Showing posts with label audio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label audio. Show all posts

Friday, April 22, 2011

It's Friday

Another good day for free fiction with several SF stories, as well as other genres, a couple of forgotten adventure stories from the Victorian era featuring intelligent apes (I haven't read these so if you read them remember, that era wasn't the most enlightened). Some good horror audio fiction, some good gaming material (including some free fiction in a couple of entries), Mortal Kombat, and Lt. Bob has a last word (I'm sure it will be relevant and thought provoking)







@Ray Gun Revival: "Suited for Command" by Adam Colston.
"For two hundred and forty years, only the barest whisper of power trickled through the space suit’s main processors as it tried to conserve its dwindling fuel cells."


@Daily Science Fiction: "The Elevator" by Erik M Igoe.
"The age of the Elevator did not ward curiosity. Dozens of lucky and wealthy were brought to its shadow every year, eager, anxious. Some thought they knew what to expect, others arrived readily content"



@Cosmos Magazine: "Act of Faith" by Fadzlishah Johanabas bin Rosli.
"The robot recited the call for prayer. 'Allahu akbar, Allahu akbar…' When he completed the call, and turned to face Daud, he saw tears streaming from the old man’s eyes."

@
Cosmos Magazine: "The Jesus Particle" by Dirk Strasser.
"The end of the world is never exactly the same twice - try explaining that to a bunch of Armageddon tourists..."

@Cosmos Magazine: "The Bio-Documentarian of the British Library" by Deborah Walker.
"The British Library was a derelict structure located next to a disused railway terminal. Apparently people once decoded symbols placed on paper. How strange, thought Alphonse."


@Kasma SF: "Fulghum's Synthitar" by Kevin Kvas.
"It was Uncle Vanya’s sincerest conviction that all the particles in the universe had conspired to make his life miserable, he having been born into the poorest family on the smallest, most worthless colony any harvest moon had ever seen."

@Kasma SF: "Ad Block" by Ken Liu.
"Every day, we get bombarded by intrusive and unwanted advertising, and we crave for something that will filter out the mess and give us our lives back. That's why products like ad blockers for web browsers, spam filters, commercial-skipping DVRs are so popular."

@Kasma SF: "For a Song" by Sunny Moraine.
"Andy Gaijin leans over the fire; he's drunk and leaning so close that I wonder if he might singe the fibers of his coat. But I don't worry about it. It's not my coat. And if he catches fire in here, in his drafty canvas shelter, I think I might just step outside as quickly as possible and wait to see how it all comes out."

The Edge of Propinquity has its 64th issue out with:
"Credencium - An Introduction to Belief" by Kaolin Fire.
"John Doe and Spike introduce Joshua to the power of belief; as Phoenix ails, he goes on a quest to gather materials to bring her health and mind back. Despite initial progress, Joshua manages to dig himself even deeper into the pit."

"Flotsam - Underpass" by Peter M. Ball
"Keith's been trying to work out what went wrong in Adelaide, but he's still got no answers. The ghost of the Crow Mage, Michael Wotan, may have the answer - but the deal he's offering isn't one Keith's ready to agree too."

"Idolwood - Little Dolls" by Ivan Ewert.
"As the Hanged Man suffers further setbacks, we begin to see the man beneath his many masks. Grey and Alexei confront Edie Allaway with their finds and suspicions. Despite a rocky start, once in her garden, Edie shows herself willing and eager to help the two navigate the strange world now unfolding around them - unless, of course, she's simply as mad as those who work against her."

"The Ones Who Call - The Lake That Whispers" by Alina Pete.
"Kyle Pawluk is dragged away from his home in the big city to the shores of the Qu'Appelle valley after his parents' messy divorce. While seeking solace and comfort in the waters of the lake, he is lured into the dangerous world of the Ones Who Call. Jenny must struggle to keep him from discovering her secret while still keeping him safe from her malicious cousin."

"Hatzuli" by Lillian Cohen-Moore.
"As Johanna mourns the death of her grandmother, she witnesses the robbing and shooting of a clerk. Although traumatized, she discovers her cousin needs comforting more than she does and takes comfort in the giving. However, when Johanna learns what has upset her cousin, she discovers she may have more in common with her grandmother than she thought."

Serial Fiction
@Kat and Mouse:"Payback" - Part Five by Abner Senires.
"I reached her in a knee-slide, just as she hit the ground curled in a fetal position, clutching her left shoulder, face twisted in pain."


Free Fiction Review
@BestScienceFictionStories.com: "The Shipmaker" by Aliette de Bodard. Reviewed and linked to a free online version.
"Dac Kien builds ships. But not any ordinary ships. The ships Dac builds are one of a kind, custom made, living, breathing works of art. Each ship is specially designed for its one and only passenger, a baby. An alien baby made of flesh and blood, metal and electronics called a 'Mind.'"



"Classic" Adventure Fiction
At The Hess Collection: Digital Dime Novel Highlight: Adventures with Intelligent Apes featuring Treasure of the Golden Crater "First published in 1893, protagonists encounter small apes who live inside a volcano and offer human captives for sacrifice."and "The Young Marooner (1908) "This story is billed as the "American Robinson Crusoe." Edgar Rice Burroughs cited earlier stories like these as his inspiration for Tarzan of the Apes."










@Pseudopod: Episode #226 "The Sound Of Gears" by Ferrett Steinmetz, read by Bob Eccles.
"Bit by bit, he took apart his wife’s murderer, hammering the cracked windshield behind his desk like a strange map, tacking the rubber hoses in snakelike trails around the room, carefully nailing every gear and fanblade to each of the four walls until he sat at his desk, surrounded by the guts of a dead car."

@Lovecraft eZine: "Beyond the Wall of Sleep" by H. P. Lovecraft.
"I have often wondered if the majority of mankind ever pause to reflect upon the occasionally titanic significance of dreams, and of the obscure world to which they belong."

And "The Horla" "Based on a 1887 short horror story written in the style of a journal by French writer Guy de Maupassant, and cited by some as a possible inspiration for Cthulhu. This audio drama was done by The CBS Radio Mystery Theater in 1974."







@Dark Valentine: "Still Life with Herbs and Flowers" by Mark Satchwill.
@Flashes in the Dark: "Dinnertime" by Rick McQuiston.
@Flashes in the Dark: "The Last Run" by Jim Bronyaur.
@365 tomorrows: "Ping" by Wasco Shafter.







Protodimension Magazine has up its seventh issue of fiction and gaming materials. This issue features adventures and extras for Dark Conspiracy and Call of Cthulhu, as well as fiction. In PDF download.



Altus Adventum 2nd Edition Primer. "It includes all you need to start your own adventures, but is limited to only those begining skills, monsters, and items needed to create new characters" Good Art. Completely different rules, but this has a similar flavor to the Holmes' Basic D&D that I started with long ago. In PDF download. [via DriveThruRPG]





@Netherwerks: "Found Objects: The Crystal Egg" a new, extremely detailed, magic item based on the item from the H. G. Wells story by the same name. The post also links to an online version of the story and the Tales of Tomorrow tv adaptation.





More Cool Gaming Items
@The Land of NOD: [Encounter] "Mu-Pan - Encounter XXV"
@The Land of NOD: "Schrodinger - New Villain for Mystery Men!"
@Ancient Vaults & Eldritch Secrets: [New Magic Items] "Spores of Mayhem" and "Inciting Shield of Dursk"
@A Character for Every Game: [Map] "Erdea Manor – Secret Passages"
@Sea of Stars: [New Magic Items] "Quirinius’ Spear" and "Rumina’s Cup"
@Big Ball of No Fun: [New Monsters] "Roblon" and "Sciritae"
@Zalchis: [New Monster] "Quindra"
@A Field Guide to Doomsday: [New Monsters] "Howligator" and "Skyder" (Mutant Futures or Gamma World)

Video
@YouTube: Mortal Kombat: Legacy. Brand new live action MK series featuring Michael Jai White, Darren Shahlavi, Jeri Ryan and Tamoh Penniket! Two webisodes are already up with a new one added weekly. (Judging by the huge number of views, many of you likely already know about this) [via Beam Me Up]


Other Coolness
A big congratulation to SF Signal for winning SFX magazine's 2011 Literary Blog of the Year award earlier this week! It is an awesome site (far more so than the term "blog" would imply). Check it out frequently.




Last Word
Lt. Bob says
"It’s Friday, Friday / Gotta get down on Friday
Everybody’s lookin’ forward to the weekend, weekend
Friday, Friday / Gettin’ down on Friday
Everybody’s lookin’ forward to the weekend

Partyin’, partyin’ (Yeah) / Partyin’, partyin’ (Yeah)
Fun, fun, fun, fun / Lookin’ forward to the weekend"

Ha ha humans! Bet you have that stuck in your head for hours. If you haven't heard it, consider yourself lucky and avoid it like it was written in the Necronomican!

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Elaine Cunningham, Kim Stanley Robinson, Weird Tales, and More Freeness

A bit of a quiet day, but still some great free items. New Fiction by Elaine Cunningham, Kim Stanley Robinson, and Peter Orullian. Classic P.K.D. and a trio of Weird Tales stories from the 1930s (and some art), comics, flash fiction, audio fiction, and more. [Illustration from "The Illusionist" by Elaine Cunningham]








Fiction
@Paizo.com: "The Illusionist" by Elaine Cunningham.
"Still, the school is world-renowned, and I felt one might reasonably expect a certain breadth of knowledge in its scholars. To my surprise, little is known of the Mwangi Expanse. We are all one to these northerners. When they express admiration for my gold ornaments and the thread-art on my garments, their manner suggests an expectation of jangar-skin loin clouts and necklaces of monkey bone."

@Tor.com: "The Lunatics" by Kim Stanley Robinson, from Brave New Worlds.
"They were very near the center of the moon, Jakob told them. He was the newest member of the bullpen, but already their leader." [via Free SF Reader]

@Tor.com: "The Battle of the Round" by Peter Orullian.
"Maral Praig knelt beside the bleeding soldier and examined his wounds. A sword or spear had punctured the man’s gut several times. He would die if Maral did not heal him."

Classic SF
@Munseys and Project Gutenberg: "Isle of the Undead" by Lloyd Arthur Eshbach, from Weird Tales (Oct. 1936.)
"A gripping, thrilling, uncanny tale about the frightful fate that befell a yachting party on the dreadful island of living dead men"





@BestScienceFiction: A review of, as well as a link to, "Paycheck" by Philip K. Dick (1953).
"ALL AT ONCE he was in motion. Around him smooth jets hummed. He was on
a small private rocket cruiser, moving leisurely across the afternoon sky,
between cities."

@Munseys and Project Gutenberg: "Here Lies" by H.W. Guernsey, from Weird Tales (Oct. 1937).
"An ironic little story about a practical communist who taught his friend when to take him seriously"

@Munseys and Project Gutenberg: "The Last of Mrs DeBrugh" by H. Sivia, from Weird Tales (Oct. 1937).
"Mr. DeBrugh was dead, but he still regarded his promise as a sacred duty to be carried out."







@StarShipSofa: Episode #184 featuring: [Fiction] "A Very Private Tour of A Very Public Museum"by Scott Edelman, [Poetry] "Poetry Planet" by Diane Serverson, and [Serial] "Grail-Diving in Shangrilla with the World’s Last Mime" by Ken Scholes, with narrators Jeff Lane and Josh Roseman.








@Flashes in the Dark: "Instinct" by Lori Titus.
@365 tomorrows: "Special Ops" by Roi R. Czechvala.
@Daily Science Fiction: "N is for Nevermore Nevermore Land" by Tim Pratt, Jenn Reese, Heather Shaw, and Greg van Eekhout.


Comics
@Crosseyed Cyclops: Journey Into Unknown Worlds #53 in CBR download. Sci-Fi.







@Pappy's Golden Age Comics Blogzine: "The Sorceress of Zoom" from Weird Comics #17 (1941). Fantasy/Crimefighter.

@The Comic Book Catacombs: Sheena, Queen of the Jungle in "Vengeance of the Talu Chief" from Sheena #1 (Spring 1942) Pulp Adventure.

@Atomic Kommie Comics: Cave Girl in "Ape God of Kor" from Thun'da #2. Prehistoric Adventure.


Other Coolness
[Art] Conan Images. "The Tree of Life" at Crom! and Weird Tales and paperback covers at Golden Age Comic Book Stories.

@Paleofuture: [Futurism Fail] "Picnics on Mars in the Year 2012" (1962).

Friday, March 11, 2011

Gnaerkiean Computer Sabotage

A few awesome goodies today, with the very welcome return of Pseudopod being of especial note. I ran a bit short on time today, due to computer issues taking up an hour or so, but that just means more stuff to link to this weekend.




E-Fiction
At Daily Science Fiction "Epinikion" by Desmond Warzel
"Another battle had been decided in humanity's favor; another system reclaimed from the Squids. Another tiny pseudopod now extruded outward from the amorphous boundary that marked where human territory left off and Squid territory began."

Online HERE.


At Munseys, The Seventh Order" by Gerald Allan Sohl, from Galaxy Science Fiction (March 1952)

"History is filled with invincible conquerors. This one from space was genuinely omnipotent, but that never keeps humanity from resisting!"


At Munseys HERE and Project Gutenberg HERE.





At BestScienceFictionStories: A pair of free online stories "Code Three" by Rick Raphael (1963) reviewed and linked to HERE. And "The Observer" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch (2008) reviewed and linked to HERE.

(QD is also very relieved to see that Rusty survived reading a Stephanie Meyer novella. He is a brave man. **correction see comments**)


Audio Fiction

At Pseudopod: "Flash On The Borderlands VI" featuring the winners of its forum’s “Flash Fiction” contest. "Escape" by M.E. Smith, read by Leann Mabry, "Mother’s Milk" by Strahinja Acimovic, read by Jacquie Duckworth, and "Little Monster" by LynnCee Faulk, narrated by Dani Cutler.

Streaming and in MP3 download HERE.


At Escape Pod: Episode #283, "Grandfather Paradox" by Katherine Mankiller, read by Kim Gianopoulos.

"Ann stuffed her blood-spattered clothes into the next door apartment complex’s dumpster. He wasn’t dead, but it was harder to get a knife through someone’s chest than she’d expected."

Streaming and in MP3 download HERE.


At Cast Macabre: "The Path That Does Not Stray" by Christopher Ryan, read by Graeme Dunlop.


In MP3 download HERE.



Flash Fiction [Fiction nearly as fast as the speed of light]




@The Daily Cabal: "The Moalai" by Daniel Braum.
@365 tomorrows: "Someday" by Erik Goranson.
@Flashes in the Dark: "She Took in Silence" by Matthew C. Funk.
@Everyday Fiction: "Breakfast for Two" by Rumjhum Biswas.


Comics
At Diversions of the Groovy Kind: classic comic book SF, "The Imitation People" by Gentile and Aparo, from Space Adventures #4 (August 1968).


Online HERE.



At The Comic Book Catacombs, Kazanda in "Queen of the Lost Continent." Lost world adventure and g.g.a. from Rangers Comics #23 (Jun.1945).


Online HERE.




At Winter-City.com: Free online for a short time, issue one of Winter City.
"Alan McLean, a wealthy business-man, is brutally murdered in his own home. It quickly becomes clear to Detectives Daniels and Harvey that things are not what they seem when an eye witness claims she saw the Grim Reaper at the murder scene."



Online HERE (Extreme violence, mature readers only).

Monday, February 28, 2011

Many Monday Finds

Happy Monday, space citizens. A great shipment of free fiction in many formats (text, audio, illustrated, gaming, etc.) has made it past the evil Gnaerkiean space pirates. We weathered a bad storm here at headquarters darn planets and their weather.



E-Fiction
At Fantasy Magazine, "The Celebrated Carousel of the Margravine of Blois" by Megan Arkenberg.
"My sincerest apologies for my inexcusable delay in responding to your inquiry after the celebrated carousel of the Margravine of Blois. The truth is—and I write this with utmost regret—that the reports responsible for so much distress in your admirable person are accurate in every respect."

Online HERE.


Dark Valentine "is a quarterly journal devoted entirely to dark fiction, which we define as any story in any genre that is disturbing, provocative, haunting, scary, dangerous, or any combination of those things." The latest issue #3 has fiction by Patricia Abbott • Diane Arrelle • David Boyer • Thomas Canfield • Eric Dimbleby • Paul Edwards • Edward A. Grainger • Greg M. Hall • Dave Hunsaker • Simon Marshall-Jones • P. R. O’Leary • Dale Phillips • Christine Pope • Brian Trent. If you can judge a magazine by its cover, this one will be awesome.

Issues One through Three are available in free PDF downloads HERE [via SF Signal]


At AE - The Canadian Science Fiction Review, "Aliens, eh?" by by Laura Lee McArdle. [OMG that is the ultimate Canadian SF story title!]
"Today I’ve had two cases of bullying, a fist fight between pregnant cheerleaders and, to top it all off, a phone call from a shrink back east. My mother has gone AWOL. Again. Today I need coffee that’ll stand up a spoon."

Online HERE.


At Mindflights, "The Patron" by Michael Simon.
"My customers noticed as well, eyeballing her sleek form as she angled between bodies on her way to the bar. Unlike most nights when I could have fired a gun across the floor and not hit anyone, tonight was standing room only. Unfortunately, that had everything to do with the recent terrorist attack as opposed to my sterling personality."

Online HERE.


Serial Fiction
At Book View Cafe, Chapter eight of Offspring: A Novel of The Silent Empire by Steven Harper.
"It is through first contact with an alien species that humanity learns of the Dream. It is a plane of mental existence where people are able to communicate by their thoughts alone--over distances of thousands of light-years."

Online HERE or start from the beginning here.



At Kat and Mouse: Guns for Hire, "Taking Care of Business" - Part One, by Abner Senires.

"Malachi gripped the arms of his desk chair and glared at the phone on the desktop. 'You assured me," he said, teeth gritted, "your men were reliable.'"

Online HERE.


Audio Fiction
At Scott Sigler's website episode three of the audio-book of "The Starter"
"Feel your heart pump at the roar of 180,000-plus screaming for blood at Ionath Stadium! Watch as second-year quarterback Quentin Barnes leads the orange and the black onto the field of battle in the second book of the Galactic Football League series."


In MP3 download HERE.




Beam Me Up hits a milestone with its 250th podcast. This episode feature new story from David Steffen called "The Utility of Love," a "clever retelling of the Wizard of Oz mythos." and the conclusion to Nancy Fulda’s "Knowing Neither Kith Nor Kin."


Streaming and in MP3 download HERE.




At The Internet Archive, The Sealed Book "a radio series of mystery and terror tales, produced and directed by Jock MacGregor for the Mutual network. Between March 18 and September 9, 1945, the melodramatic anthology series was broadcast on Sundays from 10:30pm to 11:00pm." OTTR certified complete.

Available in two zipped MP3 CDs HERE.



At PodCastle, Miniature 59: "Rainmaker" by Benjamin Thomas, read by Wilson Fowlie.
"I see a peacock,” I said. It didn’t look like a peacock, a bird, or even a fan. Clouds never really looked like anything, unless you squint just right."

Streaming and in MP3 download HERE.




Gaming
The Feb/March 2011 "launch issue of Battlespace is now available for download or to view online." It "provides news and views on all forms of gaming. Digital strategy, board games, card games and table top miniatures are all featured each issue in an interactive, digital format."

Available online and in pdf download HERE. [via Freewargamerules]



At Ancient Vaults & Eldritch Secrets, new spells for early D&D editions and retro-clones.

These include, Earth Trap, Convert Seeds, and Knowing Your Boundaries.




At RPG Creatures some exceptionally well illustrated creatures, easily adaptable to almost any fantasy RPG (many would work well with horror or sf RPGs). A must see site.

Recent creatures include the Aegarim, Ni-Oths, the Mehrog, and the Chaerim Witch. [via Trollish Delver]



At RetroRoleplaying The Blog, "Microlite 74 supplement 2: Wary's Grimoire" It "adds half-elves and the following classes to Microlite74: Paladin, Ranger, Monk, Illusionist, Druid, Thief and Bard" as well as spells and more.

In PDF download HERE. Also available with Microlite 74 and supplement #1 in epub and mobi formats here.


At The RPG Athenaeum, "The Rusty Dwarf Inn"
"The Rusty Dwarf Inn is a typical inn and tavern run by the halfling brewer, Bandor Berryhill. This 12-page pdf file includes a description of the inn’s history, a complete key, non-player character profiles and high-resolution maps." For D&D but easily adapted to most fantasy games.


Online HERE. [via RPG Bloggers]




Comics
At Lady, That's My Skull, Chapter 24 of "Mystra of the moon" from Planet Comics.


Online HERE. [via Free SF Reader]. Earlier chapters are here.




At The Comic Book Catacombs, "The Secret of the Crater-Men" (1951) illustrated by Al Carreno.



Online HERE.




At Pappy's Golden Age Comics Blogzine, "The Face," drawn by Steve Ditko, from Tales Of Suspense #26 (1961) and B&W scans of the original art.




In B&W and color versions HERE.





At Digital Comic Museum, Jungle Comics #160 featuring the Tarzan-like adventures of Ka'anga jungle lord and Tiger Girl.



In CBR format HERE (free membership required).





At The Bloody Pulp!, "The Devil's Fiddle" & "Horror Harbor" classic B&W horror comics from Witches' Tales.


Both are online HERE.





And at Four-Color Shadows, "Werewolf of the Alps" (1954), a mid-fifties horror tale from Jon D'Agostino


Online HERE.





Other Coolness
At Fantastic Flashbacks, a scanned article from 1977 about Forbidden Planet, the best film of the 1950s (imho).

Available HERE.