Electronic copies of two more new old stories have gone on sale at Fictionwise this week: * "The Veil Beyond the Veil" (Realms of Fantasy, 2002) * "The Day Pietro Coppino Spoke to the Mountain" (Realms of Fantasy, 2003) Each under a dollar! What a steal! Or collect
Electronic copies of two more new old stories have gone on sale at Fictionwise this week: * "Stalin's Candy" (Realms of Fantasy, 1999) * "The Diagnostic Feast" (Beyond the Last Star, Sherwood Smith, ed., 2002) Mere pennies! Or collect all ten!
Electronic copies of two more new old stories have gone on sale at Fictionwise this week: * "Kevin17" (F&SF, 1995) * "Mrs. Janokowski Hits One out of the Park" (Electric Velocipede, 2003) Cheap! Cheap! Cheap!
In which Bill and his trainer Elder Fowler take charge of missionary work in the lonesome prairie oil town of Brooks, Alberta, and many naughty words are uttered as a result.
Richard Bowes's short story "There's a Hole in the City" was very likely the best work of short fiction published on the Web in 2005. It's currently in the running, with nine other stories, for the Million Writers Award for Fiction. Never
I was browsing Amazon and came across the following assertion in a customer review of Masterpieces: The Best Science Fiction of the Century (Orson Scott Card, ed.): Early science fiction (pre-1960s, let's say) is almost inherently more worthwhile than most later science fiction. Discuss.
A new old story has gone online for purchase and downloading at Fictionwise this morning: "From Our Point of View We Had Moved to the Left." This isn't just my first published story; it's probably the most political story I've written, and
I just read the first chapter of East of Eden—yes, Classics Clubbers, I'm grateful for the extra reading time this time around—and to me it read like science fiction. The world-building in that chapter, with its careful portrait of the seasonal and climatic cycles of the
Two more older stories have gone on sale at Fictionwise.com this week, by the way: "Colin and Ishmael in the Dark" and "Divided by Time." Get 'em! They're cheap!
In which Bill flies to Canada for his first day of service as a Mormon missionary, but before departing performs amazing feats of transubstantiation upon an ordinary chewing gum wrapper.
If you saw me on that evening subway ride and judged me for my reading material, a battered, torn copy of Snow Crash, how would your opinion have changed if you'd known I was toting four volumes of Proust in my shoulder bag?
Yes, we all seem to be more up in arms today about James Frey and his partially made-up memoir than we are about domestic wiretaps, freedom of information in China, and terrorists taking power in Palestine. And it makes sense to me why. Countless hordes of people feel like they
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