Showing posts with label e-book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label e-book. Show all posts

Friday, September 20, 2013

Free E-Books, Vampires, and Zombies

There are a few goodies for you this evening.  In addition to the e-books, there's a vampire story by the master story-teller Kristine Kathryn Rusch, new episodes of Pseudopod (always great) and The AntiSF Radio Show, and some good stuff in other genres for those willing to leave their spec. fiction comfort zones. [Art from "Victims" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch.]









Fiction
• "Victims" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. Paranormal.
     "Reese Catton manages campaigns. The dirty side of campaigns. And he has dirt suggesting that his candidate’s opponent is a vampire’s slave."


E-Books
At Free eBooks Daily:

Audio Fiction
• At Antipodean: "The AntiSF Radio Show 182" Speculative Fiction.
     "G'day fellow flash speculative fiction hominids. Oh yes, perhaps other life-forms as well. This is the AntipodeanSF Radio Show 182, featuring all of the stories from Issue number 182 of the online magazine and e-book"

• At Pseudopod: "Enough With The Crazy" by Emile Dayne, read by Joe Scalora. Horror. Zombies.
     "People – men and women and children – faces twisted into grimaces, attacking an elderly couple from all sides, bringing them down, tearing at their clothes and at their flesh. By this exact hydrant. Blood falling where the ketchup was now."

Other Genres
Audio at Selected Shorts: "High Society" and "Dorothy Parker's Wicked Pen"
Fiction at The New Yorker: "Bad Dreams" by Tessa Hadley.
Fiction at The Western Online: "Across Time" by Kathy Otten. Western.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Not Free, But Worth a Look At $3.99

In case you didn't already know it, Regan Wolfrom, my peer at SF Signal, is also an accomplished genre writer. In anticipation of the release of Book Two of After The Fires Went Out, Regan is serializing an excerpt from After The Fires Went Out: Coyote on his website.  Give the excerpt a chance in his site and if you like what you read, grab the e-book from Amazon for only $3.99. (More purchase options here,)





Also out now Haunted Horror #5, co-edited by The Horrors of It All blogmaster Karswell.  Classic horror comics in a new anthology so you don't have to pay a gazillion dollars to read them in print (only $3.99).  Check out the preview here, and read some classic horror comics at The Horrors of It All.  If you like what you see, be sure to grab a copy from your local comic book store.  

Monday, February 21, 2011

Free Fantasy and SF Links

As promised earlier, a few links to some very good free fiction (both print and audio) for your use.


E-Fiction
At Strange Horizons, "The Yew's Embrace," by Francesca Forrest.
"We could still see the old king's blood in the cracks in the flagstones beneath the new king's feet when he announced to us all that this was a unification, not a conquest."

Online HERE.





At Ray Gun Revival, "Proving Ground" by Gerri Leen. "Captain Jim Rutherford walked briskly to the makeshift parade ground and barked orders to the assembled survey crew. They wearily came to attention. Most looked as if they hadn’t woken up yet. This planet—the latest of many, but the farthest out the fleet had been—had a difficult atmosphere to acclimate to. Taking pity on them, he ordered parade rest."

Online HERE.



At Fantasy Magazine, "The House that Made the Sixteen Loops of Time" by Tamsyn Muir. "14 Arden Lane suffered from bad plumbing and magical build-up. There Dr. Rosamund Tilly had raised two children, bred sixteen chinchillas, and written her thesis, and because her name was on the deed had become the medium of all the house’s whims and wishes."

Online HERE.



Issue #134 of Hub is out featuring "Progeny" by Mark Morris, as welll as reviews and an interview. "So what was he here for? What was he supposed to do? Surely not that? No, please God, he wouldn’t. He just wanted all this to end. He’d rather die before he put her through that again."
In Pdf and epub downloads HERE.



Free-Online-Novels is exactly what the title suggests. Links to free, legal, online novels in such categories as Adventure, Fantasy, Horror, science Fiction, and others.

The site is HERE [via Inner City]




At Paizo.com, Pathfinder Tales, serialized fantasy fiction set in the Pathfinder RPG world. All but the final story are complete. These look very good.



The Lost Pathfinder by Dave Gross: Chapters One, Two, Three, and Four.
"That got my attention. Both the boss and I knew there'd be repercussions from our last case. We'd gotten the job done all right, but in the process we'd busted open a bigger secret. It was the kind of thing that hurt a lot of the noble houses, the sort of people who usually hire the boss. They're also the sort of people who usually hire assassins."

The Noble Sacrifice by Richard Ford: Chapters One, Two, and Three.
"They rode their horses far from the well-trodden roads of the Conerica Straits. The ancient trade routes were no longer safe, even for seasoned warriors, and the pair stuck to the labyrinthine hill paths that intersected the foot of the Aspodells' northern peaks."

Blood Crimes by J. C. Hay: Chapters One, Two, Three, and Four.
"At that, the paladin started screaming again, the hysteria that tinged his voice doing little to convince me that his faith in his goddess's protection was entirely certain. 'Has everyone gone mad? He was a vampire!'"

Certainty by Liane Merciel: Chapters One, Two, Three, and Four.
"And evil? Evil is no easier. Most criminals are only men, and stupid and frightened ones at that. But they're the easiest to punish; they've done wrong, and know it, and will pay the price."

Swamp Warden by Amber E. Scott: Chapters One and Two.
"Every soldier leaves a part of himself behind on the battlefield. Sometimes several."

The Secret of the Rose and Glove
by Kevin Andrew Murphy: Chapters One, Two, Three, and Four.

Lord of Penance by Richard Lee Byers: Chapters One, Two, Three, and Four.
"And you think the gods punished you for it by pushing Melaku off the scaffold and making you miscarry? If the world worked like that, there wouldn't be a person left alive." He put a hand on her shoulder. "You're not thinking straight, and small wonder after what you've been through. Come home for a day or two—"

Guns of Alkenstar
by Ed Greenwood: One, Two, Three, Four, Five, and Six.
"'I thought you'd be eager,' Kordroun said coldly. 'You were more than a good shieldmarshal, once. You were one of the best.'"

The Ghosts of Broken Blades by Monte Cook: Chapter One, Two.
"The open field of green grass and wildflowers hid the fact that he stood upon the site of a furious battle from just a year earlier. Such battlefields covered the land of Lastwall like a pox, but it was a pox of which Roubris could make very good use with his unique talent."


Audio Fiction
At LibriVox, Short Story Collection Vol. 047 features adventure tales by Jack London, Bret Harte, Joseph Conrad, and Rudyard Kipling, but of most interest is Poul Anderson's fantasy story "The Valor of Cappen Varra" originally published in Fantastic Universe (January 1957.) "'Let little Cappen go,' they shouted. 'Maybe he can sing the trolls to sleep—'"

All are available in MP3 and ogg downloads HERE.


And Short Ghost and Horror Collection 012 featuring stories by Edgar Allen Poe, H. P. Lovecraft, H. G. Wells, and other greats. "A collection of twenty stories featuring ghoulies, ghosties, long-leggedy beasties and things that go bump in the night. Expect shivers up your spine, the stench of human flesh, and the occasional touch of wonder."

In MP3 and ogg downloads HERE.


At the Cthulhu Podcast, Episode 96, Part One of "The Spawn of Cthulhu."

In MP3 download HERE.

Another recent reading was "The Graveyard Rats"


Other Audio
At H. P. Lovecraft Literary Podcast, Episode 70 "The Mound" Part One. A look at H. P. Lovecraft's story "The Mound" with summary, discussion, and some parts read.

Streaming and in MP3 download HERE.

Other recent episodes include "The Electric Executioner" and "The Dunwich Horror" part One, Two, Three, and Four.

Libre Review and Informal Thoughts on Ebooks

Something a bit different for QD, a review and an informal editorial. Not to worry though, anyone not interested will find free fiction links in the post directly below this one and more links above it later today (21 Feb. 2011).

Aluratek Libre eBook Reader Pro ($115.99 at Amazon)

Pros: Price, USB, Light weight.

Cons: Smaller Screen, Sluggish when first starting a new book.

This is my first ebook reader, which might have some influence on my opinion of it. However, after just a couple of months with it, the idea of being without an ereader is as unthinkable as going without a computer, more so than going without a cell phone.

Screen: The screen is a bit smaller than most ebook readers, though that makes little, if any, difference on most books, though on magazines or graphic novels it might hurt. It is very easy on the eyes.

Reading a novel on this is virtually the same experience as reading a paperback, though it's much easier to carry a hundred or so ebooks than the same number of paperbacks. However, heavily illustrated magazines and graphic novels don't fare well on the Libre with the squished PDF images often being nearly unreadable. Manga, typically with larger images and writing, are nearly acceptable to read on the Libre.

Glare: Glare is mild issue inside with a few angles, depending on your light source, being difficult at best. However, just a slight change, about five degrees or less, in how I hold the Libre is always enough to completely fix the problem.

I took my Libre outside in the bright sunlight yesterday and was pleasantly surprised to find that it was even easier to read than inside.

Connection: The Libre connects to a computer with a standard USB cable, I use the same one to connect my MP3 player and PSP to the computer, and requires no software to use. It is a simple matter to drag an ebook from your computer to the reader. It is a different matter when it comes to DRM items, but since I will never download anything with DRM, I can't say anything about it.

The Libre has no wireless connect ability, but after the kindle 1984 debacle, this is arguably a good thing.

Format Supported: Supports PDF (Adobe Digital Edition DRM/non-DRM), TXT, FB2, EPUB (Adobe Digital Edition DRM/non-DRM), MOBI (non-DRM only), PRC (non-DRM only)and RTF electronic book format

Extras: The Libre comes with an mp3 player, mostly for audiobooks, and a picture viewer. I really can't say much about these as I haven't used either. For me, these are of extremely limited use. When I want to listen to an audiobook on the go, an MP3 player is much more convenient and there are many better ways to view a digital pictures than in B&W on a cheap ebook reader.

Conclusion: The Aluratek Libre eBook Reader Pro is a good bargain-basement reader with few frills, but still providing a good experience for its core function, reading ebooks. Better readers may already exist, and will likely exist in the future but the Libre is definitely a good enough reader for now.


Random thoughts on ebooks.
Being a true bibliophile, I love the physical presence of books. They provide a reassuring comfort that can never be replaced digitally. However, it is impossible to deny that ebooks are the future. While physical books are likely to remain around for many, many years, they will occupy an ever shrinking piece of the market. With that in mind, I'll look at what I consider the good and bad aspects of ebooks, as well as my hopes for them.

Good:
Public domain actually means something. With physical books a public domain book like The Time Machine costs roughly the same as copyrighted book the same size. There were few benefits for the consumer. Now, more and more public domain works are freely available online.

Ebooks take up much less space and are far more portable. As any bibliophile knows, books take up space, a lot of space and are very heavy. Ebooks eliminate space concerns, a 1TB hard drive can easily hold more books than a public library. Carrying a one pound Kindle would save the backs of countless college students whose backpacks are full of heavy textbooks.

They are much faster. If an ebook is for sale, or better yet free, you can easily be reading it within five minutes of starting to look for it. With a physical book, you either have to drive to a book store, which might have to order it or order it online and wait for it to arrive in the mail.

Bad:
Piracy is a problem. While piracy might someday be used to the benefit of writers and publishers, it is currently a growing problem. There are no easy answers here. Perhaps embedded advertisements might work. I don't know.

Browsing is far more difficult. Amazon and other online booksellers do there best, but there is no equivalent to walking through a book store to find just the right book.

Pricing is another difficulty. It seems as if publishers and book sellers are still trying to kill ebooks by overpricing them. For example, at the time I'm writing this Amazon has the Kindle edition of Deus Ex: Icarus Effect priced at $9.99, while the trade paperback is priced at $8.91. There are countless other examples of overpriced ebooks.

While there are certainly costs involved with an ebook, it insults the intelligence of the consumer to suggest that it is equivalent to the cost of even a mass market paperback with the cost of paper, printing, transportation, sample copies, and returns. For many years publishers have blamed rising book prices on returns from booksellers, yet suddenly with the dawning of ebooks returns and the other listed costs are said to unimportant in pricing.

The problem is that there is an attempt to give ebooks a status that is somewhere between a trade paperback and a hardback book. In reality, an ebook is, and will always be, somewhat below a mass market paperback in value. No ebook should cost more than 2/3 the price of an equal sized (in words) mass market paperback. (Of course exceptions exist for small publishers whose products were always significantly higher than large publishers.) I really don't think there is a villain in the over pricing of ebooks, merely a misunderstanding of their status as well as an understandable fear of change.

DRM is an understandable response to piracy, but a bad one. First it paints a target on the work for many hackers. Cracking copyright protection has never been especially difficult and is unlikely to become so. Second, and much more importantly, it cheats consumers who actually pay for the product. When you purchase a physical book, it is yours as long as you take care of it. If you purchase a DRM protected product of any time, you are effectively only renting it. Unlike books, electronic devices don't typically last for a lifetime of use and any product locked into that device dies when the device does. The online storage used by some companies may seem a safer and better method, assuming you don't mind your personal tastes being analyzed and sold or hacked into by unscrupulous individuals. However, these DRM materials are equally fragile. Unlike physical books, most companies don't last a lifetime either. What will happen to the online DRM materials when, not if, some of these companies go out of business is yet to be seen. Some may be transfered to other companies but much will simply cease to exist faster than a 1984 on a Kindle.

Hopes:
I am optimistic that ebooks will reduce, though not eliminate, the size fetishism that seems to have infested the genre markets. There are far too many gazillion page epics on the market and far too few physical books that fall into 120-200 page range of most classic novels. Without side by side comparisons books are more likely to be judged on their merits. And while there are likely to still be some behemoths, as there should be, there is likely to be more of a market for smaller novels and hopefully even novellas.

I hope ebook and ebook reader prices will come down enough to not only encourage people to buy them, but to buy them in great quantities. In particular, I hope a business model arrives that allows authors and publishers to make much more money, allows far more full time "mid-list" authors to make a living, and makes ebook much cheaper for the consumer.