Showing posts with label sci-fi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sci-fi. Show all posts

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Algernon Blackwood and More Horrors


Goo morning!  There's some quite good stuff today, including a collection of dark fantasy stories by Algernon Blackwood that ere praised by H. P. Lovecraft, a continuing serial, audio horror at Pseudopod ( a trio of flash horrors), a collection of audio horror stories at LibriVox (including Poe, Lovecraft, Blackwood, Clark Ashton Smith, Hawthorne, and more), flash fiction, comic books, and more.










Fiction
• At Project Gutenberg: Incredible Adventures by Algernon Blackwood. Weird. Dark Fantasy. 1914.
      "In the volume titled Incredible Adventures occur some of the finest tales which the author has yet produced, leading the fancy to wild rites on nocturnal hills, to secret and terrible aspects lurking behind stolid scenes, and to unimaginable vaults of mystery below the sands and pyramids of Egypt; all with a serious finesse and delicacy that convince where a cruder or lighter treatment would merely amuse. Some of these accounts are hardly stories at all, but rather studies in elusive impressions and half-remembered snatches of dream. Plot is everywhere negligible, and atmosphere reigns untrammelled:" H. P. Lovecraft quoted at Wikipedia.

• At Silver Blade: "The Greatest Shade – Part 4" by Bryan Wein. Fantasy.
       "You see any red uniforms?” Adewale replied curtly as his fingers flew across the keys. The glow lamps along the walls dimmed, as did the luminescence on the ceiling. “Those men could be with anyone.”

Flash Fiction

Audio Fiction
• At LibrVox: "Short Ghost and Horror Collection 022" Horror.
      "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. "

• At Pseudopod: "Flash on the Borderlands XVII: Keeping Up Appearances" Horror.
      “Down By The Sea Near The Great Big Rock” by Joe R. Lansdale, “The Demon Fields” by Keith McCleary, and “Pawn” by Jaki Idler.

Comics

Other Genres
  • Audio at WMG Publishing: "The Ghost of Willow’s Past" by M.L. Buchman.
  • Fiction at WMG Publishing "The Amazing Quizmo" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch.
  • Fiction Online Pulps: "Mementos of Murder" by John L. Benton. 1948, "Green-eyed Vengeance" by Arthur J. Burks 1936, and "Thief in the Cupboard " by Ray Fulbright. 1947. Pulp. Noir.

Saturday, September 7, 2013

You Might Think I'm Crazy, to Bring Free Fiction to You.

Some more great free fiction in a variety of formats and more.  Fore more free fiction pointers check out
 [art from Sacred Knights in E-Books below]





Fiction
• At Author's Site: "What Fluffy Knew" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. YA Science Fiction.
     "Fluffy has the perfect life.  Her cat bed, her kibble, a human to wait on her.  Until they came."

• At Short-Story.me: "Consumed" by Laura Ellison. Fantasy.
     "She recited the words from the tome; an ancient, difficult language that provoked a response from the natural elements of the world. Her outstretched arms grew heavy with empowered blood. Her fingertips tingled. Then her palms grew hot.

Flash Fiction
  • At SFFaudio: "The Canal" by H.P. Lovecraft. Poem. Audio.
  • At 365 Tomorrows: "Welcome Home" by Nils Holst. Science Fiction.
E-Books
At Amazon: [via Pixel-of-Ink]
At Smashwords:
At Amazon: [via Freebook Sifter]
Comics

Other Genres
  • Fiction at Short-Story.me: "Ebb Tide" by April Winters. Romance.
  • Fiction at Short-Story.me: "Super Soul Sister" by Tim Weldon. Crime.
  • Fiction at Short-Story.me: "Two Blanks" by George Sparling.
Other Weirdness


From the cover of Black Cat Mystic #58 (1956) it's the ghost of George R. R. Martin reading to a pair of children.  I can only imagine that it's the start of A Game of Thrones and the little boy is saying "Bran and Rob Stark are my favorite characters. I hope nothing bad happens to them"

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Fun Free Fiction

It's almost the weekend!  Until then here's some great free fiction to pass the time.  There's a new issue of Beneath Ceaseless Skies, tons of flash fiction and comics, and more. A couple of links via Regan Wolfrom at the always awesome SF Signal. More later. [Art from "Asteroid Witch" in comics]


Fiction
• At Beneath Ceaseless Skies: "On the Weaponization of Flora and Fauna" by Alec Austin & Marissa Lingen. Fantasy.
     "As such, I was present in the imperial audience chamber when Plinio Gustavo Invicta presented the results of his expedition into the half-wild province of Corvesia; though not, alas, in any position to witness the first revelation of Plinio’s great discovery, as the Count of Nova Carthago was standing directly in front of me."

• At Beneath Ceaseless Skies: "The Goblin King’s Concubine" by Raphael OrdoƱez. Fantasy.
      "It was a good thing that Maugreth’s men mutinied when they did. Otherwise he would have gone mad like the rest and fled shrieking into the moss-forest at the river’s edge to be devoured by spiders. Of course he didn’t know that at the time. He just sat in the ship’s hold where his men had locked him, shaking his grizzled gray-blonde locks, watching the sunless banks slip slowly past the embrasure."

• At Mythic Delirium Books: "Echoes in the Dark" by Ken Liu. Historical Fantasy.
      “The Chinese speak of him as a great fighter,” my cousin said, “skilled in the ancient arts of combat. They call him by the honorific Ta Tsia, which I’m told means ‘Great Hero.’ Many are the tales of his prowess in battle and generosity towards the poor and helpless.”

• At Weird Fiction Review: "The Divinity Student: Part One" by Michael Cisco. 
      "Short but powerful, this neo-gothic novel, which is illustrated by Harry O. Morris, uses the crisp immediacy of the present tense to lead the reader on a hallucinatory journey from humanity to inhuman transcendence. After a miraculous recovery from near death, a young man known only as the Divinity Student is beset by strange dreams whose lingering effects further alienate him from his fellows. Abruptly, he is sent away from the chill, damp confines of the seminary to work as a word-finder in the vibrant, chaotic desert city of San Veneficio, scanning old texts to record any unknown words he may find." - Amazon.

Flash Fiction
• At Daily Science Fiction: "Flip Side" by Chip Houser. Science Fiction.
• At Every Day Fiction: "Following the Cow's Path" by Sarah Crysl Akhtar. Surreal.
• At Nature: "The Scent of Things to Come" by J. R. Johnson. Science Fiction.
• At SFFaudio: "The House" by H.P. Lovecraft. Poem.
• At 365 Tomorrows: "Runaway" by Duncan Shields. Science Fiction.
At Kazka Press: Fantasy.

Audio Fiction
• At Beneath Ceaseless Skies: "Ill-Met at Midnight" by David Tallerman. read by John Meagher. Fantasy.
      "It was a good thing that Maugreth’s men mutinied when they did. Otherwise he would have gone mad like the rest and fled shrieking into the moss-forest at the river’s edge to be devoured by spiders. Of course he didn’t know that at the time. He just sat in the ship’s hold where his men had locked him, shaking his grizzled gray-blonde locks, watching the sunless banks slip slowly past the embrasure."

Comics
Other Genres
Non-Fiction at Project Gutenberg:
Fiction at The Western Online:

Friday, August 30, 2013

Classic Cover #12 --- Of Shields and Ray Guns


What I love most about this cover, other than it's cool, over-the-top, Flash Gordon style, is that the female character is just as heroic, or insane, as the male character.  And using of a shield of all things. 

The scan is by Cimmerian32 and the whole comic is free at Digital Comics Museum (free membership required)

Friday, August 23, 2013

Classic Cover #11 - Shadow Dragons - Gary's Source?


I love "The Invisible Robinhood Returns" as if the cover wasn't wild enough.  Still, the Binders could write so the story probably isn't quite as cheesy as the cover implies.

Saturday, August 17, 2013

Free Fiction from Frogs to Dragons

Let the weekend begin!  A few good free fiction links to begin the day, including a pair of links swiped from Regan Wolfrom at SF Signal, a free Kristine Kathryn Rusch story, a complete e-zine, flash fiction, audio fiction, and some quite cool classic comics.  More to come.




[Art From "Dragon Slayer" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch.]






Fiction
• At Baen: "Frog Water" by Tony Daniel. Science Fiction.
     "The ship soothed my legs with the slop wands. Aleria had ordered it to do so. She thought I was upset about the blisters on my thighs and shins, but the truth was that I was used to those now. I let her keep thinking that was what it was, though. This was something I’d learned to do back home, even though maybe I didn’t know I’d learned it at the time: you know, act like something bad that happened is much worse than it actually is until you can figure out your next move"

• At Baen: "She Sells Sea Shells" by Paul Darcy Boles. Dark Fantasy.
      "Humans seem to be nature's xenophobes, hell-bent on conquest, ravaging the land and everything growing and living on it in order to "possess" it. We destroy and conquer out of fear . . . fear of anyone or anything unlike ourselves."

• At WMG Publishing: "Dragon Slayer" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. Fantasy. Noir.
      "Rumaad, a different kind of dragon, collects information about the killings the way some dragons collect jewels. So he’s perfectly suited to see the differences in the latest crime scene, the murder of a dragon he knows all too well."
 
• Now Posted: Yellow Mama #39. Noir. Horror.
  • "Summer Job"-Fiction by Joe Malone
  • "Pike N Flytrap"-Fiction by Richard Godwin
  • "No Effect on Me"-Fiction by Willie Smith
  • "Dick Dyce-The A-B-C's"-Fiction by Paul Dick
  • "Road Kill"-Fiction by Rex Sexton
  • "Minnesota"-Fiction by Kenneth James Crist
  • "Hangdog"-Fiction by Cindy Rosmus
  • "My Gypsy Girl" from Bluefield-Fiction by Robb White
  • "My Salad Days"-Fiction by Rudy Ravindra
  • "The Judge"-Flash Fiction by Rob Pierce
  • "Mom Met the New Neighbors"-Flash Fiction by Paul Beckman
  • "John Doe"-Poem by Mark Rosenblum
  • "Killing the Poetry Professor"-Poem by Doug Draime
  • "Running on Empty"-Poem by Marc Carver
  • "Van Gogh"-Poem by Marc Carver
  • "Scalp"-Poem by Ian Mullins
  • "Bottled Up"-Poem by Ian Mullins
Flash Fiction

Audio Fiction
• At Radio Drama Revival: "Kaboom!" - Supernatural noir with Harry Strange.
     "Harry Strange is a noir detective of a different stripe – solving supernatural crimes. Weird frequencies come to a head with “Kaboom!”, an episode from that podcast’s second season."

Comics
Other Genres
• Audio at Selected Shorts: "Pushing the Limits"

Friday, August 16, 2013

Classic Cover #10 - What the . . .?


Just too weird . . . Make it stop.
[unfortunately I don't know the scanner or I would credit them]

Thursday, July 25, 2013

There Ain't No Cure for the Summertime Blues - Except More Free Fiction

Three e-zines full of speculative fiction, science fiction, and horror, and a scad of cool genre comics can cure any blues. Enjoy!












E-Zines
• Now Posted: Expanded Horizons Issue 40 (July 2013). Speculative Fiction.
• "Bicycle Girl" by Tade Thompson
     "Once more, the sun came out. It was brighter, you could tell even with closed eyes, but Aloy did not stir until he heard the dawn chorus. He had slept sitting down, facing a twelve foot wall with a window close to the ceiling. It was rectangular, roughly a foot wide and most likely barred. This was the only light source."

• "Into the Breach" by Malon Edwards
      "I’m off my bunk and into my jodhpurs, knee-high leather boots and flight jacket the moment the long range air attack klaxons seep into my nightly dream about Caracara.
Muscle memory and Secret Service training kick in; I’m on auto-pilot (no pun intended) and a good ways down the hall buttoning up both sides of my leather jacket to the shoulder a full thirty seconds before I’m awake."

• "Resurrection 2.0" by Victor Fernando R. Ocampo
      "It was October, the month of harvest, the month of blood. The cold Siberian winds blew from the North, lightly frosting the window with infinitesimal diamonds. A solitary figure stood by the moon window, staring past a blood-red wall of light towards the dark sewer called Mother Ocean."

• Poetry: "The Robo Sutra" by Bryan Thao Worra.

• Now Posted: Aphelion #175 - July 2013. Science Fiction.
"Little Green Things" by William R. Warren, Jr.
     "A never-before-seen installment in a new shared universe series, The Aphelion Project."
"Illegally Parked UFO" by N. E. Riggs
     "Inexperienced Kumar didn't really fit in at NASA until an alien and a traffic cop showed up outside their doors."
"Court Dresser" by Roderick D. Turner
     "Fabric, dyes, makeup, and flowers were Fessington's tools in a very different look at noble ambitions."
"Sprint Hack" by Zac Miller
     "Nelson chafed for years against his "perfect" competitors until he made his own solution."
"The Perfect Meal" by Stanley Wilkin
    "The biggest challenge to settling the planet was that humans tasted so good."
"SoignƩ Voyage" by George Schaade
      "The bombshell secret of the doomed liner's journey had been staring them in the face the whole time."
"Rip Tide" by James Neale
      "Sailors and a dragon gamble against a man who could see everything they were about to do."
"Almost Done" by Andrew Saxsma
      "How did the man across the street know that Ray was stuck on his dissertation?"
"The Emperor's Servant" by Owen Harrison
      "Gregor knew service to the Emperor took total committment. Anyone who gave less than all he had was a traitor."
"Kebakarania" by Christy Boston
     "Kind-hearted Mollie never understood why the others prisoners hated her or why the fires were coming for them all."

Poetry:

• Now Posted: Black Petals #64. Horror.
• "A Matter of Principle" by Felicia Lee
     "Amber thought she’d be able to sleep through that shuffling down the hall. But she couldn’t."
• "Calendula and the Other Man" by Charlie C. Cole
     "Calendula and I were just kids during the Woodstock age, but still influenced, years later, by the countercultural reverberations from those famously groovy free-lovers"
• "Holiday Greetings from the Witness Protection Program" by Charlie C. Cole
     "In 1989, I was delivering a pizza order when the Loma Prieta earthquake struck. The house was on fire."
• "Murder Scene-Fiction" by Bradley Nies.
     "Sitting in Stone’s office reception area is both disturbing and irritating."
• "The Day I Started Believing" by George G. Economou.
     "I had no idea that this day would change my entire life, and the way I think and perceive the world around me."
• "The Fortune Teller-Fiction" by Harold Kempka.
     "Mark spotted the old fortune teller machine after dining with his wife Marge at their favorite beachside restaurant."
• "The Last Day of the Ugly Man" by Charlie C. Cole
     "To me, that crazy crush of humanity I witnessed was the very twilight of civilization."
• "The Monkey Who Talked Too Much" by Charlie C. Cole
     "Franco and Merle jumped from the stifling school bus and sprinted for their favorite waterhole, Branson Quarry."
• "The Unholy Birth of Kitty" by K.P. Hooker
      "It was Kent’s job this year to set up his parents’ old incubator one week before Thanksgiving in his father’s house."
• "The Hartfield Creature" by Dominic Lennard
      "The creature had been seen by at least half the residents of Hartfield, a small suburb of the city, population six hundred."
• "Jaws 3D and Others" Poems by Jeffrey Park
• "Alien Rhymes" Poems by Janet Ro
Comics

Friday, July 12, 2013

Classic Cover #5 - Alien Legs


You know, one of the underlying assumptions of most science fiction stories must be that women have been genetically engineered to be immune to cold, because they sure don't wear much clothing.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Free Comics and E-Books

Some good comics (including a scanned story by Donald A. Wollheim) and e-books for you today. Will try to catch up on the e-zines today, if not then tomorrow.






[Art from Planet Comics #23, linked below.]




Comics
E-Books
At Amazon: Shadow of Oz by Nick Damon. Fantasy. [Via Pixel of Ink]
At Free eBooks Daily:
At Smashwords:

Friday, May 31, 2013

Friday

Another day of fantastic freebies, more tomorrow (unless I'm sleeping and stuff).  Lots of good stuff today, fiction, flash fiction, audio fiction, comics, e-books, and the video section ushers in a classic Poe adaptation.










Fiction
• At Buzzy Mag: "Something You Don’t Want To Find" by Annie Neugebauer.
     "At first, her parents didn’t believe her when Chris told them she could hear the scorpions—not until she was proven right so many times. The clinking of her blinds? It could have so easily been a single slat caught on the lever of the lock, slipping back into place through a combination of air current and gravity, but it had indeed been a scorpion nestled within."

• At Daily Science Fiction: "An Exodus of Wings" by Bonnie Jo Stufflebeam.
     "Before Heidi came along, Michael did everything he could to keep the damn faeries out of his apartment. Every night he washed and dried his dishes, never left one dripping in the drying rack. Always fished the food particles from the drain, took the trash out, sealed his cereal in glass jars."

• At Real Pulp: "The Moon Moth" by Jack Vance. 1961 [via SF Signal]
     "Ser Edwer Thissell has to search for a murderous imposter on a planet where everyone wears a mask! "

• At SF Signal: “The Black Abacus”  by Yoon Ha Lee.
     "In space there are no seasons, and this is true too of the silver wheels that are humanity’s homes beyond Earth and the silver ships that carried us there. In autumn there are no fallen leaves, and in spring, no living flowers; no summer winds, no winter snow. There are no days except our own calendars and the stars’ slow candles in the dark."

Flash Fiction
  • At Beware the Hairy Mango: "Pool Man" by Matthew Sanborn Smith. Audio.
  • At Every Day Fiction: "One Life Story" by David Castlewitz. Fantasy.
  • At Flashes in the Dark: "Slightly Ajar" by Sandra Seamans. Horror.
  • At Nature: "A Time for Peace" by S. R. Algernon. Science Fiction.
  • At 365 Tomorrows: "Field Test" by Jae Miles. Science Fiction.

E-books at Free ebooks Daily:
Audio Books
• At The Classic Tales Podcast: "The Repairer of Reputations Parts One and Two" by Robert W. Chambers. Science Fiction.
       "America is fat and prosperous. We’ve warred with the world, and have gotten rid of the riff-raff. A new era is arising, change is in the air, and to top it all off, the first Government Lethal Chamber is now open for public patronage. Science Fiction from 1895."

• At Fantastic Worlds of Edgar Rice Burroughs: "Episode 04 - The Land That Time Forgot" Adventure.
     "A struggle almost leaves the sub in the command of the Germans, But Lys, who is innocent of any treachery, cannot forgive our hero for doubting her loyalties."

• At LibriVox: "Four Science Fiction Stories" by G. L. Vandenburg
     " In the first, Martian V.F.W., some strange visitors join a parade; in the second, Jubilation, U.S.A, our first visitors from outer space encounter a One-Armed Bandit and don't exactly hit the jackpot; in the third, Moon Glow, the first Americans on the Moon receive an unwelcomed surprise; and in the last, The Observers, a sinister plot involving bald men is thwarted by a dumb secretary "

• At Pseudopod: "The Abyss" by Leonid Andreyev. Horror.
     "The light was gone, the shadows died, everything became pale, dumb, lifeless. At that point of the horizon where earlier the glowing sun had blazed, there now, in silence, crept dark masses of cloud, which step by step consumed the light blue spaces. The clouds gathered, jostled one another, slowly and reticently changed the contours of awakened monsters; they advanced, driven, as it were, against their will by some terrible, implacable force. Tearing itself away from the rest, one tiny luminous cloud drifted on alone, a frail fugitive."

• At Tales to TerrifyEpisode No. 73, Bram Stoker No. 2. Horror.
      “Magdala Amygdala” by Lucy A. Snyder and “Righteous” by Weston Ochse

Comics
Video
• At The Internet Archive : NBC Matinee Theater: The Fall of the House of Usher (1956) Poe adaptation.
     "It is rather amazing that 650 episodes of Matinee Theatre were produced and that it was live and in color."

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Terrific Tuesday Treats

Many good freebies today, including two 'zines, numerous short stories, flash fiction, comics, e-books, etc.  Be sure to check out SF Signal's daily freebies post, especially since, reversing the natural order of the universe, I swiped a link from Regan Wolfrom today.

[Art from "Deathchaser" by D.L. Watson, linked below]




Fiction
• At Author's Site: "Tribute" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. Pirates.
     " But when the crew begin writing about a ghostly vision—a vision impossible to believe but inadvisable to ignore—he must address the danger facing the ship and her crew. And he must make a choice that will affect every last man on board."

• At The Colored Lens: "The Desert Cold Oasis and Spa" by Emily B. Cataneo.  Slipstream.
     "The woman in the diner’s backroom sat in a chair–but no, she wasn’t just sitting. She had become the chair, or the chair was eating her, consuming her like a wicker tumor. Half her teeth were gone and white willow strands had forced through the empty spots in her gums."

• At Daily Science Fiction: "It's Good to See You" by Douglas Rudoff. Science Fiction.
     "Most people were unsettled by the journey past the dead to the ship's forward viewing dome. Brad didn't mind as it allowed him solitude. He floated through the zero gravity of the dimly lit, quarter-mile-long corridor of the necropolis, pulling himself along the rungs between the rows of thousands of white sarcophagi encircling him on all sides, the blank faces of their occupants just barely visible through small windows. In four days, he'd be joining them."

• At Lightspeed: "The Traditional"  by Maria Dahvana Headley. Science Fiction.
      "By your first anniversary, the world’s stopped making paper, and so you can’t give your boyfriend the traditional gift. You never would have anyway, regardless of circumstances. You’re not that kind of girl. You pride yourself"

• At Lightspeed: "The Man Who Carved Skulls"  by Richard Parks. Fantasy.
     “I married your mother for her skull. It’s no secret.” Jarak put aside his rasps and gouges for the moment, resting his eyes and mind from the precise, exacting work his trade demanded. He didn’t mind his son’s persistent questions at such times. Akan was at an age when he should be curious and, if curiosity was a duty, Akan was a dedicated boy. It wasn’t as though Purlo the Baker, whose skull rested patiently on Jarak’s workbench, was in a hurry."

• At Strange Horizons: "Hear the Enemy, My Daughter" by Kenneth Schneyer.
       "Now Kesi is four and does not mention him at all. She remembers him; when I point to his picture, she tells me who Jabari is. But she does not begin conversation about him. She does not ask when he will return. She does not ask what it means to die."

• At Tor.com:  "We Have Always Lived On Mars" by Cecil Castellucci. Science Fiction.
       "Nina, one of the few descendants of human colony on Mars that was abandoned by Earth, is surprised to discover that she can breathe the toxic atmosphere of the Martian surface.  The crew, thinking that their attempts at terraforming and breeding for Martian adaptability have finally payed off, rejoice at the prospect of a brighter future."

• At World SF Blog: "A Puddle of Blood" by Silvia Moreno-Garcia. Vampires.
     "Domingo waits to see if the next news items will expand on the drug-war story. He is fond of yellow journalism. He also likes stories about vampires; they seem exotic. There are no vampires in Mexico City: their kind has been a no-no for the past thirty years, around the time the Federal District became a city-state."

Now Posted: Galaxy's Edge #2. Science Fiction. [Via SF Signal]
Now Posted: Sorcerous Signals May - Jul '13. Fantasy.
Flash Fiction
E-Books
At Free eBooks Daily:
At Smashwords:
Audio Fiction
• At Lightspeed: "The Traditional"  by Maria Dahvana Headley. Science Fiction.
     Described Above.
• At Strange Horizons: "Hear the Enemy, My Daughter" by Kenneth Schneyer.
     Described Above. 

Comics
Other Genres
  • Audio at Project Pulp: "The Spirit of France" by S. B. H. Hurst. Pulp f=Fiction.
  • Flash at Every Day Fiction: "Margins" by D. Z. Watt.

Friday, May 3, 2013

Part Three

A few more freebies, including comics and Tales to Terrify.



[Art from "The Hungry Horde" linked below]







Fiction
•  At Big Pulp: "Paula" by Court Merrigan. Science Fiction.
     "I am in my car, foraying into the lower city in search of life and books. Autumn storms loom gray over the city, twinging the air with the scent of ice-cracked winter. Rain makes an opaque smear of my windshield so I pull over. Through the steady-streaking glass I see a shopfront, its marquee a freakishly grinning clown juggling amidst sprinting elephants, relic from a past century. I duck in through the rain."

•  At Enchanted Conversation: "The Curious Tale of Mr. Fox" by Lissa Sloan. Fairy Tale.
     "I am going to tell you the story of my sister Lady Mary and Mr. Fox. But I am not sure quite how to begin.  My brothers and I could never understand what she saw in the fellow.  She was hardly alone in her admiration of him.  Indeed, many of the ladies of the village of L_____ thought Mr. Fox the most agreeable gentleman of their acquaintance.  Perhaps it was his charming, almost lazy smile, his bright mischievous eyes, or his fine red coat, which I daresay many of the gentlemen envied."

Audio Fiction
•  At Tales to Terrify: Episode No 69
      “It’s Just Tearing Me All Apart” by O.D. Hegre and “The Anatomy of Seahorses” by John Dodds

Comics

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Comics and More Fun Freebies

A ton of online horror and sci-fi comic book stories as well as a few other cool items.


[Art from "Flash Gordon and the Space Pirates" in comics below]




Fiction
• At Paizo: "The Irregulars - Chapter Four: Out with a Bang" by Neal F. Litherland. Fantasy.
     "They moved silent as breath through the empty tunnels, tucking charges into crevices and butting them against wooden support beams. The devil's scent of saltpeter made the caverns smell like Hell, ready to burn with a single, ragged spark. Fairy lights danced in the deeper darkness where the Lieutenant and Trilaina licked wicks and set fuses, making certain everything was perfect."

• At Tor.Com: "The Ink Readers of Doi Saket" by Thomas Olde Heuvelt.
     "People send their dreams and wishes floating down the Mae Ping River with the hope that those dreams will be captured, read and come true. It is a surprise what some wish for and why. One can never know what’s inside someone’s heart—what they really truly want, and those dreams sometimes reveal our true selves."

Flash Fiction
Audio Fiction
• At Fantastic Worlds of Edgar Rice Burroughs: "Episode 15 - The Beasts of Tarzan" Adventure.
      "Chapter XV – 'Down the Ugambi' - Jane Clayton, fleeing Rokoff, is making her way back to the Ugambi River. Hot on her trail is Rokoff. Tarzan is following Rokoff."

Comics
Other Genres
  • Fiction at The New Yorker: "Mexican Manifesto" by Roberto BolaƱo.
  • Flash Fiction at Every Day Fiction: "For Two" by Paige Zubel.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Tuesday Treats

 More great free fiction.



[Art from "Dinner in Audoghast" linked in fiction below]





Fiction
• At Author's Site: "Moments" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch. Science Fiction.
     "“We have to be prepared,” Hoa Nguyen said as she strapped on her laser pistol. She also carried a stun stick. She had attached an emergency aid patch to the inside of her left wrist. Her black hair was pulled back, and she wore a medium-level environmental suit. With a soft voice command, the suit would seal around her ankles and wrists, raise a hood that would cover her entire face, and protect her against a hostile environment. She hoped she wouldn’t have to use it. “Everything could change in an instant.”

• At Beneath Ceaseless Skies: "The Barber and the Count" by Michael Haynes. Fantasy.
    "With the first snip, the count spoke again. 'Filip's hand shook the last time I was in his shop. A man can't have his hair cut by someone he does not trust. Your hand will be true. Will it not, barber?'"

• At Beneath Ceaseless Skies: "The Mermaid Caper" by Rich Larson. Fantasy.
     "The Baron stared long at the tank, and Crane and Gilchrist saw for the first time an unfocused quality to his eyes, a faint gray fog. 'I want her to be real,' he muttered, folding his scarred hands together. 'She does look real.'"

• At The Black Gate: "The Cremator’s Tale" by Steven H Silver, Fantasy.
     "Hoggar, staggering home from Rathskill’s tavern, was blown sideways by the blast and instantly sobered up. He looked at Pargama’s Tower and saw the last remnants of the explosion fade to nothingness. A shower of brilliant stars rained down on the stone tower, leaving small green spots in his vision. He sat down on a rainbarrel and waited for his eyesight to clear."

• At The Colored Lens: "Those Who Do Not Reap" by Kris Millering.
      "From horizon to horizon, water. Trade winds go from west to east, and carry weather and fish with them. Wind and weather bring us news of the world, in the form of all manner of things that float. A string of islands are our own, we and the cousins. Fifteen islands, from tiny Ike to the largest, Yuhime. Ours is the northernmost, Liipil, an island that catches the winds, the volcano beneath dead as our ancestors. As you go south, the land becomes more active, and the cousins become more numerous."

• At Daily Science Fiction: "Legerdemain" by Gabriel Murray.
       "When he looks at you it's obvious he has no idea what manner of fellow you are, and that is how you know that you've got him. No one likes knowledge, after all, least of all curious individuals like Spencer."

• At Lightspeed: "Dinner in Audoghast" by Bruce Sterling, Fantasy.
      "Delightful Audoghast! Renowned through the civilized world, from Cordova to Baghdad, the city spread in splendor beneath a twilit Saharan sky. The setting sun threw pink and amber across adobe domes, masonry mansions, tall, mud-brick mosques, and open plazas thick with bristling date-palms. The melodious calls of market vendors mixed with the remote and amiable chuckling of Saharan hyenas."

• At Lightspeed: "Deep Blood Kettle" by Hugh Howey. Science Fiction.
     "They say the sky will fill with dust in a bad way if we don’t do something soon. My teacher Mrs. Sandy says that if the meteor hits, it’ll put up enough dirt to block the sun, and everything will turn cold for a long, long while. When I came home and told Pa about this, he got angry. He called Mrs. Sandy a bad word, said she was teaching us nonsense. I told him the dinosaurs died because of dust in the sky. Pa said there weren’t no such thing as dinosaurs."

• At Tor.com: "Do Not Touch" by Prudence Shen.
     "Lane doesn’t understand why people have such a hard time following directions. All these paintings are clearly marked “DO NOT TOUCH” for a reason."

Flash Fiction

Audio Fiction
• At Author's Site: "The MVP Episode #28" by Scott Sigler, Science Fiction. Football. 
      "Quentin learns of a love triangle between John Tweedy, Rebecca Montagne, and a mystery person. The Krakens struggle to keep their playoff hopes alive as we head into the final three games of the season. It's not over yet, folks, can Ionath put together a late-season run and take a shot at the title?"

• At Beneath Ceaseless Skies: "The Barber and the Count" by Michael Haynes. Fantasy.
     Describes above

• At Clarkesworld: "Guest of Honor" by Robert Reed. Science Fiction.
     "One of the robots offered to carry Pico for the last hundred meters, on its back or cradled in its padded arms; but she shook her head emphatically, telling it, “Thank you, no. I can make it myself.” The ground was grassy and soft, lit by glowglobes and the grass-colored moon."

• At Lightspeed: "Deep Blood Kettle" by Hugh Howey. Science Fiction.
    Described above.

• At SFFaudio: "The Door In The Wall" by H.G. Wells.
    "Afterwards, as I sat up in bed and sipped my morning tea, I found myself trying to account for the flavour of reality that perplexed me in his impossible reminiscences, by supposing they did in some way suggest, present, convey--I hardly know which word to use--experiences it was otherwise impossible to tell."

• At Tales of Old: "The Book Box" by Roberta Branca. Ghosts.
      "Darts of arctic air puncture my skin through layers of underclothes, dress, coat, and wool blanket. Ari huddles against my bosom, his small arms wrapped tightly around my waist. Like my fellow passengers, I try to limit my movements so as not to rock the boat further. The waves around us all seem to defeat our purpose."

Other Genres

Thursday, March 28, 2013

More Goodies

 A few more freebies for today.

 [Art for Police Your Planet by Lester Del Rey in audio fiction]








Fiction
• At Aurora Wolf: "Swallowed by Darkness" by Jennifer M. Windrow. Fantasy.
    "Our date wasn’t going well. It had been obvious from the start.  However, I felt obligated to stick it out. I owed it to the good friend who’d thought “we’d be perfect for each other”. "

• At Daily Science Fiction: "Shadow Play" by Liz Argall.
     "Every time the shadow puppets play, someone is saying, goodbye. Someone is saying, please don't go. Someone is saying, if only, please. Someone is saying, I remember when, and laughing."

• At Paizo: "Bastard, Sword - Chapter Four: Illusions of Ice" by Tim Pratt. Fantasy.
     ""Probably," Hrym said. 'I can't be expected to remember every kind of thing I've slain. Listen, Manius, before we begin our crusade, do you mind giving me a few moments alone with Rodrick here?'"

• At Tor.com: "Running of the Bulls" by Harry Turtledove.
     "You are all a lost generation, she said back then. And anyone who looked at them as they spun their dizzy way through life would have had a hard time telling her she was wrong."

Flash Fiction
  • At Every Day Fiction: "Life of Eight" by Paul Miller. Science Fiction.
  • At Nature: "Sticky" by George Zebrowski. Science Fiction. 
  • At 365 Tomorrows: "Cold" by Bronwyn Seward. Science Fiction.
Audio Fiction
• At Escape Pod: "Keeping Tabs" by Kenneth Schneyer. Science Fiction.
      "I was so excited when I could finally buy a Tab. They cost so much, you know, but I saved up for maybe six months. I waitressed at Antonio’s in the North End, and let me tell you, it’s murder on the feet.  Those trays are heavy, too, and Nico screams at everybody the whole shift, not to mention the way you smell after six hours."

• At LibriVox: Police Your Planet by Lester Del Rey. Science Fiction.
     "Bruce Gordon looked at his ticket, grimaced at the ONE WAY stamped on it, then tore it into bits and let the pieces scatter over the floor. He counted them as they fell; thirty pieces in all, one for each year of his life. Little ones for the two years he'd wasted as a cop."

• At LibriVox: People of the Mist by H. Rider Haggard. Adventure.
     "Penniless Leonard Outram attempts to redress the undeserved loss of his family estates and fiancee by seeking his fortune in Africa."

Morning Freebies

Good morning! A few great freebies - more to come!

(Art for "No Breather in the World But Thee" in fiction and audio fiction)





Fiction
• At Nightmare Magazine: "No Breather in the World But Thee" by Jeff VanderMeer. Horror.
     "The cook didn’t like that the eyes of the dead fish shifted to stare at him as he cut their heads off. The cook’s assistant, who was also his lover, didn’t like that he woke to find just a sack of bloody bones on the bed beside him. 'It’s starting again,' he gasped, just moments before a huge, black, birdlike creature carried him off, screaming."

Ebooks
At Free eBooks Daily:
Flash Fiction
Audio Fiction
• At Nightmare Magazine: "No Breather in the World But Thee" by Jeff VanderMeer. Horror.
      Described above.

• At PodCastle: "Virtue’s Ghosts" by Amanda M. Olson. Fantasy.
      "For two weeks after she moved into our house, no one could convince me that Aunt Victoria was not a ghost. With soundless steps, she drifted from room to room in a dress the same blue-gray color as the pendant around her neck'

• At StarShipSofa: "The Golden Age of Story" by Robert Reed.
     "Each vignette is a separate episode outlining the spread of a designer drug, the effects of which include elevated reasoning and memory, high creativity, and pathological confabulation." - Primary Sources.


Other Genres