Showing posts with label Galaxy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Galaxy. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Free Fiction Tuesday


It's already a fantastic day for free fiction and I haven't even looked at the e-book sites yet.  Strange Horizons has extra free fiction as part of it's fund drive (PRI take note - please!). There's great free fiction and flash fiction from several other great sites.  Add some audio fiction and crime stories in the "other genres" category and it's already a great day!

[Picture from "A Princess of Spain" in fiction and audio fiction]


Fiction 
At AE: "The Fade" by Dylan Sargent. Science Fiction.
      "According to the notice, Don would be completely invisible by the early hours of tomorrow morning."

At The Colored Lens: "In The Garage" by Victor Alao. Speculative Fiction.
      "I don’t have a soul; that was one of the first things my mother told me. I asked her what she meant, but she smiled and said it meant I was special. Later that day, I asked myself what it meant; it was my first question to myself, what did it mean to have no soul? From all the information that poured into me"

At Lightspeed:
"A Well-Adjusted Man" by Tom Crosshill, Science Fiction.
      "On September 3, 2045, Jim Turner shot dead an innocent girl and went home to his family a well-adjusted man. It was supposed to be a simple escapee bust, out in the projects."

"A Princess of Spain"  by Carrie Vaughn. Fantasy.
      "Catherine of Aragon, sixteen years old, danced a pavane in the Spanish style before the royal court of England. Lutes, horns, and tabors played a slow, stately tempo, to which she stepped in time."
At Strange Horizons:
 "The Hateful Brilliance of His Eyes" by Alec Austin. Speculative Fiction.
     "This fragment, recovered from the archives at Tian Jing, is the only surviving account of the deeds of Captain Liao Jun and the Celestial Ascension during their exile in barbarian lands."

"Household Management" by Ellen Klages. Speculative Fiction.
     "He is, perhaps, the worst tenant in all of London."

"Good Hunting (Part 1 of 2)" by Ken Liu. Speculative Fiction.
     "A hulijing cannot resist the cries of the man she has bewitched."

"Good Hunting (Part 2 of 2)" by Ken Liu. Speculative Fiction.
     "I dream of hunting in this jungle of metal and asphalt," she said. "I dream of my true form leaping from beam to ledge to terrace to roof, until I am at the top of this island, until I can growl in the faces of all the men who believe they can own me."

At Weird Fiction Review: "The Stone Badger" by Misha Nogha.
     "She keeps hearing badgers. She hears their shadows creeping across the frozen ground mumbling faint sounds of subterra­nean rage. She wakes to the noises of licking fur, claws sharpening, purrs and growls. In the woods sounds layer on each other." 

At The World SF Blog: "Planetfall" by Athena Andreadis. Science Fiction.
      "Through the haze of her dark blue mane, the mershadow gazed sternly at her youngest. She had often warned her not to go near the shore. Afterwards, ever would she long for the hostile land, where her skin would crack and she would wither."

Flash Fiction
At Strange Horizons:
Audio Fiction
At LibriVox: Tarzan the Untamed by Edgar Rice Burroughs. Adventure.
       "This book follows Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar chronologically. The action is set during World War I. While away from his plantation home in East Africa, invading German troops destroy it and kill his wife Jane and the Waziri warrior Wasimbu who is left crucified."

At Lightspeed: "A Princess of Spain"  by Carrie Vaughn. Fantasy.
    Described above

At SFFAudio: "The Other Celia" adapted from the short story by Theodore Sturgeon.
     "Something drastic should happen to all snoopers – but nothing as awful and frightful as this!"  First published in Galaxy Magazine, March 1957.

Other Genres

Friday, May 6, 2011

Friday Freebies Complete

Happy Weekend! A few cool items today. SF and Fantasy stories, another part of the Vampire serial at White Wolf, Escape Pod's audio version of the recently posted "Shannon's Law" by Cory Doctorow. Added the gaming section and an additional audio fiction link.

Illustration for the audio drama "The Stuff of Myth" by Roger Gregg.







@Daily Science Fiction: "The Beauty Garden" by Damon Shaw.
"The invaders kicked down the gate in the village stockade. Eurwen heard the crowd behind her moan in fear, but did not allow herself to flinch as the flimsy barrier crashed to the ground. She raised her hand, as much to still her own heart as to calm her people."

@Anotherealm: "The Red Queen" by Noeleen Kavanagh.
"And Rose was a fool of a girl. She always had been, ever since she had been a small child. I still cannot believe that I bore a child so utterly alien to me. Maybe the peasants are right when they speak of children spirited away in the night and changelings left in their place."

Serial Fiction
@White Wolf: Silent Knife, part 4 by David Nurenberg.
"Now she was staring into Bourne’s startled, porcine eyes, at his scraggly black beard, at the tip of her blade as she pointed it at him with her free hand."

Classic SF
@Munseys and Project Gutenberg: "The Telenizer" by Don Thompson, from Galaxy Science Fiction (March 1954).
"Langston had technicolor delusions; inanimate objects came alive in his hands; THEY were persecuting him, out to get him ... what a relief it was to know he wasn't going insane!"







@Escape Pod: Episode #291 "Shannon’s Law" by Cory Doctorow, read by Mur Lafferty.
"When the Way opened again, the day I turned seventeen, I didn’t hesitate. I packed everything I could carry—every scratched phone, every half-assembled laptop, every stick of memory, and every Game Boy I could fit in a duffel bag."

@Radio Drama Revival: Episode 224 "Stuff of Myth" (Part One) by Roger Gregg. Mythology/Comedy. [site found via SFFaudio]
"Ahh, ancient Greece. Hot nymphs, raging orgies, much wine, song, and occasional transformations into livestock. All well and good, right? Well things are more wacky than ever in the sizzling and scandalous interpretation of the myth of Orpheus"














@Fighting Fantazine: Issue #6 featuring "Escape from the Sorcerer"
"A 200 reference bumper length mini Fighting Fantasy adventure:
The kingdom of Alkemis has come under repeated attack from neighbouring Agra. Unable to hold back the hordes of Lizard Men and chaotic Asuras led by the evil sorcerer Grudar Kreshnel, YOU and a few dozen fellow survivors were captured. One by one your fellow countrymen have been brutally executed, until only YOU remain. Will YOU be able to escape from the Sorcerer?"



More Cool Gaming Items

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Tuesday Freebies

As always, a variety of free Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror, and other cool genres from many cool sites.









E-Zines
Infinities edited by Keith Brooke. A free sampler of short stories, novel extracts and a complete novelette from infinity plus and friends. [via SF Signal] Complete stories [mostly fantasy/sf] include:
"The Man Who Built Heaven" by Keith Brooke.
"Last night I dreamed. The same old dream. The same old dream, and different every single time."
"Venus Macabre" by Eric Brown.
"Devereaux chose Venus as the venue for his last public performance for two main reasons: the stars cannot be seen from the surface of the planet, and Venus is where he first died."
"Wooden Horse" by John Grant.
"I wasn't born a movie fan. As I say, I was in my mid-twenties and studying for a doctorate when circumstances conspired to germinate an interest that I suppose, on reflection, must have been latent somewhere inside of me from the outset"
"Phoenix Man" by Garry Kilworth.
"The world's gone crazy lately. Eruptions, earthquakes, floods. Two nights ago there were meteorite showers in the northern hemisphere."
"One Step Closer" by Iain Rowan [crime]
"I mean it," the gunman shrieked, and he pointed the revolver at Ward, the end of the barrel moving in tiny circles with the shaking of his hands. "I mean it. One step closer..."


Issue #30 of Crossed Genres features "Luck" crossed with science fiction and fantasy.
"How the Goddess Came to Spring Flowering Valley" by Andrew Penn Romine.
"The food market at Hanging Cloud Gate was empty; the vendors had already scurried home ahead of the curfew drums. Not that there had been much to sell lately, not with the humans’ war driving all the farmers away."

"Little Magic" by Tom Howard.
"Uncle Seymour was magic. None of the grown-ups believed it, but me and my cousins knew strange and wonderful things happened whenever he visited."

"Luck Be a Lady" by Amy Sundberg.
"The day after I broke up with Death, I was in a bad mood. By noon, I was lounging on a pile of embroidered pillows, huddled over a pint of S’mores ice cream."

"Paid" by DeAnna Knippling.
"I came up with a solid time travel theory in 2007 and swore I’d never build an actual machine. I built it 2009 anyway; long story. If you’re reading this, it means you’re stuck here with me—or you are me."

"I Can't Imagine" by Sandra Wickham.
"My little brother had always been a little crazy, but as I watched him pace circles around my kitchen table I thought he might finally have taken a giant leap off the edge."


E-Fiction
@Daily Science Fiction: "This Life"by Lee Hallison.
"Hope grabbed at the railing as the surge of people pushed her off-balance. She hung on as she made her way down the rain-slick subway stairs, exhaling with relief at the bottom"

@Strange Horizons: "The Thick Night" by Sunny Moraine.
"She doesn't look at it the whole way home. She doesn't know how to look at it: you look at a person one way, and a thing another way, and the two are not the same."

@The author's Site: "Without End" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch, from The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (April 1994). SF. Online until May 9, 2011.
"He stared at the black box. He could picture Geneva inside as she had looked the night before: black hair cascading on the satin; skin too white; eyes closed in imitation sleep. Geneva had never been so still."

Hub #139 is up with "All your needs and wishes" by Steven Ellis.
"The Universal Provider floats silently near the ceiling in the corner of the room. If its programming had contained anything similar to curiosity it might have wondered about the scene unfolding in the room below it."

@Science In My Fiction: “The Long Toss” by Gary Cuba.
"Hell of a way to lose, I thought, as I plowed my way through the detritus covering the parking lot."

Classic SF
@The Internet Archive: "Notice of Intent" by Phyllis Sterling Smith, from Startling Stories (Oct. 1952). [via Marooned - Science Fiction & Fantasy books on Mars]
"From Mars comes the wonder-drug Marcillin and a selfish plot by Earthly monopolists to corner the market on this precious new commodity."


@Munseys and Project Gutenberg: "Big Stupe" by Charles V. De Vet, from Galaxy Science Fiction (March 1955).
"Smart man, Bruckner—he knew how to handle natives ... but they knew even better how to deal with smart terrestrials!"

Reviewed
@BestScienceFictionStories.com: "Whisper’s Voice" by Elena Gleason (2010).
Reviewed with a link to a free online version.







@Every Day Fiction: "The Pale Farmer" by Rich Matrunick.
@Flashes in the Dark: "Decay" by Neil Leckman.
@365 tomorrows: "Librarians" by Noah Katz.
@Weirdyear: "The Night I lost Harry" by Deryn Pittar.
@The New Flesh: "Death by Limited Palette" by Kirk Jones.
@Strange Horizons: [Poem] "What Ray Taught Me" by Jenny Rossi.
@Sam's Dot Publishing: [Poetry] Scifaikuest Vol.8 No. 4.







@The Internet Archive: Lights Out - Will O The Wisp (1951). Episode 6 from the third season of this classic horror anthology. No description available.









@The Horrors of It All: "Demon From the Deep!" and "The Kiss of Death!" from Venus #19 (April 1952) Horror.



@Digital Comics Museum: Jumbo Comics #91 (Sept. 1946). Adventure featuring Sheena, The Hawk, and others.
@Ditko Comics: "The Man Who Disappeared" from This Magazine is Haunted #14 (1957)
@Four-Color Shadow: "Sir Prize" from Prize Comics (1945). Fantasy / Humor.
@Hero (& Heroine) Histories: "Thor: God of Thunder" from Weird Comics #1 (Superhero but not the Marvel Comics character).

Other Coolness

@Diversions of the Groovy Kind: [Art/superhero] A Thor comic book gallery.
@Secret Sanctum of Captain Video: Power Records Space 1999 "Breakaway" [video]

Friday, April 29, 2011

Tons of Free Fantasy, Science Fiction, and Dark Fiction.

Wow, there are a lot of freebies today! First up fiction. Dave is too embarrassed to show his face today after realizing he had been forgetting to link ChiZine since he had returned from his long hiatus. So there are many, free professional dark fiction stories today. There's a Ken Liu story at On the Premises, as well as other good ones (don't miss the cartoons). And many more fiction items, including serials and classic SF.

There are many free audio stories today, which beats the heck out of listening to crappy radio on a long drive. There's flash fiction and poetry, several cool gaming items (all with pictures this one time), and finally a movie. One of the strangest sword and sandals movies ever (though the lizardmen are cool, much better looking than humans.)

This week's QuasarDragon presents will be delayed (until next week) due to the larger size of the story and OCR providing less help than usual.

One last thing. Please tell Dave his is completely wrong with his movie reviews yesterday or I, Lt. Bob, will loose a bad bet.







@ChiZine: Dark Fiction available until July 1, 2011.


On the Premises has its 13th issue up featuring a mixture of Genre and Mainstream stories. (And cartoons!)
"The Visit" by Ken Liu.
"Four hundred fifty-three probes arrived that night."

"Neighbor from Heaven" by Edoardo Albert.
"'You are going to hell and there is nothing I can do to stop it,' he said."

"Inside Out" by Debra Purdy Kong.
“The cops don’t care, she doesn’t take anything major, and she talks to herself a lot. What a nut job.”

"A Brick Wall" by Neil James Hudson.
"After I first came here, I thought I could hear someone behind the wall."

"What Do You Want?" by Rona Yohalem.
"When she hangs up, her heart beats so rapidly, she’s afraid she’ll collapse. Maybe it’s a mistake."

"A Dead Profession" by Frank Dutkiewicz.
“No one’s died in over eighty years, Paul. What if he’s not the first? What if they can’t find out what happened? What if…?”

and "Mornings with AJ and Jen" by Thomas Cannon.
"'Do you know why I picked your show?' the gunman asked."

@Daily Science Fiction: "The Ambiguity Clock" by Lavie Tidhar,
"Bangkok, eleven o'clock at night: Soi Cowboy a street of loud music, loud laughs, pheromone generators pumping their wares into the atmosphere, truflesh dolls dancing, men walking with glazed eyes and happy smiles--all but for the two who were following him."



@Analog Science Fiction and Fact: "Phantom Sense" by Richard A. Lovett & Mark Niemann-Ross. (2010).
"I’ve never understood how it could be stalking if all you’re trying to do is keep her safe. I just want to be a good father. Make up for all those years of being AWOL because CI-MEMS is a full-time job. You can’t be a father and CI-MEMS."


@Asimov's Science Fiction: "The Day the Wires Came Down" by Alexander Jablokov. On title page here or right click to save PDF.
"Mother had gone home with a mechanical device for chopping tree roots out of drainage pipes and left her offspring to their mission. Arabella should have been getting home herself, to prepare for her going-away party, but instead she persuaded her mother that Andrew couldn’t handle finding Father an appropriate birthday present on his own."

Serial Fiction
@Ray Gun Revival: Thieves’ Honor Episode 14: Head Games, Part 1 – Keanan Brand.
“Aye, ma’am, that may be, but you’re in a colonial military facility. With a hospital. If they set you free so easily after such a grave accusation, that means there’s an implant to track you for the rest of your life. Is that the kind of freedom you want, ma’am?”

@White Wolf Publishing: "Silent Knife, part 3" David Nurnberg
"In Ariadne’s room—her cell—it was always night. She didn’t need the lamp on her desk, didn’t even know if the bulb still worked. Years ago, she had wanted it as a reminder of her old life. Now, it was only a piece of jetsam she hadn’t yet gotten around to disposing of."




Classic SF
@F&SF: "12:01 P.M." by Richard A. Lupoff, from F&SF (Dec. 1973).
"What frustration, Castleman thought, if he ever did succeed in making Rosenbluth realize that the strange phenomenon he had theorized was an actuality, had taken place, and was recurring at one-hour intervals."







@Munseys and Project Gutenberg: "One Way" by Miriam Allen deFord, from Galaxy Science Fiction (March 1965).
"I thought of every way to save Hal from the Lydna Project and failed ... but the women didn't!"













@Pseudopod: Episode #229 "Man Eat Man" by Mike Irwin.
“The Dumpster Kid is already recounting the tally behind Uncle Sam to make sure that there’s no foul play. When they finish the first vote, he puffs out his chest and in a slightly deeper voice says, ‘Now all those against.’ Again the two go competitively counting heads.



@Escape Pod: Episode #290 "Tom the Universe" by Larry Hodges, read by Mat Weller.
"I permeate this universe, which I’ve named Tom, and guard against its destruction. If someone had done that for the universe I came from, then Mary, my sweet Mary, would still be alive, and I wouldn’t have killed her and everyone else when I accidentally destroyed that universe."


@SFFaudio: Podcast #105 with a complete and unabridged reading of the action/adventure classic The Most Dangerous Game by Richard Connell, narrated by William Coon.
"A tempest tossed hunter crawls ashore on a mysterious island only to find his way to a creepy castle inhabited by a Russian Count named Zaroff."


@The Internet Archive: Strange Adventure (1945) or right click here to download a zip of the whole collection.
"Strange Adventure aired in 1945 and was a collection of short adventure stories lasting not much longer than 3:30 minutes told by host, Pat McGeehan." The perfect length to mix with songs on your iPod or MP3 player.

@Misfits Audio: Star Rabbit Tracks episode #5 "Who Are You? written by N.J. Rainford, performed by a full cast. SF humor/parody.
"Things aren’t always as they appear- as the Crew of the Jackalope are about to find out!"


@BrokenSea Audio Productions: Maudelayne Series 3 Episode 12: "Seven Years." (Earlier episodes here)
"The beautiful naiad love of Atherton returns, but is trapped inside a mirror. Can he free her without paying the ultimate price?"





@AntipodeanSF: AntipodeanSF Pilot Episode.
"features "Ninja Nemesis" by Crisetta MacLeod, "Zero" by Shaun A. Saunders, and "An Accident Going Somewhere To Happen" by Shaun A. Saunders."







@Flashes in the Dark: "Night" by David Kernot.
@365 tomorrows: "Unleaded" by Garrett Harriman.
@ChiZine: [Dark Poetry]





@The Internet Archive: Vulcan, Son of Jupiter (1961).
Bizarre, dubbed Italian sword and sandals film with two rival gods (Vulcan and Mars) stripped of their powers and sent to Earth. There Vulcan faces Mars and his Thracian allies as well as lizardmen.















@Powers and Perils: The complete 1983 fantasy RPG and (all?) supplements available in PDF scans of the original books as well as re-edited versions (go with the scans). Not a great game, but an interesting look at a different type of "old school" RPG.
"Welcome to adventure! You are about to enter the world of Powers and Perils, a completely new fantasy role-playing system, that breaks from the old standards to create an environment of unlimited, exciting adventure."

I'm not certain how legit this site is, but since it's apparently been up 15 years, it's probably OK.

@Suffer Shack: "The Challenge of Asmodeus" 4E adventure for level 30 characters. More free 4E adventures here.
"It was three earthen years after Obad-Hai’s death, before any proper link was known to the infernal hells. Asmodeus, in his scheming, offered up the archdevil Levistus to take the fall."

Other Cool Gaming Items
@The Land of NOD: [Supervillains] "Kardiak and Psychedelic for Mystery Men!"
A "drop of blood worked its way through the machinery until it touched a tiny silver pentagram hidden deep within, and Kardiak was released"


@Ancient Vaults & Eldritch Secrets: [New Magic Item] "Blood Charm of Klauso" and "Leap Locket of the Elements"
“A red mist!” lamented Koram. “It fogs all I see!”

@Big Ball of No Fun: [New Monsters] "Water Leaper" and "Xiuhcoatl" (statless)
Then he saw it, or rather, them. A half dozen frog eyes floated barely above the surface of the water."

@Sea of Stars: [New Magic Items] "Wepwawet’s Arrows" and "Xanthos’ Manger"
"It flew true, finding its mark in the neck of the enemy scout who fell silently. The hunter quickly closed to make sure the scout was dead. With another prayer to guide the spirit to the lands of the dead, he pulled the arrow free."

@Zalchis: [New Monsters] "Xilmpa" and "Walmakash"
"Xilmpa are huge, hulking, brutish crocodilian warrior-amazons with a taste for uranium."


@A Field Guide To Doomsday: [New Monsters] "Brawlrus" and "Scrawler" (Mutant Future / Gamma World)
"There is anecdotal evidence that brawlruses may be evolving intelligence"

@No Signal: [New Monster] "Bonnacon" Medieval monster (Encounter Critical.)
"Its horns are curved inward, and useless for defense, so the bonnacon uses its dung as a weapon."

@Rather Gamey: "Dead Simple Lock & Trap Mini-game"
"Each lock has a certain amount of cards that determine it's difficulty. A 2d4 roll could easily be used to determine the number of cards, but any amount could be used."




@A Character for Every Game: [Map] "Erdea Manor – the Depths"
"And here, in the depths (in the great cave of area 61) we have further stairs down into the lowest level of Erdea Manor – the Catacombs."

@DriveThruRPG: "Mutants & Masterminds Threat Report #17: Talona"
From Green Ronin.
"The Threat Report is formatted as an update from AEGIS, the American Elite Government Intervention Service, the government agency in the World of Freedom tasked with handling super-powered menaces."




That's all for now.