micahdraws, to scifi
@micahdraws@dice.camp avatar
zkrisher, to Eurovision
@zkrisher@tweesecake.social avatar

The Eurovision contest final reminded me of Catherine M. Valente's excellent Space Opera, that was heavily influenced by the European song contest.

This is still my favorite Valente novel and her flowery prose is very well suited to the audio format with an impressive performance by Heath Miller.

There's even a sequel on the way.

https://app.thestorygraph.com/books/6b1d509d-3d30-4d8c-b8f4-5f35a029ad79

@bookstodon

mpax, to scifi
@mpax@mastodon.social avatar

Your captain is talking about settling on a new planet already occupied by these people. Do you stay on the ship or move to the planet?
#scifi #sciencefiction #MPaxDimension #WritingCommunity #writingprompts #creativity

TheMetalDog, to HeavyMetal
@TheMetalDog@mastodon.social avatar
tinadonahuebooks, to scifi
@tinadonahuebooks@mastodonbooks.net avatar
SFRuminations, to scifi
@SFRuminations@wandering.shop avatar

Artist Bruce Pennington (1944-) was born on this day. Bibliography: https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?25937

L, 1972; R. 1973

image/jpeg

SFRuminations, to scifi
@SFRuminations@wandering.shop avatar

Sharon Baker (1938-1991) was born on this day. Bibliography: https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?316

L, Wayne Barlowe, 1984; R, Paul Lehr, 1987

image/jpeg

SFRuminations, to scifi
@SFRuminations@wandering.shop avatar

Wenzell Brown (1911-1981) was born on this day. Bibliography: https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?17369

L, Ed Emshwiller, 1964; R, Jack Gaughan, 1965

image/jpeg

SFRuminations, to scifi
@SFRuminations@wandering.shop avatar

Olaf Stapledon (1886-1950) was born on this day. Bibliography: https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?81

L, Arthur Hawkins, 1931; R, David Pelham, 1973

image/jpeg

SFRuminations, to scifi
@SFRuminations@wandering.shop avatar

Artist Alex Schomburg (1905-1998) was born on this day. List of covers: https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?1306

L, 1952; R, 1965

image/jpeg

mpax, to scifi
@mpax@mastodon.social avatar

They ask you to take them to your leader. Where will you take them?

oarditi, to fantasy
@oarditi@mastodon.social avatar
egconde, to sciencefiction
@egconde@bookstodon.com avatar

Subscribe to @InterzoneMag to read my new story, SIBILANCE, a queer homage to classic #sciencefiction set in outer space. Dr Hodei is in love with two spheres: 1) A gas giant called Jupiter & 2) his deceased nonbinary lover turned SEAX drone: Amaranth (both depicted in the magnificent cover art by @carlydraws ). 🪐🚀🇵🇷🏳️‍🌈

#shortstory #queerfiction #jupiter #spaceopera

https://shop.interzone.press/b/6iXIM

SFRuminations, to scifi
@SFRuminations@wandering.shop avatar

Intriguing analysis of Asimov’s Foundation trilogy and its central flaw.

From M. Keith Booker’s Monsters, Mushroom Clouds, and the Cold War: American Science Fiction and the Roots of Postmodernism, 1946-1964 (2001)

RogerBW, to books
@RogerBW@emacs.ch avatar
sfwrtr, to 13thFloor
@sfwrtr@eldritch.cafe avatar

2405.10 — Antagonist POV: What do you like the most about yourself?

[A short tootfic. Likely canon. Her Highness speaking. From /Inklings:/]

My jaw almost dropped at the shear gall of the question, but the Midlands plenipotentiary was, if anything, expert at being jovial. His smile was disarming. He was a diplomat. I didn't gape, but put the tea cup down carefully.

"You're referring to the dragon incident, aren't you?"

He nodded. He plunked a couple lumps of brown sugar in his tea, stirring. It accounted for his corpulence, something rare amongst his gaunt brethren who spent much of their day running on forest paths. He'd made it from the Midlands in just weeks, on horseback I guessed. Poor horse. "It's on everyone's tongue. You'd mobilized the militia. Detailed reports hit the Forest Ridge High Tower as if carried by a thunderstorm."

He was making sure I knew "people" kept him well informed, and that my military wasn't what interested him. Much, anyway. I sighed, crossing my legs as I sat back.

I'd mobilized the best and most radiant of my magic users. None could best me, but we expected to face a wyvern the size of my in-town mansion. It had burnt up part of the Fell Woods. A good thing, thinking about that unassailable haven for monsters and wild beasts. Then it attacked a farm.

"The attack on the farm was an accident," I said off-handedly, steepling my fingers.

He paused. Blue eyes speared me. I'd never announced the details of what happened because if I made them official rather than rumor, the public might panic. Nobody died.

The Midlands ought know, I decided then and there. It'd be to my advantage. I'd let him decide the implications. "The grain silo had a moisture problem. It had started to ferment. Who would have thought a dragon might like beer?"

He chuckled, then, "You're serious? You know this? /How?"/ He put down his tea cup with a loud clink, spilling some of the reddish liquor.

I'd rode in with an elite company of my army, through a wood arch that proclaimed "Cornfeld," into a farm yard. I'd been ready to use my radiance to repel fire; dragons of all shapes breathed fire. My troops had the best spears, but it had been centuries since anyone had needed weapons against dragon scale. Would newiron even work? Drowning the beast by swirling airborne the farm's pond was almost our best offense, if the magical beast decided to fight. I knew they disliked fighting. I hoped that I had that much correct. If I had to resort to radiant kinesis to heave rock from a stone fence, it might decide to retaliate against my Townships—if I failed.

What I found was a half-naked girl, barely a woman though very tall, mollifying a distraught farmer and mediating with a red dragon who looked to be hanging on her every word. I could tell this, even though the dragon had the form of a giant bat.

Apparently, with her mediation, both parties were apologizing to each other!

Worse, though covered with mud and ash, visibly scarred, the young woman was devastatingly beautiful. The type of beautiful that made a seasoned and well worn woman like me think of a different kind of bedmate. I wasn't a man...

Wintereyes was her name. She had befriended a dragon.

Innocent and kind.

And immeasurably dangerous.

The ingénue now attended my magic university, despite being uncomfortable around people and wearing clothing. Learning to be human. One of mine.

I said, "What I like about myself is that I know when to fight and when to make friends."

[Author retains copyright (c)2024 R..S.]

and




kmherkes, to writing
@kmherkes@wandering.shop avatar

Once again, I present my humble offering to anyone seeking a cozy sci-fi read:

Weaving In The Ends, a novella duology that starts with a summer fling & ends with a comedic Winter Solstice brawl.

It's a feel-good chosen family story, and it's a quick read that can be read as a standalone, or as an easy springboard into the world of 2 connected novels.

Available in print & ebook now, audio coming soon!

https://books2read.com/WeavingInTheEnds

@bookstodon

selfpublisher, to midjourney

A space cruiser fly-by close-up shot.

ablueboxfullofbooks, to sciencefiction
@ablueboxfullofbooks@bookstodon.com avatar

Eoin Colfer meets Rick Riordan—with a little Margaret Peterson Haddix sprinkled on top—in this hilarious new sci-fi series from award-winning authors Neal Shusterman and Eric Elfman.

@bookstodon @kidlit @mglit

sfwrtr, to 13thFloor
@sfwrtr@eldritch.cafe avatar

Ch 9 Nbr 09 — What's the minimum time you can work on your writing? Do you need a long, clear period?

This isn't something I've ever measured, though I can recall having an idea of something to add and, because of the ease of bringing up my writing on any platform, spending a few furious minutes writing. Left to my druthers, I will spend hours. Once I spent 15 hours straight, but that was because of a deadline (Clarion critique the next morning) and a story (fantasy romance) where the characters demanded I live their story. 2 to 4 hours is average.

Were I to need to clear a long period to write, I'd never write.

More to the point for me, I really need to clear my mind. Anxiety tries to creep in. To the extent I push that aside and quiet the monkey voice in my head long enough to let the words fill the blank page, time simply does not matter.

[Author retains copyright (c)2024 R.S.]

and


maxthefox, to writing
@maxthefox@spacey.space avatar

The third chapter of Stardust: Labyrinth is out! After the tense situation from Ch.2 is resolved, the heroes finally reach the ruins. What they find inside, and what they have to do, is not quite what they expected. This will be an... interesting mission.

https://www.royalroad.com/fiction/85822/stardust-labyrinth

frankboehmert, to sciencefiction German
@frankboehmert@literatur.social avatar

William Tenns 'Von Menschen und Monstern' zählt zu den frühesten SF-Lektüren, an die ich mich noch erinnere. Als Kind fand ich den Roman cool und gruselig - und weil das Autorenfoto auf der Rückseite schlecht gedruckt war, hielt ich Tenn noch jahrelang für meinen ersten schwarzen Autor, lol.

Der wurde dann Sam Delany.

(via @SFRuminations because birthday)

https://wandering.shop/@SFRuminations/112410657710116061

SFRuminations, to scifi
@SFRuminations@wandering.shop avatar

William Tenn (1920-2010) was born on this day. Bibliography: https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?484

L, Boris Vallejo, 1975; R, Richard Powers, 1955

image/jpeg

SFRuminations, to scifi
@SFRuminations@wandering.shop avatar

Richard McKenna (1913-1964) was born on this day. Bibliography: https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?8013

L, Angus McKie, 1976; R, Ed Emshwiller, 1963

image/jpeg

SFRuminations,
@SFRuminations@wandering.shop avatar

My review of McKenna's Casey Agonistes and Other Science Fiction and Fantasy Stories (1973) https://sciencefictionruminations.com/2021/10/31/book-review-casey-agonistes-and-other-science-fiction-and-fantasy-stories-richard-mckenna-1973/

Contains my favorite of his stories: “Hunter, Come Home” (1963)

SFRuminations, to scifi
@SFRuminations@wandering.shop avatar

Richard Cowper (1926-2002) was born on this day. Bibliography: https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?481

L, Don Maitz, 1979; R, Don Maitz, 1981

image/jpeg

SFRuminations,
@SFRuminations@wandering.shop avatar
  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • normalnudes
  • rosin
  • ngwrru68w68
  • GTA5RPClips
  • DreamBathrooms
  • mdbf
  • magazineikmin
  • thenastyranch
  • Youngstown
  • Durango
  • slotface
  • everett
  • vwfavf
  • kavyap
  • megavids
  • Leos
  • khanakhh
  • cisconetworking
  • cubers
  • InstantRegret
  • ethstaker
  • osvaldo12
  • modclub
  • anitta
  • provamag3
  • tacticalgear
  • tester
  • JUstTest
  • All magazines