!

Yes indeed – we’ve been promising it for ages, and now we’re going to make good on that promise.

Futurismic will start publishing fiction again in March 2008!

Monday 3rd March, to be precise – and on the first weekday of each month after that, as well. Between now and then there will be a few other changes taking place, and after the fiction you’ll see the return of our non-fiction columns as well.

Those of you reading now who’ve stuck with us through the last year or so without fiction, you have my sincere gratitude – we’re going to make sure that Futurismic comes back as good as before, if not better.

Those of you who’ve started reading relatively recently, I hope you’ll find that Futurismic‘s fiction output gives you more reason to come back regularly. We pick stories that match the sort of content we blog about – so if you find the daily topics interesting, there’s good odds you’ll enjoy the fiction too.

There will be more news and more developments to come in the next few weeks; as the new editor-in-chief here at Futurismic, I’m really excited about the prospects ahead of us, and I hope you will be as well.

Stick around – it’s going to be a great trip. 🙂

Friday Free Fiction for 8th February

It’s the highlight of your week! It’s the blog-post that you seek! It strips the breath out of your lungs and makes your knees go weak! It’s … Friday Free Fiction!

(OK, so maybe I’ve been a little short on sleep this week. Don’t mind me – the links are good even if the filler isn’t, right? 🙂 )

***

Manybooks.net provides us with stories from the really old-school …

…to the new-school:

***

Alastair Reynolds, in case you’re not familiar with the name, is one of Britain’s top-grade space opera writers. He’s just made an excerpt from House of Suns, his latest novel, available to read on his website.

***

Time moves so fast – there’s already another issue of Clarkesworld Magazine!

This one has fiction from Stephen Graham Jones and Alexander Lumans; non-fiction from Richard Bowes, and Futurismic alumni Tobias Buckell interviewing Catherynne M. Valente.

***

From Edward Schubert (via Slushmaster, and also by email from Dutch man-mountain and Interzone fiction editor Jetse de Vries):

To Readers of Science Fiction and Fantasy everywhere,

When you have something great, you want everyone to know. So you tell people about it. You share it. You pass it along to friends everywhere. Well, that’s what we’re doing with InterGalactic Medicine Show. We want to make sure everyone has had a chance to check out what we’re doing, so we’re offering up a sampling of our stories – for free.

During the month of February we are going to make one story from each of our first four issues available at no charge. Two stories will be set free on February 1st, and two more on February 15th. Just visit www.intergalacticmedicineshow.com and explore the table of contents; the free stories will be clearly marked.

What are you waiting for? Go take a look!

***

Steven Brust emailed to tell me that his entire Firefly novel My Own Kind of Freedom is available on his website.

***

The BBC has let loose a whole bunch of free Doctor Who eBooks at their website – the old-school ones, too (much better than the latest incarnation, IMHO – though YMMV).

***

Free audio fiction (Geordie style): the Starship Sofa‘s latest audio story is Pat Murphy‘s “Going Through Changes“.

***

Well, look at us getting all cosmopolitan! We received our first FFF submission from Denmark from Lise Andreason: “A Meeting“.

***

Friday Free Fiction just wouldn’t be the same with the Friday Flash Fictioneers, now would it?

And I’m immensely proud to announce that Jay Lake appears to have taken me up on my invitation to join in. However, due to the wonders of timezones, it appears he posts his work long after this UK-based editor has gone to bed.

But so what if we link them a week later? Here’s last week’s offering: “Passive Voices” by Jay Lake.

(The good Mr Lake also let loose a poem entitled “Evolution In Action” this week, which I don’t think is quite as bad as he’s making it out to be.)

Another guest appearance emerged last Sunday from Dr Ian Hocking in the form of “The Pilgrim” – no idea if he’s going regular with flash or if that was just a one off. We’ll keep you posted.

Which brings us to the usual suspects: Gareth D Jones is caught in a “White-Out“, while Neil Beynon is waiting until “After The Rain” and Gareth L Powell is headed for “Woomera“.

Greg O’Byrne thinks he has located “Nirvana“, Shaun C Green has written a “Love Story” and Dan Pawley has been “Found In Evidence“.

And finally, yours truly found himself with an “Unwanted Passenger“.

***

And there you have it – that should keep you busy for a little while, I’m guessing. In the mean time, don’t forget to send us your tips and notifications about free fiction in the wild – blatant self-pimping more than welcome.

Have a great weekend!

Friday Free Fiction for 1st February

How alliterative a title is that, eh? 😉

Alliterative the date may be, but it’s not the richest haul of free reads we’ve had. Still, there’s plenty enough here to keep you entertained for seven days …

***

A few from Manybooks.net:

***

Another email from the sharp-eyed and well-connected (not to mention fabulously-named) Cole Kitchen:

“Another e-zine for the list: Allegory, the “tri-annual online
magazine of SF, fantasy & horror,”.

(I can’t find a back-issues archive on their site, but some of these can be found via the Internet Archive.)”

Thanks, Cole – added to the sidebar!

***

Another new webzine on the block – albeit without any fiction content until the projected launch date of 1st March – is Oddlands Magazine, whose editor Soren Bask has just stepped out of the shadows. One to keep an eye on – and a new market for folk to submit to, of course. 🙂

***

Jayme Lynn Blaschke appears to be doing some kind of running serial fiction thing over at the No Fear Of The Future group blog. Just posted is part three of “Memory”, but I assume you’ll want to start at the beginning.

***

If I’m not very much mistaken, Peter Watts is also posting fictional snippets on his blog. “Job Security” certainly has his comments field buzzing, and rightly so.

***

Free audio fiction! James Patrick Kelly, obviously pining for the halcyon days of reading his novel Look Into The Sun to the public of the interwebs (way back in the dark ages of, oooh, last year), has started doing the same with his Nebula-nominated story “Men Are Trouble.

***

Neil Beynon, fellow traveller of the Friday Flash Fiction train, is having a rather productive week. In addition to the usual FFF output (see below), he’s got a whole other story on his site: “Wide Open Space“.

***

This is the second week in a row that a Futurismic staffer has had a story published. This week it’s the turn of blogger Tomas L. Martin, whose story “The Shogun and the Scientist” is now online at Aberrant Dreams.

***

It’s a very thin week for the Friday Flash Fictioneers – a lot of us (including yours truly) appear to have had obstacles thrown in our way by that thing called life (which, despite being a great generator of stories, has a neat knack of preventing them being written). But a few of the troops are holding the fort:

Neil Beynon was late to last week’s offering, so “Silver” gets a plug this time round; his thoroughly punctual offering for this week is entitled “Fragments” – these in addition to the full story mentioned further up! Go, Neil!

New recruit Greg O’Byrne examines the “Life of Diamonds“; meanwhile, Gareth L Powell appears to have been doing some writing at the “Coffee House“.

***

Non-fiction bonus! Via Warren Ellis‘s highly-trained gang of web-scouring super-monkeys at grinding.be (which anyone who digs Futurismic will probably love to bits and should subscribe to immediately):

“Stuart Home’s brilliant 1987 book THE ASSAULT ON CULTURE: UTOPIAN CURRENTS FROM LETTRISM TO CLASS WAR is available in full, here.”

As is pointed out, it’s sure to be dated. But even a dated political text can tell you a lot, if only about the time it was written. Right?

***

That’s your lot – don’t forget to contact us with any tips, winks or blatant self-plugs you may have. In the meantime, have a great weekend!

Battles in cyberspace: Anonymous vs Scientology

William Gibson, considered by many to be the father of cyperpunk, has written recent novels in the present time as we’re almost in a cyberpunk world alreadyWhen the first cyberpunk writers picked up their pens in the eighties and wrote about conflict acted out over computer networks, it seemed like a lifetime away. In recent years we’ve seen internet attacks on Estonia and on power infrastructure. Countless griefers, hackers and virus-creators have found a way to virtually attack others.

Now it seems there’s something akin to a war on in one corner of the internet. A number of individuals calling themselves ‘Anonymous’ have posted a series of videos on Youtube decrying the Church/Cult of Scientology and what they call its manipulation of its followers. In related moves, a number of high profile Scientology websites were attacked by hackers and taken down. The Anonymous group seems to be using many of the techniques used by Alternate Reality Games like World Without Oil or Perplex City to create a campaign against elements of the real world.

It’s very reminiscent of the blending between virtuality and reality seen in Charles Stross’ Halting State. You can find Anonymous’s original message to Scientology video here and their reply to the media interest here on Warren Ellis’ blog. A new video was released yesterday explaining some more of the group’s message, in particular making it clear they are not just a group of hackers. It also warns of protests against Scientology on the 10th February. Whoever is doing it and for what reason, it’s a fascinating example of just how different our world(s) are now compared to even a few years ago.

[via Elizabeth Bear, image via Wikipedia’s page on William Gibson’s Spook Country]