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... Part of the Apple" by Emily Tersoff"La Mer" by Simon Logan
Audio Fiction: @Starship Sofa: "After The Fire" by Aliette de Bodard, read by Kate Baker.@Pseudopod: & ... Sigfrit@PodCastle: "Change" by Greg van Eekhout, read by Dave Thompson.
Via Free Speculative Fiction Online:Kelly Barnhill: "Notes on the Untimely Death of Ronia Drake" (Fantasy Magazine, ...
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Every time I turn around, I find online venues where fiction authors can promote their work. Here's a few you may find helpful:
The Author Exchange Blog: where I was recently interviewed.
Chris Redding's Blog: where she interviews authors and features guest bloggers.
Beyond Her Book: Barbara Vey's blog for Publisher's Weekly. She does book giveaways and three-line reviews, every ...
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... 39;enlightened' me regarding the existence of the 50-word fiction (aka the 'dribble'... and I thought this ... accepted definition of the length of the category. Some self-described markets for flash fiction impose caps as low as 300, while others consider stories as ... refer to any short piece of literature, usually fan fiction, where brevity is its outstanding feature. Some stories, called & ...
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... convince the reader to choose the latter and not the former. There is a limit to this, of course – if your fiction is about vampire rabbits, and I am not interested in vampire rabbits, ... 8217;s no reason all these and more can’t be integrated into the online fiction format; in fact, some of us have already taken the first few steps in these particular directions. These are my suggestions ...
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... November 18th that changes. We will go to bookstores around the world and move science fiction and fantasy books from wherever they might be to their proper place in the “Science Fiction†... Fiction Customers?
I mean they were looking for, say, Michael Chabon's work in the Fiction section and they saw it there the previous day. What happens to them? They'll think it might have sold out ...
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... this is what the person has said they thought or felt, then the author is writing fiction. But since their book is presented as fact, they're misleading the reader. I think ... ;ironic distance" discussed in the Aqueduct Press piece. The text itself is fiction, and is pretty much always labelled as such. There may be other clues in the story - especially if it is alternate history.
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