Showing posts with label old time radio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label old time radio. Show all posts

Monday, September 16, 2013

The E-Books are Coming. The E-Books are Coming.

And  now they're here. Some good e-books and classic OTR this time. [Art from "Tom Corbett - Adventure in Deep Space" linked below]










Old Time Radio
  • At Boxcars711:  Tom Corbett Space Cadet - "Danger In Deep Space." Part 1 of 2 and  Part 2 of 2.
  • At OTR Plot Spot!: "War Game" - Exploring Tomorrow. Science Fiction. 1958. "It Happened on Sunday" - The Hermit's Cave. Horror. 193x. and "Hunter's Moon" - Piccadilly Radio. Science Fiction.
  • At Relic Radio: "The Paxton’s House" Beyond Midnight. Horror. 1968.
E-Books
• At Amazon: Evolution (Evolution Series Book 1) by Kelly Carrero.YA Paranormal. [via Pixel-of-Ink]
At Free eBooks Daily:
At Amazon: [via Freebook Sifter]

Monday, September 2, 2013

Midday Free Fiction

  And the good stuff keeps coming.  There are two good e-zines, flash fiction, and some old time radio in this post alone.  And yes, there's more to come.  [Art from SQ Mag linked below]












Fiction
Now Posted: New Myths: Issue 24, September 1, 2013. Speculative Fiction.
• "A Slender Darkness" by D. A. D'Amico
      "The sweeping curve of indigo reminded Rhyse of Daisha's lithe body, the way her smooth shoulder had moved under his clumsy fingers as he applied the ink. She'd gasped when he'd used the hot wire to set the line, her voice exploding in breathless sighs of pleasure."

• "The Hidalgo's Domain" by Thomas Canfield.
        "The light took Bradshaw by surprise. He hung suspended in the water, moving his fins just enough to maintain his depth, wondering how he could have miscalculated so badly. The water had a beautiful rich tint to it, a silky, sensuous blue, not unlike waters Bradshaw had dove in the Caribbean. But why here, he wondered. There was a spring five miles further to the west, a small one that scarcely warranted a name. But here the network of caves ran uninterrupted through miles of porous limestone. No natural light ever penetrated these waters. Bradshaw should not have breached the surface till he returned to his original point of entry again. This was not his point of entry."

• "Cerebral Vortex" by Sean Hazlett
       "The hollow-skulled dolphin carcasses started washing ashore about a week ago. No matter how many times Dr. Janet Kimball examined the bodies, she was at a loss as to what was behind these mutilations. Dr. Kimball observed an atrocity that had become so common she was almost numb to it – almost, if not for the dolphins’ missing gray matter. In all her forty years, she’d never come across such a peculiar and gruesome sight."

• "Butterfly Weather" by Hannah Lackoff
      "On Monday morning, there were ants in the kitchen. I searched under the sink in vain for the traps I knew I had bought. I tried the medicine cabinet, the hall closet, and finally found them on top of the refrigerator, out of my reach without the assistance of the step stool. I was twenty minutes late for work."

Now Posted: SQ Mag: Edition 10
• "Shoe Shine Picture" by Robert Datson. Dark Fantasy.
     "Concrete lies under Sam’s thin sleeping bag and he keeps still, knowing the moment he moves, bones will push through the thin material and his comfort will disappear, bringing him firmly into contact with his current situation."

• "Intangible (Part 5 of 6)" by A.A. Garrison. Fantasy.
      "It was the fall of '89, late September, no different than the thirty-seven she'd known previously. But that changed on a Thursday afternoon, as she motored down the road in the family minivan, Kyle and Tia in tow."

• "That Blasts the Roots of Trees is My Destroyer" by David Halpert. Dystopian Science Fiction.
      "Tenement apartments hugging the Green Zone show their true colors in the sober light of day. Moss and climbing ferns hide the cracked foundations and graffiti courtesy of resident syndicates. Charlie’s disposable Sanyo reads yellow for this district, advising citizens to express caution when venturing out in broad daylight."

• "Drunks" by Michael C Schutz-Ryan. Horror.
       "When I first met Neil, he was drinking Heineken at Jim’s party. Well dressed and very drunk gay men stood around a veritable garden of potted plants; they watched each other watching each other and tried to appear disinterested."

• "Mr Strawn and the Book" by Morgan Knight. Steampunk.
      "Mr. Strawn stepped off the sleek magnetic train and walked down the wooden boardwalk of the depot, boots clunking. He carried a canvas bag shaped around the thick book inside of it. It made him think of a snake that had misjudged its meal every time he picked it up."
Flash Fiction
• At SQ Mag: "Visiphorical Art" by Michelle King. Horror.
• At 365 Tomorrows: "The Morrow Upon Midday" by Timothy Marshal-Nichols. Science Fiction.
At New Myths: Speculative Poems.

Old Time Radio
  • At Boxcars 711: "The Graveyard Mansion 2 Pts. Complete" - The Witch's Tale 1933.
  • At OTR Plot Spot!: "Incident at Switchpath" - Beyond Tomorrow 1950, "The Third Man's Story" - Quiet, Please 1948, and "Hunter's Moon" - Part 05 of 08. Science Fiction and Horror.
  • At Relic Radio: "The Wendigo" - Theater 10:30. Horror.

Saturday, August 17, 2013

Quasar Dragon Spotlight On X Minus One.

X Minus One was a half-hour science fiction radio anthology that ran from April 24, 1955 to January 9, 1958 on NBC.  It was overseen by NBC staff writers Ernest Kinoy and George Lefferts, who also wrote some stories and adapted most of the rest.  The series featured stories by many of the best writers of that era (Bradbury, Asimov, Heinlein, Pohl, Dick, etc.), typically either a rewrite of a Dimension X script or taken "from the pages of Galaxy Magazine," and was one of the last great Old Time Radio series.

As with virtually every anthology series, the episodes were rather hit or miss. Some were great, while other (including most original stories by Kinoy and Lefferts) weren't very good.  But with so many episodes, if a listener likes even half of them, it's a great series.  Tastes vary so I'm reluctant to recommend any except to say that the stories by the better known writers tend to the best ones.

There was a single episode attempt to revive the series in 1973, that some purists do not consider part of the series.  And I'm the only person in the world, but I consider the 19 Nocturne Boulevard episode "The leech" to be an honorary X Minus One episode. (It's a dramatization of 1950's Galaxy Magazine story by a big name SF writer - Robert Sheckley).

While X Minus One had some flaws, such as a half-hour being a bit short for the adaptations, it was one of the high points of twentieth century science fiction.

The links after the fold are direct download MP3 from the Internet archive, except on names which lead to the original story at Project Gutenberg and on The 19 Nocturne Boulevard which leads to that site.


Saturday, August 10, 2013

Free Fiction Nightcap

A few bonus goodies today, including some classic old time radio, some e-books, a new episode of  Every Photo Tells, and the completion of James Potter and the Morrigan Web by G. Norman Lippert.
 

Fan Fiction: 
• At Author's Site: James Potter and the Morrigan Web by G. Norman Lippert. Harry Potter. Fantasy.
      "James had expected his return to Hogwarts to be a happy occasion. Indeed, the sight of the enormous crimson engine of the Hogwarts Express, shrouded with steam, hissing and clanging with prosaic urgency, was a very welcome sight after the events of the previous months. Even Albus, who had spent the holiday in a sort of angry fugue, had displayed an almost annoyingly chipper mood all morning, eager to board the train and rejoin his Slytherin mates."

E-Books
• At Amazon: Alexandria by John Kaden. Post-Apocalyptic. [via Pixel-of-Ink]
At Free eBooks Daily:

Audio Fiction
• At Every Photo Tells: "Night Cap" by Richard D. Asplund Jr. Horror. Mystery.
     "A young woman on the verge of suicide gets unexpected help."

Old Time Radio

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Free Fiction, Eight Days a Week!


Welcome to another posting of free, legal fiction links (especially science fiction, horror, and fantasy) at QuasarDragon, where even on a Sunday, we hunt down free fiction to save you time and money.  All for no cost! Even the corny intros are free. 

 

 [Art from Astounding - linked below]






 Fiction
• At Project Gutenberg: "Astounding Stories of Super-Science, May, 1930" Science Fiction.
      "Four destinies rocket through the strange Time-Space of the Fourth Dimension in Tode's marvelous Atom-Smasher."

• At The WiFiles: "A Silver Soul" by Rebecca L. Brown. Speculative Fiction.
     "For one hundred pounds I will sell you my soul… There was nothing that Julian Hart loved more than getting something for nothing. He had dedicated his life to just that; setting up convoluted deals in which people unwittingly bought things which they already owned."

Flash Fiction
Audio Fiction
• At Antipodean: "The AntiSF Radio Show 180" Speculative Fiction.
   Audio versions of flash speculative fiction.

• At Cast of Wonders: "Little Wonders I" by Kara Hartz and Eric Juneau. YA Science Fiction.
     "a collection of flash fiction and poetry centered around a theme or genre - "Immersion" by Kara Hartz and "Influx Capacitor" by Eric Juneau."

• At Chilling Tales for Dark Nights: "The Art of Jacob Emory" by Peter Divine. Horror. (streaming only?)
     "the tale of a restless young man named Jacob Emory, who escapes small-town American life for a stint overseas, only to return nearly a decade later, changed, and with a chalk-like black wand in his possession.  The 'stick,' to to speak, allows Jacob the ability to exercise a power that was never meant to be possessed by a mortal man, and before long, mistakes are made."

• At Fantastic Worlds of Edgar Rice Burroughs: "Episode 08 - The People That Time Forgot"
     "Tom Billings and Ajor are now in the land of the Kro-Lu, enroute to Ajor’s home with the Galu. They encounter a hunting party of Band-Lu, taking a Kro-Lu prisoner back to their cave for the dance of death."

Other Genres

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Land of the Free Fiction

A few more goodies to finish the weekend.  I'll be back Monday with more.





Fiction
• At Short-Story.Me: "The Plight of Thaddius Bia" by Kevin Brennan. Science Fiction.
     "Thaddius Bia rose drearily, typical of the day that was in it. Silly to feel such dread about a procedure that he had undergone so many times.  Purely psychological."

Flash Fiction
  • At Short-Story.Me: "Crépescule" by Charles D. Tarlton. Fantasy.
  • At 365 Tomorrows: "The Locket" by Mae Thann. Science Fiction.
E-Books
• At Amazon: Island of Fog by Keith Robinson. YA Fantasy. [via Pixel of Ink]
At Smashwords:
Audio Fiction
• At Author's Site: "The MVP Episode #37" by Scott Sigler. Science Fiction. Football.
      "The Galaxy Bowl is over and a new champion has been crowned. As a universe tunes in to the most-watched event in the history of everything, the winners celebrate and trophies are raised."

• At The Fantastic Worlds of Edgar Rice Burroughs: "Episode 10 - The Land That Time Forgot (Final)"
     The conclusion of Burroughs' classic adventure story.

• At Journey Into: "Respite" by Autumn Rachel Dryden.
       "Edward and Ann, who carries their child, race against time to travel to the safety of the caves before the ravenous scupp shells hatch."

Old Time Radio
  • At Boxcars711: "Let Me See Your Face" - Beyond Midnight  (1950) Horror.
  • At Plot Spot:  "Omegapoint" - BBC (1950) and "The Dream" - Lights Out! (1938)
  • At Relic Radio: "The Leech" - Nightmare (1954) Horror.
 Other Genres

Friday, January 11, 2013

Bradbury, Drake, Leinster, and More

More great freebies, including several ebooks, comics, and a couple more audio fiction stories! 

Today's QD Radio is "To The Future" by Ray Bradbury, adapted on Dimension X. A science fiction story about totalitarianism and an extreme escape attempt.

[Art from "The Unwanted," linked below]




E-Books
• Via Pixel of Ink: "Synthetic: Rise of the Siren" by Shonna Wright.
• At Free eBooks Daily:
Audio Fiction
• At Escape Pod: "Scout" by Bud Sparhawk. Science Fiction.
     "The idea behind the drop was dramatic and simple.  Three attack cruisers would carpet bomb the area where the aliens landed.  The drops consisted of ten burrowers, thirty sweepers, and twenty HE bombs from each ship, all distributed to randomly bracket the target. The third, eleventh, and nineteenth bomb of each pod were slow-fuse HE duds, except for the one that contained me."

• At LibriVox: "The Red Dust" by Murray Leinster. Science Fiction.
      "The world, in a far distant future, is peopled with huge insects and titanic fungus growths. Life has been greatly altered, and poor puny Man is still in the process of becoming acclimated to the change even after 30,000 years."

Comics 
Other Genres
  • E-book at Free eBooks Daily: The Trail by M L Dunn. Western.

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Lightspeed, Strange Horizons, and More

Another day of fantastic freebies with Lightspeed, Strange Horizons, and other great free fiction sites.  Today also brings the first Strange Horizons audio fiction podcast (It sounds quite good). More will be added to this post as the day goes on.

Today's QD Radio is "Knock" by Fredric Brown adapted on Dimension X.  Obviously with the whole story being only  "The last man on Earth sat alone in a room. There was a knock on the door..." the Dimension X is more "inspired by" than "based on" the story.

[Art from Blackburn Gaslight Adventures, linked below]


Fiction.
• At The Colored Lens: "Desert Song" by Carol Holland March. Speculative Fiction.
      "The skeleton stuck with us as we drove into the mountains at Flagstaff where it was cool and green. I thought a more populated area might scare it off, but it just kept running along the right side of the road, at a pace to keep it the same distance behind us."

• At Daily Science Fiction: "Harmonies of Time" by Caroline M. Yoachim. Science Fiction.
      "You do not know me yet, my love, but I can hear you in my future. You are there from the beginning--at first just a few stray notes, but your presence quickly grows into a beautiful refrain"

• At DargonZine:
"And Two Steps Back" by Keith English. Fantasy.
      "The recruits look good this batch," Kalen Darklen mumbled to the man next to him. The other officer looked from the new additions to the watch and to his superior. "Straight." He hesitated a moment but then continued, "Captain, you know that you don't have to be here any longer.
"Five Days in Winter Part 2" by Joseph Carney. Fantasy.
      "The early morning sun shining through a cloudless sky fell upon a hillside overlooking Leavenfell Keep. Fresh snow covered the hillside and a cold wind blew from the east carrying ice crystals from the bay where the keep was located. A murder of crows perched in barren oak trees huddled together for warmth."
• At Lightspeed:
"With Tales in Their Teeth, From the Mountain They Came" by A.C. Wise. Fantasy.
      "She woke with the words I love you on her tongue, speaking them aloud to an empty room. They tasted of smoke and ash drifting over a far-distant, muddy field. The War that had taken her lover had lost him. She knew he was dead, because she’d never spoken the words aloud before."
"Addison Howell and the Clockroach" by Cherie Priest. Science Fiction.
      "Addison Howell didn’t so much arrive in the town of Humptulips as appear there sometime around 1875. He had money, which set him apart from everybody else—because everybody else was working for the logging company, and mostly they didn’t have a pot to piss in, as my Daddy put it."
• At Nightshade Books: "The Advocate" by Genevieve Valentine. Science Fiction.
     "The Martian Embassy in New York is at the north edge of Midtown along First Avenue, in a grey building set back from the street by a courtyard and surrounded by a high stone wall."

• At Strange Horizons: "Selkie Stories Are for Losers" by Sofia Samatar. Speculative Fiction.
      "I hate selkie stories. They’re always about how you went up to the attic to look for a book, and you found a disgusting old coat and brought it downstairs between finger and thumb and said “What’s this?”, and you never saw your mom again."

Flash Fiction
Audio Fiction
• At Gypsy Audio: "Blackburn Gaslight Adventures: Arc 2 part 1 Arachnophobia" by A.J. Clarkson.
• At Lightspeed: "Addison Howell and the Clockroach" by Cherie Priest.Science Fiction.
      Described above.
• At Strange Horizons: "Selkie Stories Are for Losers" by Sofia Samatar.
      Described above.

Old Time Radio
  • At Boxcars711: "Caretaker" by James H. Schmitz. Adapted on X Minus One. Science Fiction.
  • At Relic Radio: "A Sound Of Thunder" by Ray Bradbury. Adapted on SF 68. Science Fiction.
Other Genres
  • Audio at Crime City Central: "Jade Skirt" by Simon Levack.
  • Audio at LibriVox:  Critias by Plato. (Origin of the Atlantis myth)
  • Audio at Protecting Project Pulp: “Whispering Death” by Lawrence Donovan. Action.
  • Flash Fiction at Every Day Fiction:  "Illuminations" by Gustavo Bondoni. Literary.
  • Fiction at Author's Site: "Mr. Alibi" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. Noir.
  • Fiction at Project Gutenberg: The Strand Magazine, Volume XVII, February 1899, No. 98.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

E-Zines, Flash Fiction and More Free Fiction

Lots more great free fiction today including a nice looking new SF e-zine,  Indian SF (h/t SF Signal) and the always great Abyss & Apex. There are many flash fiction stories today, and much more.  I'll try to have a second post today - no promises.

Today's "QD Radio" is the first episode of the classic SF radio series Dimension X, "No Contact"
"A test pilot on an experimental high altitude aircraft with only ten minutes worth of fuel disappears from radar for ten hours, yet returns safely. Of course, it is impossible, as is his story of contact with aliens and the dire warning they have for Mankind." - OTRplotspot.


[Art from Indian SF #1, linked below.]


Fiction

• At Daily Science Fiction: "The Miracle on Tau Prime" by Alex Shvartsman.
        "The investigators arrived in the morning. Father Laughlin and Father Sauer trudged through the dense, chilly fog from their shuttle to the spaceport terminal just as the twin suns of the Tau system began to paint the eastern horizon in yellow hues."

• Now Posted: Abyss & Apex Issue 45 -1st Quarter 2013
Heartland” by Crystal Koo.
     "Whenever my wife spoke Mongolian, it sounded like a gale going through khag bones. I always saw a picture in my head every time I heard it: Maral-Erdene Otryadyn in her youth, pitching gigantic tents, racing large bovines, Earth’s yellow-dwarf sun setting over the grasslands. The only thing wrong with the picture was I wasn’t in it."
Acrimony Grout” by Jay Caselberg.
     "had a well-developed sense of his place in the cosmos. From his magnificent tick-tock spire overlooking the city he would scan the surrounds, peering out from his narrow slit-window and occasionally reach up to pat down the lank remaining strands of his buttercup-tinged hair across his balding moon-like pate.  This ritual occurred daily, if not more frequently.  Of course, his ministrations were unconscious: Acrimony Grout was barely aware of it, if at all."
The Shadow Artist” by Ruth Nestvold.
      "The Shadow Artist bent slowly in the late afternoon light, stretching one arm high, fingers spread wide, and twisting the other arm just right, so the shadow cast along Seward Avenue became a snake climbing up a tree. Here, just south of the Arctic circle, shortly after summer solstice, he would be able to play with light and shadow for hours, telling stories in the main street of Rolynka, Alaska, nearly all night if he wanted."
And Our Lady Splendor” by Matthew Wuertz.
      "A small, black screen projected Gavin’s typed commands as he drummed them out from memory.  His eyes strayed to the viewport; had it not automatically sealed itself during the last course change, Gavin would have faced a blinding view of the sun."
The Third Attractor” by Mjke Wood.
      “I . . . I’m sorry?” Vienna Marshall was startled. She felt heat at the back of her neck. She became aware of the watching eyes, Parisian intellectuals, jazz club regulars, sitting all around her, amused, waiting to see how she would reply.
• Now Posted: Indian SF - Issue #1. [Via SF Signal]
"Staying Behind" by Ken Liu.
       "Those that have uploaded to machines try to steal children."
"The Boy Who Cried Wolf" by Ram V.
       "There is more to the wolves that the boy sees in his dreams." 
"Goddess" by Lavanya Karthik.
      "A man finds a Goddess with three heads in Bhopal after the Gas."
• Now Posted: SQ Mag #6
Flash Fiction
• At Abyss & Apex: "Grampy Cybercop" by J.P. Boyd.
• At Every Day Fiction:  "Annuals" by Ian Breen. Fantasy.
• At Indian SF: "X Marks the Spot" by Kat Otis.
• At 365 Tomorrows: "War is Hell" by J.D. Rice. Science Fiction.
• At Flash Fiction Friday:
• Poetry at Abyss & Apex:
• At AntipodeanSF:
Old Time Radio
  • At Relic Radio: "Murder Castle" - Lights Out. Horror. (1938)
  • At Boxcars711: "Last Visit" - Nightfall. Horror. (1980)
  • At Boxcars711:  "Worlds Apart" - 2000 Plus. Science Fiction. (1950)
Other Genres

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Free E-Books, Comics, and OTR


Rounding out the day with some free ebooks, comics, and old time radio. They are all good so get them all.  And for more freebies check out SF Signal's  "Free SF, Fantasy and Horror Fiction" (Poor Regan found what I was getting him for Christmas and has come to "deeply regret that decision") and for spoiler-free reviews of  free SF check out Variety SF and BestScienceFictionStories.com.



E-Books
• Via Pixel of Ink: "The Spider and the Fly" by C.E. Stalbaum. Science Fiction.
• Via Pixel of Ink: "Blood Skies" by Syd Gill. Horror.
• At Free eBooks Daily:
• At Smashwords:
Comics
  • At Pappy's: "Captain Daring" from Buccaneers #22 (1950). Adventure. Pirates.
  • At The Horrors of It All: "Doomsday!" from Black Cat Mystery #40 (1952) Horror. 
  • At The Horrors of It All: "My Daddy Should Have Listened" from  Beware #12 (1952) Horror.
  • At Seduction of the Innocent: "HeartLine" from Chamber of Chills #23 (1954). Horror.

Old Time Radio


Thursday, December 13, 2012

Free E-Books and Audio Fiction

There are some quite good sounding free E-Books today as well as audio fiction of different categories. There many audio fiction sites that are now on QuasarDragon's radar for the first time, thanks in part to Audio-Drama.com, so expect to see a few "new" sites being linked.  (If you have young children, you might want to check out Classics on the Go in the other genres category).


[Art from Underlife linked below]






E-Books
At Free eBooks Daily:
At Smashwords:
 Audio Fiction
• At American Radio Theater: "The Big Hand" Adventure. OTR reconstruction.
     "An adventure story from 1951. There's lost treasure in the jungle and Doctor Becker leads an expedition to find it.  But first she needs a guide."

• At Brain Drops Keep Falling on My Head: "The Red Room" by H. G. Well. Horror.
      "One of Wells’s most famous non-science fiction stories, The Red Room, though ostensibly a ghost story, may instead be an allegorical tale about the dawn of the 20th Century. If anything, that makes it even scarier…"

• At Campfire Radio Theater:  Twilight Road by John Ballentine. Horror.
      "A young woman, pronounced dead hours earlier, springs to life on the embalming table. Haunted by disembodied voices and recollections of a shadowy afterlife, Cerina is desperate to escape the ghoulish confines of the city morgue. Might she suffer delusions due to her accident or is something far more grisly amiss?"

Old Time Radio
Other Genres


Saturday, December 1, 2012

Free Fiction Part 2: Clarkesworls and Much More.

Even more great freebies, including the latest issue of Clarkesworld Magazine, one of the best magazines available (free or not).  There's more worthwhile free fiction, including a few quite good ezines, audio fiction, old time radio, and more.Check everything out; you won't be disappointed.



[Art from Clarkesworld]








Fiction
At Aurora Wolf: "In a Dragon’s Age" by Eric J. Juneau. Fantasy.
      “Get off my lawn, ya damn kid,” the old dragon slayer said.

At L5R: "Scenes from the Empire" by Robert Denton & Yoon Ha Lee. Fantasy.
      "Few ever visited theTempleofVigil. Indeed, few even knew of the temple’s existence. Far from the settlements on theIslandofSilk, it was connected only by an unfrequented road ever-fading into tropical brush. The canopy masked it, except for its pointed pagoda, which jutted abruptly from the green landscape like a broken ship’s bow. On this night, it was nearly invisible, even to the gilding touch of the waning moon."

Now Posted:  Aoife's Kiss - Issue #43.: Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror.
"Just Another Cothoc Vys" by D. Gansen. Science Fiction.
     "He knew the enemy, even if he didn’t understand them. The Cothoc Vystrians who were trying to kill him were humans in that they had emigrated from Earth in the Great Exodus with the ancestors of everybody else who now lived in the galaxy. There were, however, subtle differences between Renfro and them."
"Broken" by Jennifer Juneau.
     "Had she left the baby in the changing room?  No, she hadn’t taken the baby shopping today.  Others began staring at her as she stood stock still.  A woman rolled her eyes in disgust.  A man gazed at her and shook his head.  That was it—it was her head.  She had forgotten her head."
"Property Values" by Wayne Carey.
     "I didn't see the necessity of my joining the entourage as it trekked through the forests of Enyo from the landing site. Robert “Bobby” Carter, owner and CEO of Carter Industries, led the way, his huge form in its cream-colored suit stomping along the path. I followed dutifully behind, wishing to be back in the yacht and out of the stifling heat"
"Forever Love" by Rone Wisten. Poem
"Rusted World" by JD DeHart. Poem.
"The Monolith" by Christina Sng. Poem.
Now Posted: Clarkesworld Magazine Issue #75, December 2012 Science Fiction and Fantasy.
"Your Final Apocalypse" by Sandra McDonald .
      "This is not a story about the end of the world, although Casual Visitor arrived here in search of such a tale approximately .03 seconds ago. (It, not him or her or they. There is no gender in this corner of the future. There is nothing physical about Casual Visitor, but I’m a different story.)"
"Sweet Subtleties" by Lisa L Hannett.
     "Javier calls me Una, though I’m not the first. There are leftovers all around his studio. Evidence of other, more perishable versions. Two white chocolate legs on a Grecian plinth in the corner, drained of their caramel filling."
 Now Posted: The Fifth Dimension - Edition 14, #4--December 2012. Fantasy and science Fiction.
"Crimes of Passion" by Daniel C. Smith.
       "Diane Greenwood. She had had it all, young, beautiful, from a good family, officially confirmed within a fine church and excelling at a reputable college. And then she pissed it away for one of them-- an Antarian no less."
"What the Dormouse Said" by Tessa Bennett.
       "Looking in the bathroom mirror, she was could see the bags under eyes, the pimples on her face, and the cracks in her chapped white lips. It was becoming harder and harder to deny the reality of her situation and the more she tried to rationalize the physical ailments away, the more acutely aware she became of just how bad it had become."
"Six Step Recovery for Hacker-Inventors" by Marilyn K. Martin.
       "I hear I'm like most of you. Hacked a Roompa and built a mobile android," began Bruce nervously. "Called mine Robby, after a Classic TV Series with a robot named Robby."
Now Posted Nightblade - Issue 22 - The Language of Flowers: Fantasy and Horror.
"Tonight, Tonight" by W.P. Johnson
      "The harmonics ring out and he winds the tuning peg down for the E string. The two notes start to shimmer and throb against one another, creating a wave of sound that fluctuates slower and slower until a single harmony is created."
"The House That Did Not Breathe" by Gwendolyn Edward and Andrew Austin     "I remember a volume I had seen once in the rare book room at my university, and how there was a locking hinge made of rusted metal, attached to the wooden, worm eaten covers, and how when the hinge was unlatched the book sprang open as if begging to be read, the folded pages of the manuscript parched and dry and written upon in black ink with illustrations of many colors and the occasional golden embellishment."
"The Garden" by Christopher DeWan.     "We shined the light through the glass. The windows looked dirty and thin. Somewhere, there was a beast outside. We thought we heard the sound of breathing but realized maybe it was our own. We didn’t see a thing." "Hieronymus" by Megan ArkenbergThe alcove is always full of papers. I leave them stacked on the floor around me, and between toasting muffins, sending maids for laundry and tallying fees for the few and increasingly shabby guests, I sit by the window with a cup of tea and a scissors and search for Hieronymus.
Now Posted:  Spaceports & Spidersilk -.Vol. 5 No. 4: Children's Fantasy and Science Fiction.

Flash Fiction and Poems
At 365 Tomorrows: "Android CG" by Alice Brook.
At The Fifth Dimension: Fantasy and Science Fiction Poems
At Nightblade: Fantasy and Horror Poems
Audio Fiction
At Cast of Wonders: "The Quarrel of the Monkey and the Crab" by Yei Theodora Ozaki. Fairy Tale.
      From a book called Japanese Fairy Tales (published 1908). "Long, long ago, one bright autumn day in Japan, it happened, that a pink-faced monkey and a yellow crab were playing together along the bank of a river. As they were running about, the crab found a rice-dumpling and the monkey a persimmon-seed."

At Clarkesworld: "Your Final Apocalypse" by Sandra McDonald
     Described above..

At Decoder Ring Theater: The Red Panda in "Last Flight of the Valkyrie" Adventure. Superhero. 
      "These days even the arrival of old friends almost always seems to mean trouble. They never seem to show up without news of some new doomsday menace, hurtling through the sky at terrible speed. Will the Red Panda and the Flying Squirrel catch The Last Flight of the Valkyrie?"

At LibriVox: "Brood of the Dark Moon" by Charles W. Diffin. Science Fiction.
      "Once more Chet, Walt and Diane are united in a wild ride to the Dark Moon—but this time they go as prisoners of their deadly enemy Schwartzmann."  [The audio version of the first story "Dark Moon" is here]

Old Time Radio

Other Genres
  • Fiction at The New Yorker: "Literally" by Antonya Nelson.
  • Flash Fiction at Every Day Fiction: "A Geronimo Autumn" by Ruth Schiffmann.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Eclectic Sunday Mix


An eclectic mix of free fiction and interesting news items, for early Sunday. Maybe more later, we'll see.





Fiction
At L5R: "In Service to the Empire, Part 2" by Seth Mason. Fantasy.
     “The esteemed Master of Water,” Moshi Sasako said, bowing to Asako Chukage and his attendants. “I was told that there would be Phoenix observers coming here, but I had no idea we would be hosting such an honored guest.”

Flash Fiction at 365 Tomorrows: "Lonely Lights" by Phro Metal. Science Fiction.

Audio Fiction
At Beam Me Up: Episode 340 featuring part 2 of Poul Anderson’ s classic “Call Me Joe” and episode 14 of the Dark Inspector series "In Plain Sight."  

Old Time Radio
At OTR Plot Spot: "'Never Send to Know" - Quiet, Please ,"The Twonky" - Sci-Fi Radio , and "The Dentist" - Nightfall. 

At Relic Radio:  "Shadow Of The Wings" - Quiet Please. Horror.
Other Genres
Flash Fiction at Every Day Fiction:  "Every Year the Circus Comes" by Maureen Wilkinson.
  Science News
 History

Hobbit News




Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Lightspeed and More Great Free Fiction.

There's some very good free fantasy, science fiction, and horror fiction today, including stories from Lightspeed and Nightshade Books, a simultaneously posted story at The World SF Blog and Weird Fiction Review, and many more.  And don't miss this week's Protecting Project Pulp, which is in the other genres category. Special Thanks to the honorable Sir Regan Wolfrom for the heads up on a couple stories. More tonight or tomorrow.

[Art from "La Alma Perdida de Marguerite Espinoza" in fiction and audio fiction]


Fiction
At Author's Site: "Well-Chosen Words" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. Alternate history.
     "The Gettysburg Address has become an authoritative expression of the American spirit—as authoritative as the Declaration [of Independence] itself, and perhaps even more influential, since it determines how we read the Declaration"

At Daily Science Fiction: "Since You Seem to Need a Certain Amount of Guidance" by Alexander Jablokov.
       "Thank you for your query. Violating the laws of physics in that way was quite enterprising, and we feel you deserve a reply. Just don't do it again."

At Lightspeed: "Ace 167 " by Eleanor Arnason. Science Fiction.
     "It was after I lost my job as the manager of a traveling troupe of precision unicyclists that I met Ace 167. I was down and out in a bar in Venusport, my last credit gone to buy cheap Venusian wine. The jukebox was playing an old, tinny-sounding Beatles tune"

At Lightspeed: "La Alma Perdida de Marguerite Espinoza" by Jeremiah Tolbert. Fantasy.
     "He had falsely predicted her passing four times in the past three days, but the passing was unmistakable. As Maestro Eusebio had said many times, “When the moment comes, you will know.” And he did."

At Nightshade Books: "Holmes Sherlock: A Hwarhath Mystery" by Eleanor Arnason. Science Fiction.
      "She did not translate military information, since that was done by hwarhath men in space. Nor did she translate technical information, since she lacked the requisite technical knowledge. Instead, she translated human fiction."

At The World SF Blog: "Brita’s Holiday Village" by Karin Tidbeck. Horror.
At Weird Fiction Review: "Brita’s Holiday Village" by Karin Tidbeck. Horror.
      "The cab ride from Åre station to Aunt Brita’s holiday village took about half an hour. I’m renting the cottage on the edge of the village that’s reserved for relatives. The rest are closed for summer. Mum helped me make the reservation—Brita’s her aunt, really, not mine, and they’re pretty close. Yes, I’m thirty-two years old. Yes, I’m terrible at calling people I don’t know."

Flash Fiction

Audio Fiction
At Lightspeed: "La Alma Perdida de Marguerite Espinoza" by Jeremiah Tolbert. Fantasy.

At 19 Nocturne Boulevard: "The Rats in the Walls" by H. P. Lovecraft, adapted by Julie Hoverson. Horror.
     "An American returns to the family's ancestral home in England, only to discover that heredity can be terrifying."

Old Time Radio
Other Genres


Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Free Fiction In a Landslide! Pundits Baffled, but Pleased.

Today's a great day for free fiction. There are a couple new stories at Lightspeed, a short story by Bram Stoker and Nebula award winning author Nina Kiriki Hoffman at Strange Horizons, a new issue of Sorcerous Signals, and more great free written and flash fiction.  Don't miss the free audio fiction, including a Manly Wade Wellman story that was originally published in Weird Tales, and a new PodCastle miniature. There's a classic dramitization of a Ray Bradbury story and a couple interesting "other genres" items. There  a new free fiction listing at SF Signal  (please send poor Regan some coffee, caffeine deprivation is a serious mental health issue) And finally, some great free audio fiction news, Strange Horizons will begin  free fiction podcasts in 2013 (Huzzah!).

[Art for "As the Wheel Turns" at Lightspeed]

Fiction
At AE: "The Pack" by Matt Moore. Science Fiction. 
      "There is another complication. Each man was injected with a unique nanite model. Each man now hosts an identical hybrid model which appears to be the result of cross-contamination and replication."

At Daily Science Fiction: "Just Today" by Nina Kiriki Hoffman.
       "My best friend, Ben, is dead. We still hang. Not too many other people can see or hear him--just little kids and animals, and an occasional weirdo, so Ben is kind of stuck with me, which works for me"

At Lightspeed: "Searching for Slave Leia" by Sandra McDonald. Science Fiction.
       "A slip, slide, falling through icy coldness, white noise like TV static. A breeze of hot buttery popcorn. Giddy laughter, sweaty bodies, fanfare music over the intercom, and what’s this? A ten-foot-wide movie poster of young, pale, undernourished Carrie Fisher, posed seductively in a gold metal bikini with a collar and chain around her neck."

At Lightspeed:  "As the Wheel Turns" by Aliette de Bodard. Fantasy.
       "In the Tenth Court of Hell stands the Wheel of Rebirth. Its spokes are of red lacquered wood; it creaks as demons pull it, dragging its load of souls back into the world. And before the Wheel stands the Lady."

At Strange Horizons: "Four Kinds of Cargo" by Leonard Richardson. Speculative Fiction.
       "The Captain had spent her childhood watching bad native-language dubs of those same epics, except the implication that all this stuff was fiction had been lost in translation. When she came of age, the Captain (probably not her birth name) had bought Sour Candy with Mommy's money, hired a crew, and declared herself a smuggler."

At Weird Fiction Review: "Xebico" by Stephen Graham Jones.
      "I had my Library Science degree in one hand, a beer constantly in the other. Officially, I was taking a post-graduation break before entering the rat race. Just catching my breath before putting my soul on the auction block, all that. Unofficially, two of the three professors I’d asked for recs were putting me off."

At Weird Fiction Review: "The Night Wire" by H.F. Arnold. 1926.
      "There is something ungodly about these night wire jobs. You sit up here on the top floor of a skyscraper and listen in to the whispers of a civilization. New York, London, Calcutta, Bombay, Singapore – they’re your next-door neighbors after the street lights go dim and the world has gone to sleep."

Now Posted: the Nov '12 - Jan '13 Issue of Sorcerous Signals.
"Cycle of Justice" by Charles Kyffhausen.
"The unquiet spirit didn't know her effort to save her kinswoman would avenge her own death."
"Dead Girl's Sphinx" by Bernise Marie D. Carolino. Flash Fiction
"Dusting Pixie" by Margaret L Carter.
"Beware of accepting favors from magical creatures, even cute ones."
"To the Empty Castle of My Queen I Came" by W. Luke Hamel. Poetry.
"The Genetic Menagerie" by Mary E Lowd.
"Two cops chase down a rogue scientist, leading them to the fantastical world he's built with genetic engineering."
"Inner Mind's Pyramid" by M. K. A. Marble.
"When Gregor and his hired hands join Dr. Bloigh on an expedition to Giza to excavate an undiscovered pyramid, they find themselves confronted by an ancient Egyptian demon and a cursed sorceress."
"Spare Me" by Jerome Brooke.
"Osirus rules his world as Satrap of the Empire. He recoils in horror as his minions are loosed on the rebels who dare defy the power of the Imperium."
"They Called Me Red Hood" by Kelda Crich. Poetry.
"When Wizards Clashed" by Richard H Fay. Poetry.

Flash Fiction
Audio Fiction
At Lightspeed: "Searching for Slave Leia" by Sandra McDonald. Science Fiction.

At PodCastle: Miniature 73 "Sugar Skulls" by Samantha Henderson. Fantasy.
     "Yesterday was the first of November, the Día de los Angelitos, and Abuela and Ramon and the neighborhood kids made the altar for the children." 

At Protecting Project Pulp:  "The Golgotha Dancers” by Manly Wade Wellman. Weird.
     "Hung over my own fireplace, it looked as large and living as a scene glimpsed through a window or, perhaps, on a stage in a theater. The capering pink bodies caught new lights from my lamp, lights that glossed and intensified their shape and color but did not reveal any new details. I pored once more over the cryptic legend: I sold my soul that I might paint a living picture."

At Toasted Cake: "Biding Time" by Beth Cato. Speculative Fiction.
     "What is closure? How do you close a door if the house has burned to ashes?"

Old Time Radio
At Relic Radio: NBC Short Story "The Rocket" by Ray Bradbury. Science Fiction.

Other Genres

And all who heard should see them there,
And all should cry, Beware! Beware!
His flashing eyes, his floating hair!
Weave a circle round him thrice,
And close your eyes with holy dread,
For he on honey-dew hath fed
And drunk the milk of Paradise.