Tag Archives: short stories

New sf mag on the block: Lightspeed to launch in 2010

Via BigDumbObject, some excellent news in the short fiction publishing sphere: Prime Books are launching a new science fiction magazine called Lightspeed in the summer of next year. Fiction editing duties will be handled by John Joseph Adams, who will leave his current assistant editor post at F&SF to take up the reins; non-fiction will be handled by Andrea Kail.

Lightspeed will focus exclusively on science fiction. It will feature all types of sf, from near-future, sociological soft sf, to far-future, star-spanning hard sf, and anything and everything in between. No subject will be considered off-limits, and writers will be encouraged to take chances with their fiction and push the envelope. Each week, they’ll post one piece of fiction and one piece of non-fiction. They’ll debut with four original stories, and then move to two new and two reprint stories each month thereafter (all of the non-fiction will be original).

Lightspeed Magazine

Lightspeed will open to fiction submissions and non-fiction queries on 1 January 2010. Writers’ guidelines are expected to be posted by 1 December 2009. They plan to pay five cents per word for fiction, one hundred dollars per article for non-fiction, and variable amounts for art.

Isn’t launching a print magazine in the sf short fiction domain a mite quixotic in the current climate? Possibly so, but it looks like Prime have thought carefully about ways to make the magazine pay its own way:

[Publisher Sean] Wallace said “The website will be free, but the hope is that the magazine should be making money by its third year, if not sooner, through multiple-revenue streams, including advertising, ebooks, merchandise, and more.”

Three years doesn’t sound like an unreasonable time-frame for a business model to bed in, but things change fast in the content industries these days; hopefully Prime have some smart people at the wheel who can roll with the punches of a fluctuating marketplace. Having John Joseph Adams at the helm is a promising start; I’ve been impressed by the visibility he’s brought to the numerous anthologies he’s edited in recent years, and I think he’s got the enthusiasm and foresight to try new ideas in order to make it work.

Definitely one to watch… and great news for writers, too. More pro-rate markets can never be a bad thing.

Friday Free Fiction for 3rd April

It’s the first Friday of the month, which means the usual bumper crop of free science fiction stories for you to read… though I would just like to draw your attention to Futurismic‘s own contribution to April’s harvest, namely “A Programmatic Approach to Perfect Happiness“, penned by no less a luminary than Tim Pratt.

So, go read Tim’s story, then tuck in to whatever takes your fancy from the following fictional finger-buffet…

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A brace from ManyBooks:

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Four from FeedBooks:

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Yet more preliminary extra material from Season 2 of Shadow Unit: “Consumption

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SpaceWesterns is keeping it old-school with a reprinted classic: “A Curious Pleasure Excursion” by Mark Twain

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New month, new issue of Clarkesworld:

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Is it just me, or has Farrago’s Wainscot had a redesign? Either which way, they’re got a new issue online with six stories for you to read:

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Back after a nasty hacker attack, Pantechnicon‘s latest issue went up last week. There’s a whole bunch of fiction to read there for nothing, so get to it. If you’re feeling particularly choosy, you can narrow it down to just the science fiction stuff.

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Unstoppable anthology-makin’-machine John Joseph Adams has launched the website for Federations, his new book of interstellar sf stories, which includes links to four free-to-read teaser tales:

There are downloadable mobile document formats available on the Federations site itself, if that’s your preference.

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Via pretty much everyone who contributed to it (and then some), the Hugo-nominated METAtropolis audiobook is available for free for a limited period at Audible.com.

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Jayme Lynn Blaschke presents the thirty-sixth fragment of his Memory.

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Jason Stoddard presents chapter 4.2 of Eternal Franchise

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The tireless SF Signal crew once again have a couple of posts collecting the free fiction from the past week, and they caught the following extras as well:

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Last but not least, here’s a little bit of Friday Flash Fiction for you:

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That should keep you occupied for a while, I think. Don’t forget to shoot us a message if there’s something you think warrants inclusion in next week’s round-up; in the meantime, have a good weekend.

What to do when you finish a short story

Bios writing robotThere’s some sound advice for the novice short fiction writer from Sarah Brandel over at Apex Online. The first one (which, as any slush-pile reader will tell you, gets ignored far too often) is:

1. Get some distance.

First drafts are rarely perfect. The conventional wisdom, upon finishing a story, is to lock the story in a drawer for a week before starting to revise it. It can be difficult to see mistakes–ranging from typos to issues in continuity and back story–in anything one is too close to.

Amen. Any writers in the audience feel like sharing some of their hard-earned wisdom? [image by Gastev]

Nick Gevers surveys the sf short fiction scene at Locus Online

Just arrived in my inbox is a note from Nick Gevers informing me that starting today, Locus Online will be running a series of interviews titled SF Quintessential.

The column will see Gevers quizzing the creators and publishers of science fiction short stories in an attempt to map the current state of play:

I intend that the series will help promote valuable short fiction publications and provide a forum for discussion of trends in the short form: creative movements and the rather troubled state of the market. There’s a huge amount to talk about; I hope “SF Quintessential” can supplement and augment existing debate, at a vital time in the history of genre literature.

The first instalment of SF Quintessential features an interview with Australia-based anthologist extraordinaire Jonathan Strahan, and Pyr’s Lou Anders is also in the pipeline. This promises to be a fascinating (if potentially grim) read for anyone writing short stories for publication.

[Full disclosure: Nick Gevers is part of the editorial team at PS Publishing, who are clients of mine.]

Picowebzines as paying markets

We’ve already mentioned Thaumatrope here on Futurismic, but thanks to the ever-vigilant people at Tor.com we hear that Jetse de Vries – the man behind the forthcoming Shine anthology of optimist sf – is starting another Twitter-based webzine named Outshine, due to launch January 14th; check the Shine anthology blog for submission guidelines.

Two new venues for picofiction, both of them paying markets… is this a fad, or a sign of things to come? I don’t think anyone will deny that you can do amazing things with a short character limit, but hell knows it’ll be tricky to monetise a Twitter feed…

That said, at US$5 for up to 140 characters, Outshine is bloody close to paying SFWA professional rates per-word, and that’s not to be sniffed at!