Showing posts with label Elizabeth Bear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elizabeth Bear. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Celebrating the Births . . . Elizabeth Bear and David J. Schwartz


Sarah Bear Elizabeth Wishnevsky (born September 22, 1971)
       A two-time Hugo Award winning (not counting her awards for "fancast") author and John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer, Wishnevsky (AKA Elizabeth Bear) is extremely prolific and many of her works are, fortunately, freely available.  Already "one of the greats" she is likely to be a force in the speculative fiction genres for years to come.









Much more after jump break

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Four Free 'Zines

Four outstanding free magazines (two fiction, two gaming) available for download and/or online reading.

 [art from all four 'zines)




Fiction
Now Posted: Clarkesworld Issue 81, June 2013. Speculative Fiction
• "The Urashima Effect" by E. Lily Yu
     "Leo Aoki awoke with a shudder in the cold green bubble of the ship, nauseated and convinced that he was suffocating. He shoved his way out of the sleep spindle, found his balance, ran his hands through his sweaty hair, checked his bones: all unbroken. Well, then. There was a snaking black tube cuffed to the wall, its other end pointing into the black vacuum of space."
"• This is Why We Jump" by Jacob Clifton. 
     "I can curl myself around him like an ammonite, and call him little names, and he will smile. Arms and legs getting bigger every day. A little starfish, crowding me out. It is my name for him, but only when he will be gentled can I say. It happens less and less."
• "Free-Fall" by Graham Templeton
     "Our elevator has stalled some thirty kilometers above the surface of the Earth, and my first thought is not heroic: I need to start fasting, lean up these haunches in preparation for the Donner decision trees that most likely lie ahead. There’s food for a month below the floorboards, but thirty kilometers? Looking at my three fellow passengers, hot-shot scientists all, it is distressingly easy to imagine our mini-society devolving into tribalism"
• "Mongoose" by Sarah Monette and Elizabeth Bear
       "Izrael Irizarry stepped through a bright-scarred airlock onto Kadath Station, lurching a little as he adjusted to station gravity. On his shoulder, Mongoose extended her neck, her barbels flaring, flicked her tongue out to taste the air, and colored a question. Another few steps, and he smelled what Mongoose smelled, the sharp stink of toves, ammoniac and bitter."
• "Dead Men Walking" by Paul J. McAuley
     "I guess this is the end. I’m in no condition to attempt the climb down, and in any case I’m running out of air. The nearest emergency shelter is only five klicks away, but it might as well be on the far side of this little moon. I’m not expecting any kind of last-minute rescue, either."
Now Posted: Mirror Dance - Summer 2013. Fantasy.
• "Behold" by James Lecky
     ""I regret to tell you, your majesty," the Doctor said to the Queen. "That the child has been born ugly."
• "On Festival Road" by Jonathan Olfert.
     "The Festival of Forbidden Arts came every seven years to Allsoulsanchor, that most diverse and liberated of cities. Aalem couldn't quite remember the last time caravans of aloof, argumentative magicians passed his family's roadhouse."
• "Old Rootling" by Trevor Shikaze. Fantasy. Flash Fiction.
• "Hagia Sophia" by Chandler Groover.
    "If you have never seen Hagia Sophia, you should find a picture of it, or else visit it in person if you ever have the chance to. It is (or was) a church turned into a mosque turned into a museum, and it is (indeed, it is) one of this world’s greatest architectural marvels"
•  "Caught in the Weave A Story of the Crow Witch" by Mike Phillips.
     "Two women hurried in through the door. Each had a lantern in one hand, a crucifix in the other. Though it was night and well past time for decent folk to have gone to their beds, they were both fully clothed, arrayed in stout, woolen dresses that swept the floor as they hurried inside the room."
• And fantasy poems by Sandi Leibowitz, Alicia Cole, Glenn Halak, and Deborah Walker 
Gaming
Now Posted: Fighting Fantazine #11
• The conclusion of an interview with Fighting Fantasy writer Paul Mason
• A new 219 reference adventure "Ascent of Darkness" by Stuart Lloyd and illustrated by Michael Wolmarans
• The "Rogues' Guide" tourist book team paying a visit to Port Blacksand
• "The Fact of Fiction" looking at the sci-fi tale Star Strider
• An introduction to the Titannnica wiki
• A round up of the rollercoaster ride that was Bloodbones going to print
• Chapter 6 of "Aelous Raven and the Wrath of the Sea-Witch"
• The regulars such as Fighting Fantasy Collector, Chronicle of Heroes, Fighting Dantasy, Omens & Auguries, Everything I Need to Know, and The Arcane Archive.
Now Posted: Footprints #18
  • The Cult of the Devourer (article)
  • A Riddle (article)
  • "The Mired Cathedral" (adventure)
  • Magic Items (article)
  • The Holy Sword (article)
  • Tribal Spellcasters revisited (article)
  • Creatures of the Tulgey Wood (article)
  • The Sorcerer (class)
  • An Unhealthy Obsession with Equipment (article)

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Haldeman, Bear, Hoffman, and Other Great Free Fiction and More

Some great stuff today including SF great Joe Haldeman's Nebula award winning short story "Graves" in both Fiction and Audio Fiction, Elizabeth Bear and Nina Kiriki Hoffman in Audio Fiction.  There are other potentially great stories in those two categories as well as E-Books and Flash Fiction. A few cool comics round out the freebies and there are a few science and Hobbit news items for those interested. Lastly, the resident blathering blowhard, yours truly, weighs in on Mankind: The Story of All of Us

[Art from "Dracula" in Comics below]




Fiction
At The Colored Lens: "The Illusionist" by Bruce Holland Rogers.
     "When Jerome’s father died, his mother started visiting mediums and spiritualists, and Jerome would come along and sit in the room while his father’s messages were conveyed to the land of the living. This was the beginning of his interest in crystal balls, velvet cushions, bright scarves, and other accoutrements of magic. Before he was even a teenager, Jerome knew that communication with the dead was a confidence game"

At Nightmare Magazine: "Graves" by Joe Haldeman. Horror. 1993.
     "I have this persistent sleep disorder that makes life difficult for me, but still I want to keep it. Boy, do I want to keep it. It goes back twenty years, to Vietnam. To Graves."  the Nebula Award and the World Fantasy Award for best short story in 1993.

Flash Fiction
  • At Daily Science Fiction: "Old Flames"by Sylvia Spruck Wrigley. 
  • At Every Day Fiction: "Consuming" by Peter Tupper. Science Fiction.
  • At 365 Tomorrows: "Beaming" by Duncan Shields. Science Fiction.
  • At Yesteryear Fiction: "The Storm" by TRS. Fantasy, short poem.
E-Books
Via Pixel of Ink:
At Free eBooks Daily.
At Smashwords
Audio Fiction
At Nightmare Magazine: "Graves" by Joe Haldeman. Horror.
     See "Fiction" above. 

At PodCastle: Giant Episode: "The Tricks of London" by Elizabeth Bear.
      "“That’s the third damned dead whore in seventeen days,” Detective Inspector Rupert Bitner said, his educated tones incongruous to his choice of words. He slurped tea loudly from the chipped enamel lid of a vacuum flask."

At StarShipSofa: Episode No. 264.
 "In Their Garden" by Brenda Cooper.
     "I’m running back through the desiccated woods, going too fast to keep the sticks and branches that have fallen from the trees from cracking under my weight. My skin and mouth are dry. The afternoon sun has sucked all the water from me, and I haven’t stopped to drink."
"Futures in the Memories Market" by Nina Kiriki Hoffman.
      "You can't do anything else when you emp one of Geeta Tilrassen's memory modules. Her senses seize you; you see through her eyes, taste with her tongue, hear with her ears. And touch? You've never felt air against your skin until you've felt it breathe across hers."
Free Comics
Hobbit and Oz News
Science News
Paleontology/history
Mini-review: Mankind: The Story of All of Us - Episode One. History Channel.
About: The History Channel's whirlwind tour of history. Episode one covered important discoveries and inventions.  This was a rather disappointing attempt to create a history equivalent of Planet Earth.

The Good: Many individual scenes were interesting enough, though too brief and generally lacking in real context. The visuals were good, though not nearly what the hype would have one believe.

The Bad: The very nature of the show lends itself to a limited, shallow interpretation of critical historical events. It focused too much on events and too little on the various cultures involved with these events. Worse, it took controversial opinions, such as the idea that Stonehenge was a memorial to the dead, and presented them as established facts. And worst, the series deliberately eschewed actual experts and relied on celebrities (Brian Williams, Dr. Oz, Anthony Bourdain) to give what are, at best, semi-informed opinions.

Final Rating: 5 of 10. Read a couple history books instead of watching this series.


Thursday, September 22, 2011

Great Freebies and Happy Hobbit Day!

Some more awesome free genre items today. Another great issue of the bi-weekly eZine Beneath Ceaseless Skies, a new story up at Tor.com, a new issue of the always impressive StarShipSofa, the continuation of Amber E. Scott's story at Paizo, and a couple of audio versions of classic SF stories at The Drama Pod.

Today's illustration is from "The Night Children"








@Beneath Ceaseless Skies: "Butterfly" by Garth Upshaw. Fantasy.
The train jerked forward the instant I boarded. Steam chuffed, and wheels scraped metal rails. I stumbled against the guard, a beefy, middle-aged halfbreed. She wrinkled her nose and checked me off a list. “Maia Carson. Sit down.”
@Beneath Ceaseless Skies: "The Magick" by Kristina C. Mottla.
“Once a Magick visibly manifests its skills, said Magick must be immediately transported, as community property, to the nearest Hith Auction House in order to establish control over its nascent iniquity pre-sale.”
@Tor: "The Night Children" by Alexander Gordon Smith. Horror.
"There are worse things hiding in the snow than soldiers"

Serial Fiction
@Paizo: "The Seventh Execution - Chapter Three: The Fettered Freed " by Amber E. Scott. Fantasy.
"The moon was a yellow bruise in the sky as I hurried through the streets of Edme. Sweat poured off me as if I raced through a furnace. I ran without seeing, navigating the streets by long practice. I felt I had left part of myself back at home, as if I had lost a limb."
Audio Fiction
@Beneath Ceaseless Skies: "Gone Sleeping" by Heather Clitheroe. Fantasy.
"Well, what was I supposed to do? I wished harder. I couldn't just stop."
@The Drama Pod: "Youth" by Issac Asimov. Science Fiction.
"Red and Slim found the two strange little animals the morning after they heard the thunder sounds. They knew that they could never show their new pets to their parents."
@The Drama Pod: "The Burning Bridge" by Poul Anderson. Science Fiction.
"A starship captain has to make a terrible choice. Should they go on or should they turn back?"
@StarShipSofa: Episode #204 "Dolly" by Elizabeth Bear and "Secret Identity" by Paul Cornell.


Holiday
Happy Hobbit Day! Today (Sept. 22) is the birthday of both Frodo and Bilbo Baggins today so do something appropriate to celebrate. Start one of the books, watch one of the movies, raise a toast, or whatever you think is best.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Tuesday Part Two - Free Fiction

Not to worry, despite appearances, QuasarDragon has not turned into a blog about nature documentaries (Although I do love to watch them). "Just" some really good fiction today by big name authors (Rusch, Bear, McDonald, etc.) and future big name authors.

The illustration is for "Recording Angel" by Ian McDonald.







Now Posted: The Chiaroscuro Volume 47, Week 13 (June 27—30, 2011)
"The Consumer" by Seth Lindberg.
"The other night armed men woke me up to sell me toothpaste. I thought it was a dream at first, until I felt the cold metal against my warm sleeping body. “Who are you?” I asked."
"Conventions of the Genre" by Jesse Bullington.
"“Silver seems to stop them just fine,” I remind him, funnelling the carefully measured metal pellets into the mouth of a yawning 12-gauge shell."
"The Eight of Swords" by S. Boyd Taylor.
"You walk alone in your father’s labyrinth. Through the craze of brambles and glossy-leafed hedges. At the centre a circle of swords stands where the arbour should be. Eight scimitars stabbed deep into a pile of bright roses."
"Growing Out of It" by Mehitobel Wilson.
"“Thirty,” Meg said again. “It’s artificial. Fake, faux, and fulla shit. No such thing—not on your birthday, anyway. When you turn thirty, you’re actually finishing your thirtieth year outside the womb."
"The Inevitable Heat Death of the Universe" by Elizabeth Bear.
"The shark is a shark. A Great White, Carcharodon carcharias, the sublime killer. It is a blind evolutionary shot-in-the-dark, a primitive entity unchanged except in detail for―by the time of our narrative―billions of years."
"Patterns in White Static" by David Niall Wilson.
"Once the rooms were dark and the soft, endless music flowed from room to room across the banks of surround-sound speakers I had installed, it was as if I was the only man in a very silent, very empty universe, seated at its centre in blissful peace."
"Salvation on the Tongues of Djinn" by A. M. Muffaz.
"There was a boy once I thought was beautiful. I thought he was beautiful and somebody saw. That was all it was. You become polluted just by talking to boys alone, and no amount of praying and fasting will rub that stain away, even though Father says I should pray and fast as I have always done."
"Sour Metal" by Amber Van Dyk.
"Pennies. I carry them in my pockets, in my purse, in the space between my stocking and my heel. My pennies are dirty like all good money, and in the dark I roll them in my palms, cover their copper in the oil of my fingerprints and savour the taste of metal on my tongue."
"You Must Remember This" by Gary A. Braunbeck.
"“The big deal,” he said, “is that I remember the way my folks argued about the colour. Dad wanted green, but Mom insisted on light blue, and like every other time they had an argument, Mom won out.”"

@Author's Site: "The Poop Thief" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch (2008). Fantasy.
"Portia Meadows runs one of the few pet stores in the entire world that sells familiars to the magical. Familiars—delicate, moody creatures that they are—keep magic clean and pure. To lose a familiar means losing magic. And on a bright afternoon, Portia’s assistance discovers that something essential has disappeared, threatening not just the magical within the store, but in the entire world."


@Lightspeed: "Recording Angel" by Ian McDonald. Science Fiction.
"“I don’t do gossip,” she had told T. P. Costello, SkyNet’s Nairobi station chief when he told her of the international celebrities who were coming to the death-party of the famous Treehouse Hotel."
@Daily Science Fiction: "His Brother was an Only Child" by Ronald D Ferguson.
"I do not know how long I struggled with groggy consciousness, but finally I reached a point where I managed to stay alert through the day. That night, I slept extremely well, and awoke refreshed the following morning."

@Storytime: "How Nnedi Got Her Curved Spine" by Nnedi Okorafor. Fable.
"In a forest of South Eastern Nigeria lived a tribe of large baboons called The Idiok. They were regal creatures with thick brown fur, black ears, careful hands and golden eyes. They were wise and peaceful, and at night, when the moon was high and full, they could easily find each other because their eyes would glow like setting suns. They were a beautiful people."

@Electric Velocipede: "Enmity" by K. Tempest Bradford. [Via SF Signal]
"She is running, has been running for some time. Running from Ariastus? No, running from the serpent she knows is at her heel, ready to strike, waiting for an excuse. So she runs. She runs through the tall grass, through the canopied forest, through the fields of flowers. Running to the music, to Orpheus, away from the serpent, though even now she knows they are the same."

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Free is the Best Price!

A ton of free fiction today, including new stories at some of the premiere online genre magazines. Also some classic SF, several free audio stories, flash fiction, and a few comics. Enjoy, I certainly will. [Today's illustration is for "The Fox" by Malinda Lo.]













@Lightspeed: "Mama, We are Zhenya, Your Son" by Tom Crosshill.
"I fell asleep in Dr. Olga’s big room, in the red university building by the Botanical Garden. I had a helmet on my head stuffed with wires. There were lots of lights and noises." Online and in MP3 audio.

@Subterranean Press: "The Fox" by Malinda Lo. "She was five days northeast of the village of "Anshu, forty-six days into her first circuit, as King’s Huntress, of the northernmost province in the Kingdom."

@Fantasy Magazine: "The House of Gears" by Jonathan L. Howard.
"The notes had referred to a Monsieur Samhet, who lived in a strange house in the hills. They were vague about Samhet’s accomplishments, but he seemed capable of resurrecting with an insolent ease that intrigued Cabal." Online and in MP3 audio.

@Strange Horizons: "Items Found in a Box Belonging to Jonas Connolly" by Laura E. Price.
"A woman swung toward us out of the sky on a knotted rope, a pistol in her free hand. The ocean roared around us; the hull sunk away from underneath us; my mother's grip on me shifted and tightened around my waist. "Hold tight," our rescuer said to us."

@Hub Magazine: "Cycloparalleladrine" by Saxon Bullock.
"So, it’s Friday night, and I’m already speeded up to my eyeballs. The whole world is like this exciting, multicoloured frenetic blur that sometimes resembles stuff I recognise, but I don’t care. I’m doing what I want. I’m down the club, dancing, larging it, throwing myself around, feeling like nothing matters."

@Daily Science Fiction: "Shards" by Leah Thomas.
"I want to tell you that I loved you, regardless of what I am. You should know that despite all you may learn in school, or from books, or from other children, I was capable of that. I may not have a heart, or a brain. But if I excelled at anything human, it was loving you."

@Mindflights: "Stars and Sons" by Robert J. Mendenhall.
"Man's first interstellar odyssey. But, for one man who has waited all his life to go, the cost may include his soul."

Serial Fiction:
@Kat and Mouse: "Payback" Part Five by Abner Senires.
"She sucked air between gritted teeth and nodded. 'You're the one who's supposed to get shot. Not me.'"

Classic and Reviewed SF
@Munseys and Project Gutenberg: "The Legion Of Lazarus" by Edmond Hamilton, from Imagination (April 1956).
"Being expelled from an air lock into deep space was the legal method of execution. But it was also the only way a man could qualify for—The Legion Of Lazarus"

@Munseys and Project Gutenberg: "The Giants From Outer Space" by Geoff St. Reynard, from Imagination (May 1954)
"Grim terror lurked in the void many light years from Earth. But Pinkham and his men were unaware of it—until suddenly they discovered—The Giants From Outer Space"

@Munseys and Project Gutenberg: "Moon Glow" by G. L. Vandenburg, from Amazing Stories (Nov. 1958).
"The Ajax XX was the first American space craft to make a successful landing on the moon. She had orbited the Earth's natural satellite for a day and a half before making history. The reason for orbiting was important. The Russians had been boasting for a number of years that they would be first."

@BestScienceFictionStories.com: "The Mad Scientist’s Daughter" by Theodora Goss. Reviewed and linked to.
"In London, we formed a club. It's very exclusive. There are only six members. Five of us live on the premises. Helen, who is married, lives in Bloomsbury, but she comes to have dinner with us twice a week. We need each other. [...] Who else could share or sympathize with our experiences?"

@Variety SF: "The Sultan of the Clouds" by Geoffrey A Landis. Briefly reviewed and linked to.
"Invitation from Carlos Fernando Delacroix Ortega de la Jolla y Nordwald-Gruenbaum." In smaller letters, it continued, "We find your researches on the ecology of Mars to be of some interest. We would like to invite you to visit our residences at Hypatia at your convenience and talk."






@Podcastle: Episode #153 "The Ghosts of New York" by Jennifer Pelland, read by Rashida Smith.
"She remembered flailing at the air, as if she could somehow sink her nails into it and cling there until help arrived. She remembered the crash and pop of the people who were landing mere seconds before her."

@Cthulhu: Episode #100 "The Mask of Romek" (Part 1) by T.C. Mcqueen.
Original fiction.

@19 Nocturne Boulevard: "When the Lamp Goes Out" by Julie Hoverson, performed by a full cast.
"A podcast crew watch a film with a spooooky past."

@The Drabblecast: Episode #202 "Boojum" (Part I) by Elizabeth Bear and Sarah Monette.
"The ship had no name of her own, so her human crew called her the Lavinia Whateley. As far as anyone could tell, she didn’t mind. At least, her long grasping vanes curled—affectionately?" [Part two is available but only streaming]

@Cast Macabre: "All in the Family" by Sheldon Higdon, narrated by R. E. Chambliss.
"“Have you ever heard of the Turner Beast?” My grandpa asked while sitting in his wooden rocker by the fireplace. Jane shook her head from side to side as I took a sip of Moxie. Anna released a groan . . ."

@The Author's Site: "The Starter" Episode #10 by Scott Sigler.
"Quentin continues to develop his passing game in practice, but the Krakens look horribly exposed at right offensive guard -- if Quentin doesn't have protection, he won't have time to throw. As trade talk circulates, can Quentin separate business from friendship?"







@Flashes In The Dark: "Car" by Ryan Underhill.
@Flashes In The Dark: "Apology" by Henry Gribbin.
@365 tomorrows: "Fertilizer" by Duncan Shields.
@365 tomorrows: "Inside" by Jake Wagner.
@The New Flesh: "Unexpected Pregnancy" by Brian J. Smith.
@Strange Horizons: [Poem] "Serenissima" by Jo Walton.
@Daily Science Fiction: "The Pen Is Mightier" by Mik Wilkens.







@The Horrors of It All: "Hostage of the Unearthly" from Baffling Mysteries #20 (April 1954).
One of "
the most bizarre monsteramas of the entire Golden Age era!"



@Atomic Kommie Comics: Spurs Jackson and His Space Vigilantes in "The Saucer Men" from Space Western Comics.

@Diversions of the Groovy Kind: Pellucidar "The World Within" (Feb. 1972).