Articles related to "Science Fiction Magazine"SF by Damian Broderick, Robert Reed, Michael Blumlein, Hugo-winner Kristine Kathryn Rusch, new writers Derek Zumsteg and Mary Robinette Kowal, and Steven Popkes returns
The Golden Age of Science Fiction dawned just before the onset of World War II. It began to mature when the troops came home.
In the beginning, there was Jules Verne. O H.G. Wells or Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley or someone else. It doesn't matter who was the first science fiction writer.
New short fiction from Nancy Kress, James Patrick Kelly, Ian R. Macleod, Lawrence Persson, Forrest Aguirre, and a debut for Felicity Shoulders. Book Reviews by Peter Heck
These magazines are open to submissions from new or experienced science fiction writers, and offer payment for publication.
Podcast Picks: Started in May 2004 by Stephen Eley as a hobby, Escape Pod produces the best and most varied science fiction short stories in the podcast world.
Fiction from Bruce Sterling, Rudy Rucker, Carole Emshwiller, Judith Berman & Steven Utley, Robert Silverberg's column, and poetry from David Lunde & Darrell Schweitzer
Brief biography of writer Edgar Rice Burroughs, best-known for Tarzan and Barsoom series.
A comparison of the proportion of British contributors to the leading British SF magazines in 2005 and 2006.
Five novellas
Contributions from Larry Niven, Nancy Kress, Will McIntosh, Damien Broderick, and the usual non-fiction from Robert Silverberg, James Patrick Kelly and Paul di Filippo.
Known for his previous short stories, James Van Pelt's first novel paints a bleak portrait of a dying civilization. With strong characters all hope is not lost.
The bombing of Hiroshima on the morning of August 6th, 1945 took science fiction from playful adolescence into a frightening, frightened adulthood.
Here's the list of 2006 Hugo and Campbell Award nominations.
Lots of Moms in lots of books. Take a look at this enticing Mother's Day literary collection of the good, the bad, and the ugly.
The Man-of-Steel comic book hero 'Superman' soared but Shuster and co-creator Jerry Siegel were left behind. Shuster struggled to make a living with vision disabilities.
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