Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Table of contents - "The Year's Best Dark Fantasy & Horror 2014" edited by Paula Guran

I grew very fond of several collections of year’s best fiction in the recent years. Ellen Datlow and Stephen Jones are veterans of such anthologies and in time their yearly collections proved an important source of excellent reading materials, so there is no wonder that year after year “The Best Horror of the Year” and “The Mammoth Book of Best New Horror” are high on my reading list. Recently I was happy to see being born and to delight in “The Year’s Best Australian Fantasy and Horror” and “Imaginarium: The Best Canadian Speculative Writing”, two yearly collections that gathered some of the best Australian and Canadian short stories and highlighted quite a few very interesting and talented writers. Last, but not least, Paula Guran’s “The Year’s Best Dark Fantasy & Horror” made its way into my list of preferences, not because it joined a catalog of similar titles, but because it brought into attention of the readers different short stories than the other collections. Of course, all these year’s best collections are subject to personal choices and since reading is an intimate experience for every reader not all the selected stories might seem like the best that were published in a particular year. From my experience, however, each of such collections I enjoyed reading comes pretty close to achieving perfection and every time I was left with a completely satisfactory reading experience. And if Paula Guran’s “The Year’s Best Dark Fantasy & Horror” is the last collection I mentioned from my list of favorites it is also the first to announce its 2014 line-up. By the looks of it there are plenty of reasons to support another strong entry in the panoply of year’s best collections.

No matter your expectations, the dark is full of the unknown: grim futures, distorted pasts, invasions of the uncanny, paranormal fancies, weird dreams, unnerving nightmares, baffling enigmas, revelatory excursions, desperate adventures, spectral journeys, mundane terrors and supernatural visions. You may stumble into obsession or find redemption. Often disturbing, occasionally delightful, let The Year’s Best Dark Fantasy and Horror be your annual guide through the mysteries and wonders of dark fiction.

Table of contents (in alphabetical order by author’s last name):

“Postcards from Abroad” by Peter Atkins (Rolling Darkness Revue 2013, Earthling Publications)
“The Creature Recants” by Dale Bailey (Clarkesworld, Issue 85, October 2013)
“The Good Husband” by Nathan Ballingrud (North American Lake Monsters, Small Beer Press)
“Termination Dust” by Laird Barron (Tales of Jack the Ripper, ed. Ross Lockhart, Word Horde)
“The Ghost Makers” by Elizabeth Bear (Fearsome Journeys, ed. Jonathan Strahan, Solaris)
“The Marginals” by Steve Duffy (The Moment of Panic, PSPublishing)
“A Collapse of Horses” by Brian Evenson (The American Reader, Feb/Mar 2013)
“A Lunar Labyrinth” by Neil Gaiman (Shadows of the New Sun: Stories in Honor of Gene Wolfe, eds. J. E. Mooney & Bill Fawcett, Tor)
“Pride” by Glen Hirshberg (Rolling Darkness Revue 2013, Earthling Publications)
“Let My Smile Be Your Umbrella” by Brian Hodge (Psycho-Mania!, ed. Stephen Jones, Robinson)
“The Soul in the Bell Jar” by K. J. Kabza (The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Nov/Dec 2013)
“The Prayer of Ninety Cats” by Caitlín R. Kiernan (Subterranean Online, Spring 2013)
“Dark Gardens” by Greg Kurzawa (Interzone # 248)
“A Little of the Night” by Tanith Lee (Clockwork Phoenix 4, ed. Mike Allen, Mythic Delirium)
“The Gruesome Affair of the Electric Blue Lightning” by Joe R. Lansdale (Beyond Rue Morgue: Further Tales of Edgar Allan Poe’s First Detective, ed. Paul Kane & Charles Prepole, Titan)
“Iseul’s Lexicon” by Yoon Ha Lee (Conservation of Shadows, Prime Books)
“The Plague” by Ken Liu (Nature, 16 May 2013)
“The Slipway Gray” by Helen Marshall (Chilling Tales 2, ed. Michael Kelly, Edge Publications)
“To Die for Moonlight” by Sarah Monette (Apex Magazine, Issue #50)
“Event Horizon” by Sunny Moraine (Strange Horizons, 21 Oct 2013)
“The Legend of Troop 13” by Kit Reed (Asimov’s Science Fiction, Jan 2013 / The Story Until Now: A Great Big Book of Stories, Wesleyan)
“Shadows for Silence in the Forests of Hell” by Brandon Sanderson (Dangerous Women, eds. George R. R. Martin & Gardner Dozois, Tor)
“Phosphorous” by Veronica Schanoes, (Queen Victoria’s Book of Spells: An Anthology of Gaslamp Fantasy, eds. Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling, Tor)
“Blue Amber” by David J. Schow (Impossible Monsters, ed. Kasey Lansdale, Subterranean Press)
“Rag and Bone” by Priya Sharma (Tor.com, 10 April 2013)
“Our Lady of Ruins” by Sarah Singleton (The Dark 2, Dec 2013)
“Cuckoo” by Angela Slatter (A Killer Among Demons, ed. Craig Bezant, Dark Prints Press)
“Wheatfield with Crows” by Steve Rasnic Tem (Dark World: Ghost Stories, ed. Timothy Parker Russell, Tartarus Press)
“Moonstruck” by Karin Tidbeck (Shadows and Tall Trees, Vol. 5, ed. Mike Kelly, Undertow)
“The Dream Detective” by Lisa Tuttle (Lightspeed, Mar 2013)
“Fishwife” by Carrie Vaughn (Nightmare, Jun 2013)
“Air, Water and the Grove” by Kaaron Warren (The Lowest Heaven, eds Anne C. Perry & Jared Shurin, Jurassic London)

Monday, January 20, 2014

International Speculative Fiction #5 available

International Speculative Fiction is a bit shaky in its appearances, but when each issue is the result of voluntary work the praiseworthy efforts of the magazine’s team might be trampled by day to day events. However, the most important thing is that this magazine continues to exist, with its latest issue, the 5th, released the past week-end. In this issue we can read two short stories, “Two Worlds” by the Italian writer Francesco Verso and “Atomic Heart” by the Portuguese writer Manuel Alves, the Hugo Award nominated novelette “The Boy Who Cast No Shadow” by the Dutch writer Thomas Olde Heuvelt, plus a series of non-fiction including an article by Hunter Liguore, “Social Science Fiction”, a round-up of news from around the speculative world gathered by Nas Hedron, a review by Sean Wright of the anthology edited by Dean Francis Alfar and Nikki Alfar, “The Best of Philippine Speculative Fiction 2005-2010”, and an interview made by Saul Bottcher with the Spanish artist Sergi Brosa, responsible for this issue’s cover art. The 5th issue of International Speculative Fiction magazine is available for free in PDF format, with the epub and mobi files due to be ready for download very soon.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Table of contents - "Fractured: Tales of the Canadian Post-Apocalypse" edited by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

Part of my love for the post-apocalyptic fiction is the attraction for the landscape of those stories, the isolation and desolation brought by the apocalyptic events to the world we know. Of course, these settings are an important element of post-apocalyptic fiction and without one it would be difficult to talk about this sub-genre, but depending on the approach of each writer this particular characteristic has more or less importance within each story. It is because of settings like those of Mad Max movies and Fallout games, the two supporting pillars of my love for this type of fiction, that I feel excitement at the perspective of a new post-apocalyptic landscape. And I find this feature to be even better when more worldwide locations are used in these visions of the future, after all we are talking about an entire world coming to an end and not only certain regions of the globe. Imagine my delight when I learned about Silvia Moreno-Garcia’s new anthology, “Fractured: Tales of the Canadian Post-Apocalypse”, not only that I can’t recall exactly seeing Canada used as a post-apocalyptic location before, but with the extreme winter that recently hit hard this part of the world I can picture in my mind the potential of this setting. It is true that not many of the writers who have stories in Silvia Moreno-Garcia’s anthology are known to me, I only read and enjoyed quite a bit A.C. Wise, E. Catherine Tobler and Claude Lalumière’s stories before, while only A.M. Dellamonica and Orrin Grey are the other familiar names for me, but I don’t see any reason for losing my interest in “Fractured: Tales of the Canadian Post-Apocalypse” because of this. On the contrary, besides the opportunity I have to enjoy this new post-apocalyptic setting, with stories taking place in Alberta, Manitoba, Quebec, British Columbia, Ontario, Saskatchewan and the Yukon, I also have the chance to discover some new writers to read in the future. “Fractured: Tales of the Canadian Post-Apocalypse” is due to be released by Exile Editions on the fall of 2014 and while we don’t have a book cover yet if in the end it is one as good as the cover of “Dead North: Canadian Zombie Fiction”, the other anthology edited by Silvia Moreno-Garcia and published by Exile Editions, I am certain we’ll have another excellent cover to admire. As the editor says, Welcome to the post-apocalypse, people. And to Canada.”

“Kalopsia” by E. Catherine Tobler
“Jenny of the Long Gauge” by Michael Matheson
“Snow Angel” by A. M. Dellamonica
“Persistence of Vision” by Orrin Grey
“Keeper of the Oasis” by Steve Stanton
“Maxim Fujiyama and Other Persons” by Claude Lalumière
“Saying Goodbye” by Michael Pack
“Of the Dying Light” by Arun Jiwa
“Edited Hansard 116” by Miriam Oudin
“@shalestate” by David Huebert
bythe editor says, se to admire.ilvia Moreno-Garcia and published by Exile Editions imagine the potential of ahg about a world The Body Politic” by John Jantunen
“Brown Wave” by Christine Ottoni
“Dog for Dinner” by dvsduncan
“Manitou-wapow” by GMB Chomichuk, Curtis Janzen and Thomas Turner
“D-Day” by T. S. Bazelli
“Ruptures” by Jamie Mason
“City Noise” by Morgan M. Page
“River Road” by Amanda M. Taylor
“Matthew, Waiting” by A.C. Wise
“The Dome of St. Macaire” by Jean-Louis Trudel
“No Man is a Promontory” by Hilary Janzen
“White Noise” by Geoff Gander (reprint)
“Last Man Standing” by Frank Westcott

Friday, January 10, 2014

Artist interview - Claudia Niculescu

© The artwork presented on this post is used with the permission of its author. All the artwork is copyrighted. Please do not use the images without the permission of the artist or owner.

Claudia Niculescu is a Romanian artist. She studied Art History at the University of Vienna and is currently living in Wien, Austria. She paints, creates handcrafted jewelry and recently illustrated A.R. Deleanu’s collection of short stories, “Acluofobia” (Achluophobia).

Mihai A: Thank you very much for the opportunity of this interview.
How did you discover your passion for art? When have you decided to pursue your passion into an art career?
Claudia Niculescu: I can’t really remember. I’ve been drawing since ever; it was my favorite game when I was a child (it still is). But probably the most important step that actually started to define this passion was the moment when my mother came into my room one day and got extremely mad when she saw the abstract “mural” I did on the bedroom wall while she was away. She immediately decided to send me to some painting courses at the art school just to keep the walls clean. I was 6 years old.

Mihai A: How important is to believe in your talent in such a decision and how important is a valuable advice in taking such a decision? Are these two strictly connected?
Claudia Niculescu: This is almost like a paradox, I think. You have to be confident and believe in your talent but at the same time you also have to be open and take a lot of advice. A narrow mind will not help.

Mihai A: Often, in sports, it is said that the path to success is made of 20% talent and 80% work. Is such a statement true for art as well? Can a less talented artist achieve better results with his art through constant work?
Claudia Niculescu: Absolutely. I don’t really believe in talent (in the traditional meaning of the word). I think that the word “talent” stands for one’s capacity to coordinate the brain and the hand at the same time, the ability to translate ideas and thoughts into lines, shapes and colors and all this comes with constant exercise. But this exercise I am talking about is rather a psychical one than a practical one. So it is in vain to have talent without “shaping” it.

MA: Who are your favorite artists? Who are the artists that inspired and influenced your art career so far?
CN: Although it is not visible in my work, I am a huge fan of classical painting and I am obsessed with Caravaggio. He created a new technique in which he is basically shaping figures out of the dark and literally places mythical or biblical scenes on the dirty streets of 17th century Italy. He broke all the rules of painting, decency and morality to create something completely new, something that will impose its pureness and divinity through its sordidness and sinfulness. His paintings have the power to convince you that all you know and all that you have seen before is wrong and open a path to a new understanding of life. This is what inspires me and influences my art.

MA: You have decided to study art at the University of Vienna. What led you to this particular choice? Is there an important difference between the Romanian and Austrian school when it comes to art studies?
CN: It would be really unfair to compare the schools because I do not know much about the Romanian art school. The reasons why I chose Austria are simple: I wanted something new and I wanted to leave. I chose Vienna because of its vast artistic opportunities. There are tons of museums; you can find almost any artistic movement you want there, from Roman artifacts to Gothic cathedrals, from classicism to minimalist and contemporary art. I think Vienna is the perfect city for a student of art history.

MA: Besides creating art you also make jewelry and you are interested in photography. Why the interest in these two? How the photography and jewelry craft influenced your art?
CN: Photography has actually an important role in my life. I wanted to be a photographer at some point, so I decided to take this matter seriously and concentrate on building some solid ground in this domain. And so I did. I studied Photography for two years. When I take pictures I always try to put a highlight on details. I also do that when I paint.
Jewelry is my second passion. I can’t go anywhere without wearing a necklace or at least a big ring. I think I have about 3 kg of it and most of it is made by me. I like to work with beads because I consider it a very relaxing and creative activity and, as in painting, I enjoy to combine colors and play with contrasts.

MA: You are using the traditional tools in creating your paintings and drawings, but with the increased number of computer programs nowadays there are more and more artists using the digital tools and mediums for their work. Why do you prefer to work in the traditional way? Do you think that one day you would try the digital tools too?
CN: I like the traditional tools because through this technique I can literary create with my own hands. The whole preparations for the act of painting are like rituals: the preparing of the canvas, setting it on the easel, choosing the brushes, the colors… mixing the colors is one of my favorite parts. I could not start to work on something without this phase. All these increase my enthusiasm and actually contribute to my ideas and inspiration. It’s a very complex mental process in the end that is significant for the final result, the painting. And it is never the same; each idea requires different “rituals”. I like to feel the textures. I know that you can (sort of) obtain this by using 3D printers but the final result is incomparable. I’m pretty sure that nothing beats the handmade experience. It will never get old. I don’t think that I will ever completely switch to digital tools, the idea just doesn’t please me, maybe I’ll try to combine them somehow but I cannot leave the brushes.

MA: With the increased number of online mediums for displaying art, come an increased number of artists who display their artworks. How important is, in this context, the originality of an artist? How important and difficult is to achieve a personal trademark for your work?
CN: The originality of the artist is probably the most controversial subject of the modern art scene. It almost became like an obsession and the contemporary artist situates himself in a constant battle with the traditions and with the norms. I think this is the purpose of art nowadays, to create a concept that no one had ever thought of before and through this you obtain a trademark. It is impossible to pop out of the crowd if your art is not original. I think originality is even more important than talent. It is also harder to acquire. The trademark, I think, is mostly established by your truthfulness towards your art.

MA: In a recent small interview that we recently had you said and I quote: You cannot experience beauty without the grotesque, joy without horror or caress without pain. By denying or skipping the parts that do not please your soul you just push yourself further into an illusion of vague terms.” Is this one of the reasons for your art having a dark feel? Are you attracted to the darker side of things?
CN: It is just a different point of view. I see beauty in things that other people wouldn’t necessarily consider beautiful. My art is often characterized as macabre, a word that I don’t really like to use. When I’m asked to shortly describe my work I usually use the words “organic”, “heavy” and “a little bit dark”. Bones are my image for the word “beautiful” because this is our palpable inside, this is our base, this is what we are made of. The skull, a beautifully built, concrete, organic structure, is the carrier of our brain, the engine of our thoughts and feelings, which are pure life. So, we may call the skull the carrier of ourselves. How can this be possibly considered horror? It might be a little bit terrifying to take a look at yourself from the inside, but I think the association of bones with death is a wrong, preconceived idea of which we should get rid of for once.

MA: Are you also interested in this dark perspective in other cultural areas, such as music, literature or film?
CN: Yes, I am always looking for inspiration in these mediums. I have to admit that I prefer the music and the literature because they allow me to build my own image of the sound/story. I am not a big fan of horror movies… I can’t really look at the brutal scenes… it scares me.

MA: Speaking of dark art this and the art of the fantastic are not often taken seriously and they tend to be heavily under-appreciated. Why do you think that these forms of art are disregarded in face of other forms of art? Do you think that critiques fail to see beyond the label and properly appreciate an artwork for its true value?
CN: I think the problem is the general public and its trending ideals. There are few who are open minded and who like to see/read what they don’t like to see/read. Critiques usually go for the works who obtain the biggest audience. Critiques go with the trend. This is why this genre is least promoted compared to others.

MA: Recently you worked on a book, A.R. Deleanu’s “Achluophobia”, where you made the cover and interior illustrations. How did this art project come into existence? What involves the process of creating such illustration besides the artist, inspiration and easel?
CN: A.R. Deleanu’s “Achluophobia” was the most spontaneous project I ever did, and it happened like this: I received an e-mail one day from him in which he simply wrote that he has a new story book coming and wants the “Bloody Feather” for the cover and he would also need some sketches for each story. The “Bloody Feather” is a painting I did a couple of years ago, he told me then that this would make a great book cover someday. The ten sketches (one for each story) are actually randomly chosen by A.R. Deleanu out of my One Sketch a Day Book. And that’s all. I couldn’t really picture the way he wanted to put all these together but I trusted him and I was very impressed the first time I hold the book in my hands. He has such a great esthetic taste. I only read the book one week before the official release and I can tell you that I was pretty shocked to see that the illustrations and the texts go together extremely well, especially on “Kilimanjaro” where you can follow the same motives. I asked him if he changed the story a little bit so that it fits and he said that he didn’t change a word.

MA: Would you like to repeat this experience in the future? Who would be the writers you would like to work with or to illustrate their books?
CN: I would definitely repeat this experience! I think every book needs its picture as well as any picture needs its book. I would like to work again with A.R. Deleanu because we have similar ideas and we got along very well and that is important in the creative process. I haven’t really set a target on anyone but I would like to work with everybody especially if they are creative and ambitious.

MA: What plans and projects do you have for the future?
CN: This is such a terrifying question, I always avoid to answer it because the answer would be the most sincere “I don’t know”. But I will do my best to go on in the art domain.

Thank you very much for your time and answers. It has been a pleasure.

More information and art by Claudia Niculescu can be found on her blog.

© The artwork presented on this post is used with the permission of its author. All the artwork is copyrighted. Please do not use the images without the permission of the artist or owner.

Thursday, January 9, 2014

Table of contents - "Fearful Symmetries" edited by Ellen Datlow

I am not much of a fan or follower of crowdfunding projects, but over time I had a couple of such initiatives that grabbed my full attention. One of them was “Fearful Symmetries”, a project of horror anthology started by Chizine Publications and Ellen Datlow and successfully funded in the end. The reasons for which I became interested in “Fearful Symmetries” at the start of its crowdfunding were the editor and publisher, Ellen Datlow is one of the best editors of horror and dark fantasy, some of the absolute best short stories I read over the years coming from her anthologies and best yearly collections, while Chizine Publications is one of the most original publishers of nowadays, bold and original, a guarantee for quality in highest forms. And my confidence in this project and collaboration seems to be rewarded, the recently announced table of contents for “Fearful Symmetries” looks mighty impressive. An all-stars line-up that includes Kaaron Warren, Helen Marshall, Carole Johnstone, Gemma Files, Gary McMahon, Laird Barron, John Langan and Robert Shearman, writers who could sell me almost everything that they have written. This is the second crowdfunding I support in the fullest and after the tremendous delight I had with “The Art of Brom” it seems that I am heading towards 100% satisfaction guarantee with such initiatives. However, I don’t believe I’ll make a habit out of it, unless I stumble upon another project as promising as these two.

“Introduction” by Ellen Datlow
“A Wish From a Bone” by Gemma Files
“The Atlas of Hell” by Nathan Ballingrud
“The Witch Moth” by Bruce McAllister
“Kaiju” by Gary McMahon
“Will The Real Psycho In This Story Please Stand Up?” by Pat Cadigan
“In the Year of Omens” by Helen Marshall
“The Four Darks” by Terry Dowling
“The Spindly Man” by Stephen Graham Jones
“The Window” by Brian Evenson
“Mount Chary Galore” by Jeffrey Ford
“Ballad of an Echo Whisperer” by Caitlín R. Kiernan
“Suffer Little Children” by Robert Shearman
 “Power” by Michael Marshall Smith
“Bridge of Sighs” by Kaaron Warren
“the worms crawl in,” by Laird Barron
“The Attic” by Catherine MacLeod
 “Wendigo Nights” by Siobhan Carroll
“Episode Three: On the Great Plains, In the Snow” by John Langan
“Catching Flies” by Carole Johnstone
“Shay Corsham Worsted” by Garth Nix

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Title spotlight - "Academic Exercises" by K.J. Parker

The amount of details put into the construction of the fantastic worlds of K.J. Parker made this writer one of my all time favorites. The assembled pieces of these worlds and the minor details make each journey within these fantastical realms an absolute delight. Of course, it is not the sole reason for which I love K.J. Parker’s works, the characters and stories get a strong foothold in my memory too and always stand successfully against the passing of time. This year, among the books I would love to have in personal collection is a collection of K.J. Parker’s short stories released by Subterranean Press and limited to 1000 signed copies. “Academic Exercises” gathers 13 short stories, novellas and essays signed by K.J. Parker in what promises to be a very good looking volume. Now, as much as I am thrilled about K.J. Parker’s collection I cannot honestly say I am completely happy with the path taken by Subterranean Press for publishing it. I could not find any information about a potential publication of a paperback edition of “Academic Exercises” so I will assume that this limited edition it is the only one available for purchase. I am convinced that it would look great on a complete collection of K.J. Parker’s works, but looking over the table of contents to limit it to 1000 copies seems a bit too much. It is true that most of the stories published in “Academic Exercises” can be found for free on various issues of Subterranean Press Magazine, but including the already pricy novellas “Purple and Black” and “Blue and Gold” and the short story “A Room with a View” from “Subterranean: Tales of Dark Fantasy 2”, all previously released by Subterranean Press, in this volume feels like demanding too much from those who already bought those editions. It could be said that there is a balance between the free stories and already released ones, but I still cannot shake the uncomfortable feeling I get looking over the full table of contents. It is also true that one is to stare at a computer screen while reading most of these stories and another to see them printed in a wonderful volume, but I still wish I could see a more financial accessible edition for K.J. Parker’s “Academic Exercises”, one that would reach and delight more readers who would like to add a physical copy of the collection to their personal libraries. But who knows, maybe indeed in the future a more accessible edition would be available. However, let’s finish in a lighter tone and for that let me admit that I am completely happy to start the year in style with another short story by K.J. Parker, “I Met a Man Who Wasn’t There”, published by Subterranean Press on the latest issue of their free online magazine.

Academic Exercises is the first collection of shorter work by master novelist K.J Parker, and it is a stunner. Weighing in at over 500 pages, this generous volume gathers together thirteen highly distinctive stories, essays, and novellas, including the recent World Fantasy Award-Winner, “Let Maps to Others”. The result is a significant publishing event, a book that belongs on the shelf of every serious reader of imaginative fiction.

The collection opens with the World Fantasy Award-winning “A Small Price to Pay for Birdsong,” a story of music and murder set against a complex mentor/pupil relationship, and closes with the superb novella “Blue & Gold,” which features what may be the most beguiling opening lines in recent memory. In between, Parker has assembled a treasure house of narrative pleasures. In “A Rich, Full Week,” an itinerant “wizard” undergoes a transformative encounter with a member of the “restless dead.” “Purple & Black,” the longest story in the book, is an epistolary tale about a man who inherits the most hazardous position imaginable: Emperor. “Amor Vincit Omnia” recounts a confrontation with a mass murderer who may have mastered an impossible form of magic.

Rounding out the volume—and enriching it enormously—are three fascinating and illuminating essays that bear direct relevance to Parker’s unique brand of fiction: “On Sieges,” “Cutting Edge Technology,” and “Rich Men’s Skins.”

Taken singly, each of these thirteen pieces is a lovingly crafted gem. Together, they constitute a major and enduring achievement. Rich, varied, and constantly absorbing, Academic Exercises is, without a doubt, the fantasy collection of the year.

“A Small Price to Pay for Birdsong”
“A Rich, Full Week”
“Amor Vincit Omnia”
“On Sieges”
“Let Maps to Others”
“A Room with a View”
“Cutting Edge Technology”
“Illuminated”
“Purple & Black”
“Rich Men’s Skins”
“The Sun and I”
“One Little Room an Everywhere”
“Blue & Gold”

Monday, January 6, 2014

Here is to an amazing 2014!

A new year has started, with wishes anew and high hopes and I find myself once again unwilling to set many reading resolutions for the year ahead. The last couple of years I kept those book related goals to a minimum and it proved efficient. So, for 2014 I hope to enjoy reading as much as I always did and catch up with some of the older titles that are still waiting on my bookshelves. I also want to repeat the reading resolution I set and achieved in 2012, to read 365 short stories, one for every day of the year. I surpassed that goal in 2012, but I don’t want to change the wonderful experience I had and have with the short stories into a burden, therefore I’ll keep only 365 short stories as a target for this year, if it happens to be more it would be a welcomed bonus. As I said I would love to catch up with some of the older titles I failed to read so far, but there are still several books released this year I am eagerly awaiting to read and I made a list you can find at the end of the post. I have some other ideas and wishes, but since my schedule proved to be erratic lately I’ll not push it, I’ll just hope that all of them would come to pass. I hope we’ll all have a memorable 2014!

“The Widow’s House” by Daniel Abraham

“Depth Charging Ice Planet Goth” by Andrez Bergen

“The Girl with All the Gifts” by M.R. Carey

“The House of War and Witness” by Linda, Louise and Mike Carey

“Dark Father” by James Cooper

“Fearful Symmetries” edited by Ellen Datlow

“We Will All Go Down Together” by Gemma Files

“Baggage” by Lisa L. Hannett & Angela Slatter

“The Leopard” by K.V. Johansen

“The Reading Lessons” by Carole Lanham

“Cleopatra’s Needle” by Carole Lanham

“The Unquiet House” by Alison Littlewood

“Reaping the Dark” by Gary McMahon

“Academic Exercises” by K.J. Parker

“Murder” by Sarah Pinborough

“Veil of the Deserters” by Jeff Salyards