Following the opportunity offered by Ticonderoga
Publications to experience their Ditmar Awards nominated titles today we can
have a taste of more such works shortlisted for this prestigious award. This
time FableCroft Publishing offers to our consideration samples of its nominated
titles, the short stories “Mah-Song”
by Joanne Anderson, from the author’s
collection “The Bone Chime Song and
Other Stories”, and “Cold White
Daughter” by Tansy Rayner Roberts,
from the anthology “One Small Step”
edited by Tehani Wessely, together
with an excerpt from the novel “Ink
Black Magic” by the same Tansy
Rayner Roberts. You can find each of them with a downloading link on
FableCroft Publishing’s website.
Thursday, May 29, 2014
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
Free fiction - Ticonderoga Publications' stories nominated for this year's Ditmar Awards
Ticonderoga
Publications, the publisher that delighted us with titles such as Kaaron Warren’s
“Dead Sea Fruit”, Angela Slatter’s “The Girl with No Hands”, Lisa L. Hannett’s “Bluegrass
Symphony”, Felicity Dowker’s “Bread and Circuses”, Lisa L. Hannett and Angela Slatter’s
“Midnight and Moonshine”, Cat Sparks’ “The Bride Price” or “The Year’s Best
Australian Fantasy and Horror” collections, is celebrating its nominated
stories for this year’s Ditmar Awards by offering for a short time a chance to
enjoy these tales for free. So, if you wish to read Cat Sparks’ “Scarp”, Juliet Marillier’s “Prickle Moon” and “By
Bone-Light” and Kim Wilkins’ “The Year of Ancient Ghosts”, you can
find them available for download in PDF format at Ticonderoga Publications’ website.
Friday, May 23, 2014
Short movie - The Silent City, directed by Ruairí Robinson
I
do believe in love at first sight, I was convinced by its existence the first
time I lay my eyes on the “Mad Max” movies. It was the beginning of an unconditional
affection for the post-apocalyptic genre, since then books, movies and games
with such a scenario at their core became a necessity and delight for me (with
the exception of the zombie sub-genre, but that is another discussion). As it
is “The Silent City”, this little admirable movie by Ruairí Robinson.
The Silent City (2006)
Directed by Ruairí Robinson
Written by Ruairí Robinson
Starring: Don Wycherley, Garvan McGrath, Cillian Murphy
Thursday, May 22, 2014
Free reading - Finnish Weird
There is a rich and wide
world of fiction waiting to be discovered and one of the recently mined veins
on the English market comes from Northern Europe. The Swedish John Ajvide Lindqvist and Karin Tidbeck, the Icelandic Snorri Kristjansson or the Finnish Hannu Rajaniemi and Leena Krohn are some of the names
popping into mind at a first call, while titles such as “Let the Right One In”, “Jagannath”
or Desirina Boskovich’s anthology of
Finnish speculative fiction, “It Came
from the North”, gave the readers the opportunity to explore Northern
Europe’s genre fiction. Another chance to dig within this abundant vein of
speculative fiction is offered now through “Finnish
Weird”, a free publication dedicated, as the title clearly states, to the
Finnish weird fiction. There are plenty to be found in “Finnish Weird”, an
introduction by Johanna Sinisalo, a
description of the Finnish weird by Jussi
K. Niemelä, a presentation of the writers Emmi Itäranta, Tiina
Raevaara and Jenny Kangasvuo and
two short stories, “Gordon’s Story”
by Tiina Raevaara and “Flow My Tears,
Fall from Your Springs!” by Jenny Kangasvuo. So, if you want to whet your
appetite for Finnish weird fiction you can head over to the publication’s website and download a copy of it in either PDF or Epub format.
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Vladimir Colin Awards nominees, 6th edition
The Romanian book market offers quite a struggle for
the local speculative fiction. Still, although speculative fiction still moves
on wobbling feet at least the signs are encouraging. It is true that we seem to
fall short in recognizing our speculative fiction writers and editors at a
professional level, but I do hope that this situation would change in the
future. And if each of us starts to bring our little contribution, be that in
form of buying, reading or acknowledging our authors’ works, that future might
be very close. One way to recognize the new published work or to discover them,
since the promotion level is quite low in this domain, is with the help of
awards. It is also true that if speculative fiction puts quite a fight the Romanian
genre awards are in need of more work. It is difficult to speak of an
established Romanian genre award, some drift from time to time while others
lack the desired consistency. There is also the question of endless debates surrounding
such endeavors; nothing wrong with the constructive ones, but when these
conversations become warzones or constant bickering none has anything to gain
from it. An example of such an award is Vladimir Colin. Although at its 6th
edition the Vladimir Colin Awards is not celebrated yearly, as it can be seen
from the list of nominees of this 6th edition, the titles on the
shortlists were published during the last three years. But as I said, each small
step can do a world of good for the local speculative fiction and can help
reach a certain state of normality, so I can only salute the existence of this
new edition of the Vladimir Colin Awards. Hopefully, the years to come would
offer us more published books and writers in order to have the opportunity to
properly honor Romanian speculative fiction. Therefore, without further ado, here
are this year’s nominees for the Vladimir Colin Awards. This year’s jury for
the Vladimir Colin Awards is formed by Cornel
Robu (president), George Ceaușu,
Lucian-Vasile Szabo, Sebastian A. Corn and Cătălin Badea-Gheracostea and the winners
will be announced on 11th – 12th July in a ceremony held
in Bucharest.
SF NOVEL:
“Curtezana
onestă şi astrologul” (The Honest Courtesan and the Astrologer) by Voicu
Bugariu (Eagle, 2011)
“DemNet” (DemNet) by Dan Doboș (MediaTech, 2011)
“Insula pescăruşilor” (Seagulls’ Island) by Mircea Liviu Goga (Eagle,
2011)
“Călătorie în Capricia” (Journey to Capricia) by Mircea Opriţă (Eagle,
2011)
“Anul terminal” (The Final Year) by Florin Pîtea
(Audiosfera, 2012)
SF SHORT STORY COLLECTION:
“Cronici de la capătul Pământului” (Chronicles from the End of the
Earth) by Costi Gurgu (Millennium, 2011)
“Floarea de loldilal” (The Loldilal Flower) by Ana-Veronica Mircea (Nemira, 2012)
“A doua venire” (The Second Coming) by Marian Truţă (Nemira, 2013)
“Efectul de nautil” (The Nautilus Effect) by Ioana Vișan (Millennium, 2013)
“Floarea de loldilal” (The Loldilal Flower) by Ana-Veronica Mircea (Nemira, 2012)
“A doua venire” (The Second Coming) by Marian Truţă (Nemira, 2013)
“Efectul de nautil” (The Nautilus Effect) by Ioana Vișan (Millennium, 2013)
FANTASY NOVEL:
“Cerneală şi sânge” (Ink and Blood) by Ştefana Czeller (Millennium,
2011)
“Ozz” (Ozz) by Ştefana Czeller (Tracus Arte, 2013)
“Vânzoleli nocturne”(Nocturnal Fidgeting) by Liviu Radu (Millennium,
2012)
“Armata moliilor” (The Moth Army) by Liviu Radu (Nemira, 2012)
“Taxidermie” (Taxidermy) by Narcia Stoica
(Millennium, 2012)
FANTASY SHORT STORY
COLLECTION:
“Anotimpurile” (The Seasons) by Bogdan-Tudor Bucheru (Millennium,
2011)
“Acluofobia” (Achluophobia) by A.R. Deleanu (Herg Benet, 2013)
“Golem, golem” (Golem, Golem) by Liviu Radu
(Nemira, 2013)
NON-FICTION:
“Tolkien cel veşnic verde” (The Forever Green Tolkien) by Györfy-Deák György
(self-published, 2013)
“…nici Torquemada” (…neither Torquemada) by Michael Haulică (Millennium,
2011)
“Eseuri” (Essays) by Victor Martin (Autograf MJM, 2013)
“Identitatea literaturii science fiction” (The
Identity of Science Fiction Literature) by Mircea Naidin (Millnnium,
2013)
FRONTIER TEXTS (new category covering sub-genre and experimental
titles of the Romanian speculative fiction):
“…și la sfîrșit a mai rămas coșmarul” (…and at the end the nightmare remained) by Oliviu Crâznic (Vremea, 2011)
“Îmblânzitorul apelor” (The Tamer of Waters) by A.R. Deleanu (Casa
de Pariuri Literare, 2012)
“Transfer” (Transfer) by Michael Haulică (Millennium, 2012)
“Transparenţi şi Semiconductori”, în “Călătorii în timp” (“Transparent and
Semiconductor” from the collection “Time Travels”) by Cristian-Mihail
Teodorescu (Nemira, 2013)
Congratulations and good luck to all the
nominees!
Friday, May 9, 2014
2013 Shirley Jackson Awards nominees
I guess that every award, more or less, can stir
debate and controversy, but since those tend most of the times to be subjective
I try to stay away from them as much as possible. It doesn’t mean that I claim
full objectivity, far from me this thought, but I aim to channel my time and
energy toward the awards that broaden and influence my reading habit and did
that over time in a satisfactory manner. The Shirley Jackson Awards are one of
such prizes I respect the most. In its 7 years of existence I discovered a
series of wonderful books with the help of the Shirley Jackson Awards while at
the same time I was delighted to see some of the books I enjoyed winning in a
certain edition. It is no different this year, I found a couple of titles in
this year’s list of nominees that escaped my attention so far and a few others
that I would love to see lifting this trophy. If they do remains to be seen on
July, 13th when the winners of the 2013 Shirley Jackson Awards are
announced in a ceremony held during Readercon 25 in Burlington, Massachusetts.
NOVEL:
“The Accursed” by Joyce Carol Oates (Ecco)
“American Elsewhere” by Robert Jackson Bennett (Orbit)
“The Demonologist” by Andrew Pyper (Orion-UK/ Simon & Schuster-US)
“The Ghost Bride” by Yangsze Choo (William Morrow)
“Night Film” by Marisha Pessl (Random House)
“Wild Fell” by
Michael Rowe (ChiZine Publications)
NOVELLA:
“Burning Girls” by Veronica Schanoes (Tor.com)
“Children of No One” by Nicole Cushing (DarkFuse)
“Helen’s Story” by Rosanne Rabinowitz (PS Publishing)
“It Sustains” by Mark Morris (Earthling Publications)
“The Gateway” by Nina Allan (Stardust, PS Publishing)
“The Last Revelation of
Gla’aki” by Ramsey Campbell (PS Publishing)
“Whom the Gods Would Destroy” by Brian Hodge (DarkFuse)
NOVELETTE:
“Cry Murder! In a Small
Voice” by Greer Gilman (Small Beer Press)
“A Little of the Night” by Tanith Lee (Clockwork
Phoenix 4, Mythic Delirium Books)
“My Heart is Either Broken” by Megan Abbott (Dangerous
Women, Tor Books)
“Phosphorus” by Veronica Schanoes (Queen
Victoria’s Book of Spells: An Anthology of Gaslamp Fantasy, Tor Books)
“Raptors” by Conrad Williams (Subterranean Press Magazine, Winter
2013)
SHORT FICTION:
“57 Reasons for the Slate Quarry Suicides” by Sam
J. Miller (Nightmare Magazine, December 2013)
“Furnace” by Livia Llewellyn (Grimscribe’s
Puppets, Miskatonic River Press)
“The Memory Book” by Maureen McHugh (Queen
Victoria’s Book of Spells: An Anthology of Gaslamp Fantasy, Tor Books)
“The Statue in the Garden” by Paul Park (Exotic
Gothic 5, PS Publishing)
“That Tiny Flutter of the Heart” by Robert Shearman
(Psycho-Mania!, Constable & Robinson)
“The Traditional” by Maria Dahvana Headley (Lightspeed, May 2013)
SINGLE-AUTHOR COLLECTION:
“Before and Afterlives”
by Christopher Barzak (Lethe Press)
“Everything You Need” by Michael Marshall Smith (Earthling Publications)
“In Search of and Others”
by Will Ludwigsen (Lethe Press)
“North American Lake
Monsters” by Nathan Ballingrud (Small Beer Press)
“The Story Until Now” by Kit Reed (Wesleyan)
EDITED ANTHOLOGY:
“The Book of the Dead” edited by Jared Shurin (Jurassic London)
“End of the Road” edited
by Jonathan Oliver (Solaris)
“Grimscribe’s Puppets” edited by Joseph S. Pulver, Sr. (Miskatonic River Press)
“Queen Victoria’s Book
of Spells: An Anthology of Gaslamp Fantasy” edited by Ellen Datlow (Tor Books)
“Where thy Dark Eye Glances: Queering Edgar
Allan Poe” edited by Steve Berman (Lethe Press)
Congratulations and good luck to all the nominees!
Thursday, May 8, 2014
2014 Locus Awards nominees
The Locus Science Fiction Foundation has revealed the
nominees for the 2014 Locus Awards. The winners will be announced during the
Locus Awards Weekend that takes place in Seattle, WA, between June 27th
and 29th.
Science Fiction Novel:
“MaddAddam” by Margaret Atwood (McClelland & Stewart; Bloomsbury; Talese)
“Abaddon’s Gate” by James S.A. Corey (Orbit US; Orbit UK)
“The Best of All
Possible Worlds” by Karen Lord (Del Rey; Jo Fletcher UK)
“Shaman” by Kim Stanley Robinson (Orbit US; Orbit UK)
“Neptune’s Brood” by Charles Stross (Ace; Orbit UK)
Fantasy novel:
“The Ocean at the End of
the Lane” by Neil Gaiman (Morrow; Headline Review)
“NOS4A2” by Joe Hill (Morrow; Gollancz as NOS4R2)
“River of Stars” by Guy Gavriel Kay (Roc; Viking Canada; HarperCollins UK)
“Doctor Sleep” by Stephen King (Scribner; Hodder & Stoughton)
“The Republic of Thieves” by Scott Lynch (Del Rey; Gollancz)
Young Adult Book:
“Zombie Baseball
Beatdown” by Paolo Bacigalupi (Little, Brown)
“The Coldest Girl in
Coldtown” by Holly Black (Little, Brown; Indigo)
“Homeland” by Cory Doctorow (Tor Teen; Titan)
“The Summer Prince” by Alaya Dawn Johnson (Levine)
“The Girl Who Soared Over Fairyland and Cut
the Moon in Two” by Catherynne M. Valente
(Feiwel and Friends)
First novel:
“The Thinking Woman’s Guide
to Real Magic” by Emily Croy Barker (Dorman)
“The Golden City” by J. Kathleen Cheney (Roc)
“Ancillary Justice” by Ann Leckie (Orbit US; Orbit UK)
“A Stranger in Olondria”
by Sofia Samatar (Small Beer)
“The Golem and the Jinni” by Helene Wecker (Harper)
Novella:
“Wakulla Springs” by Andy Duncan & Ellen Klages
(Tor.com 10/2/13)
“Black Helicopters” by Caitlín R. Kiernan (Subterranean)
“The Princess and the Queen” by George R.R. Martin
(Dangerous Women)
“Precious Mental” by Robert Reed (Asimov’s 6/13)
“Six-Gun Snow White” by Catherynne M. Valente (Subterranean)
Novelette:
“The Truth of Fact, the Truth of Feeling” by Ted
Chiang (Subterranean Fall ’13)
“The Waiting Stars” by Aliette de Bodard (The Other
Half of the Sky)
“A Terror” by Jeffrey Ford (Tor.com 7/24/13)
“The Sleeper and the Spindle” by Neil Gaiman (Rags
and Bones)
“The Prayer of Ninety Cats” by Caitlín R. Kiernan (Subterranean Spring
’13)
Short story:
“Some Desperado” by Joe Abercrombie (Dangerous
Women)
“The Science of Herself” by Karen Joy Fowler (The
Science of Herself)
“The Road of Needles” by Caitlín R. Kiernan (Once
Upon a Time: New Fairy Tales)
“A Brief History of the Trans-Pacific Tunnel” by
Ken Liu (F&SF 1-2/13)
“The Dead Sea-Bottom Scrolls” by Howard Waldrop (Old Mars)
Anthology:
“Queen Victoria’s Book
of Spells” edited by Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling
(Tor)
“The Year’s Best Science
Fiction: Thirtieth Annual Collection” edited by Gardner Dozois (St.
Martin’s Griffin; Robinson:The Mammoth
Book of Best New SF 26)
“Unnatural Creatures”
edited by Neil Gaiman & Maria Dahvana Headley (Harper; Bloomsbury)
“Old Mars” edited by George R.R. Martin & Gardner Dozois (Bantam)
“The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the
Year Volume Seven” edited by Jonathan Strahan (Night
Shade)
Collection:
“The Best of Joe
Haldeman” by Joe Haldeman (Subterranean)
“The Ape’s Wife and
Other Stories” by Caitlín R. Kiernan (Subterranean)
“Kabu Kabu” by Nnedi Okorafor (Prime)
“The Bread We Eat in
Dreams” by Catherynne M. Valente (Subterranean)
“The Best of Connie Willis” by Connie Willis (Del Rey)
Magazine:
Asimov’s
Clarkesworld
F&SF
Subterranean
Tor.com
Publisher:
Angry Robot
Orbit
Small Beer
Subterranean
Tor
Editor:
John Joseph Adams
Ellen Datlow
Gardner Dozois
Jonathan Strahan
Ann & Jeff VanderMeer
Artist:
Bob Eggleton
John Picacio
Shaun Tan
Charles Vess
Michael Whelan
Non-fiction:
“Here Be Dragons:
Exploring Fantasy Maps and Settings” by Stefan Ekman (Wesleyan)
“Strange Matings:
Science Fiction, Feminism, African American Voices, and Octavia E. Butler” edited
by Rebecca J. Holden & Nisi Shawl (Aqueduct)
“The Man From Mars: Ray
Palmer’s Amazing Pulp Journey” by Fred Nadis (Tarcher)
“Wonderbook: The
Illustrated Guide to Creating Imaginative Fiction” by Jeff VanderMeer (Abrams Image)
“Afrofuturism: The World of Black Sci-Fi and
Fantasy Culture” by Ytasha L. Womack (Lawrence
Hill)
Art Book:
“Hannes Bok, Hannes Bok:
A Life in Illustration” edited by Joseph Wrzos (Centipede)
“Margaret Brundage, The
Alluring Art of Margaret Brundage” edited by Stephen D. Korshak & J. David
Spurlock (Vanguard)
“Spectrum 20: The Best
in Contemporary Fantastic Art” edited by Cathy Fenner & Arnie Fenner
(Underwood)
“Maurice Sendak, Maurice
Sendak: A Celebration of the Artist and His Work” edited by Justin G. Schiller, Dennis M.V. David & Leonard S. Marcus (Abrams)
“Rules of Summer” by Shaun Tan (Hachette
Australia; Hodder Children’s; Levine ’14)
Congratulations and good luck to all the nominees!
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