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By the way, I've had a couple of stories go live at Fictionwise.com this week, which means they're available now for purchase, downloading, and reading in a variety of formats on a variety of devices. Just click here: http://www.fictionwise.com/eBooks/WilliamShunneBooks.htm
One of these days I will be through obsessively posting about "Inclination," but not yet, not yet. I took a little time out from noveling today (200 pages due to the workshop tonight, and I just might make it!) to visit the Borders at Park & 57th. Lo
At the Asimov's web site, you can now find not only an excerpt from my novella "Inclination" but also an excerpt from Paul Melko's fine and fast-paced novella "The Walls of the Universe," not to mention the entirety of our own ❦asphalteden&
So, as a requirement of the workshop I'm attending in May, I must turn in 200 pages of a novel on March 15th. That's Wednesday. I have 45 pages still to go. I did 35 total last weekend, but that was a four-day weekend where I
If I could have just one cover blurb for Inclination the novel (no, don't get excited, this doesn't mean it's sold), it would be: "Get your ticket to that wheel in space while there's time!" —Donald Fagen
If I were to triple-space my novel manuscript so far, I would probably have 200 pages.
In which Bill reads an excerpt from his new novella "Inclination," available now in the April/May 2006 double issue of ASIMOV'S SCIENCE FICTION on newsstands across the U.S.A.
Another reader of Science Fiction Weekly has plenty to say about C.S.A.: The Confederate States of America, without ever having seen it.
News! The RSS feed for my podcast, "William Shunn's ShunnCast" is now available as a syndicated feed you can add to your friends list: ➺shunncast Episode #10 goes live Monday evening or Tuesday morning, so subscribe now, here if you're an LJ user or
A reader of Science Fiction Weekly is not amused by the very idea of C.S.A.: The Confederate States of America and other "disinformation" of its ilk.
The first science fiction magazine I ever saw, read, subscribed to, submitted to, and was rejected by was Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine. Back in 1983, when I was almost 16 years old, my father brought a copy home for me after it became clear to him that
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