1.17.2011

Dead or Alive - The Aston West Collection

ResAliens Press is proud to present T. M. Hunter's Dead or Alive: The Aston West Collection. This compilation of 10 new and beloved short stories from the universe of Aston West is available from iTunes as an iPhone/iPad app for $1.99. (UPDATE: A paperback edition is now available!)

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Aston West is everyman. This smarmy space pirate embodies the best of us as well as the worst of us. You cheer for him, you boo him, and on rare occasions, you’d like to sit down and toss back some Vladirian liquor with him. He’d rather just live his life, being the loner and uncaring slob he is normally, but when the chips are down, there’s no one you’d rather have watching your back.

T. M. Hunter is the author of two acclaimed Aston West novels, Heroes Die Young and Friends In Deed (Champaign Books). Now you can follow your favorite space pirate through these short fiction adventures and discover for yourself why Aston West is so often wanted dead or alive.

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“T. M. Hunter presents a fun sci-fi trek with space pirate Aston West at the helm....will leave you longing for the next great adventure.” - Kaylin McFarren, author of Flaherty's Crossing, (Finalist, 2008 RWA Golden Heart Award)

"Aston's adventures are most entertaining, have twists and turns aplenty, and each one will send you in search of the next." - Amazon Review

"A fast-paced trip into Aston's world of future space is sure to make the heart of any fan of Star Trek or Star Wars beat with joy." - Joyce Scarbrough, author of Symmetry (Finalist, 2011 EPIC Book Award)

1.16.2011

Wynfield's War by Marina Neary

Wynfield's War by Marina Julia Neary

M. J. Neary, the author of "My Salieri Complex" (a featured story in ResAliens Issue 4), has a new book available from Fireship Press. Wynfield's War is Book 2 of the Wynfield Series. Here's a summary from the publisher:

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The spring of 1854 was filled with violence, deceit, and bereavement, and marked the end of Wynfield's reign as the king of the Bermondsey slums. His memory shattered and his perception of reality distorted, he falls under the influence of an unlikely patron - the ruthless Lord Lucan.

Known to his Irish tenants as the Exterminator, Lucan plans to mold his ward into a brainwashed ally for his upcoming Crimean campaign. While in the company of some frightfully incompetent and arrogant generals, Wynfield travels to the Crimea as a junior officer in the British cavalry. From the chaos of the extensive slum of Bermondsey, Wynfield finds himself in a military campaign that makes Bermondsey look orderly.

There he catches a glimpse of the personal war between Lords Lucan and Cardigan, which results in the blunder known as the Charge of the Light Brigade, and discovers the darker side of the saintly Florence Nightingale. Short-lived alliances with comrades who would never make it home to England, and haphazard sexual encounters with women he would never see again, challenge Wynfield's innate sense of loyalty. Having seen so many heroes trampled and so many cowards exalted, Wynfield must choose sides and, in so doing, shape the course of the rest of his life.

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"These new adventures of Marina Neary’s gothic anti-hero take us from the horrors of a Crimean field hospital to the intrigues of mid-Victorian London, meanwhile providing intimate glimpses into the lives of Florence Nightingale, Lord Lucan of Light Brigade infamy, and other famous personages of the time. Intensively researched, with unsparing attention to grim detail, Wynfield’s War is a fascinating and frequently disturbing read."
- Eileen Kernaghan, author of Wild Talent: A Novel of the Supernatural

"A fascinating look behind the military curtain - a story of men and women who look beyond the tenets of a waning empire toward a modern world just beginning to reveal itself."
- Meghan Walsh, editor of The Recorder

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For a summary of Wynfield's Kingdom, Book 1 of the Wynfield Series, visit the author's website. You may also purchase your copies here. For an article about the author, read this from the Stamford Advocate.

1.15.2011

New Issue of ResAliens Magazine

Jungle Statue (c) 2009 Jason Zampol
Available Now for $8 from ResAliens Storefront

Issue 5 features seven 'dark fantasy' stories by veteran speculative fiction writers, including:

  • "Where the Sun Don’t Shine" by Jeff Parish

  • "Not Your Kind of Heathen" by Erin M. Kinch

  • "The Noble Experiment" by Pat R. Steiner

  • "Rockets Over Éireann" by Kristen Lee Knapp

  • "A Heroine’s Death" by Billy Wong

  • "Azieran: Lokxenthuul" by Christopher Heath

  • "Protein" by Gustavo Bondoni

Plus an interview with cover artist Jason Zampol and an anthology review by Fred Warren.

Purchase your copy today!
+ Paperback only $8.00 plus shipping.
+ PDF Download only $2.00
+ iPod, iPad, iPhone verson only $3.99

1.14.2011

Psychedelic Short Fiction from Jason Rizos

The Chrysalis of Matter - Psychedelic Short Fiction from Jason Rizos

Writer Jason Rizos (author of "Annelid" which appeared as "Fishing the Moons of Jupiter" and was featured in ResAliens Issue 4) is launching an interesting project via Kickstarter. He's soliciting financial backers for a self-published collection of the best of his "psychedelic-horror science fiction." Here's a blurb from the site:
All fiction appearing in The Chrysalis of Matter are previously written and/or published, except for one exclusive bonus—City Life, 2012, inspired by Terrence McKenna and his concept of the Time Wave Singularity, which I am completing throughout the duration of this Kickstarter campaign.

Upon the completion of funding my project, I will email you an audio recording (.mp3) of a reading of my Lovecraftian Craigslist spoof ad, Wanted: Cat Assassin, by professional voice talent Ian Stuart.
Rizos' ultimate goal is to grow a readership and support base to kickstart his professional writing career. Some of the material in the special collection include:

• Harvest (The Fourth River, 2006)
• City Life, 2012 (Unpublished, 2011)
• Annelid (Residential Aliens, 2010)
• Hexagon (Snow Monkey, 2005, Pseudopod, 2010)
• Swoon (Forthcoming, 2011)

Like I said, an interesting idea and a creative marketing strategy. If you're a fan of speculative fiction, you may be interested in supporting this project. If so, visit Jason Rizos at his Kickstarter page.

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For those who want to know more about this concept, here's a blurb from the site itself:
Kickstarter is the largest funding platform for creative projects in the world. Every month, tens of thousands of amazing people pledge millions of dollars to projects from the worlds of music, film, art, technology, design, food, publishing and other creative fields.

A new form of commerce and patronage
. This is not about investment or lending. Project creators keep 100% ownership and control over their work. Instead, they offer products and experiences that are unique to each project.

All or nothing funding. On Kickstarter, a project must reach its funding goal before time runs out or no money changes hands. Why? It protects everyone involved. Creators aren’t expected to develop their project without necessary funds, and it allows anyone to test concepts without risk.

Each and every project is the independent creation of someone like you. Projects are big and small, serious and whimsical, traditional and experimental. They’re inspiring, entertaining and unbelievably diverse.

1.09.2011

Review of Terminal Earth Anthology

An Anthology of Apocalyptic Speculative Fiction...

Terminal Earth
Edited by Michael Stewart and Neil Thomas
Available from Pound Lit Press, Dec 2010

What will you be doing when the shadows fall and the clocks stop?

From lovers watching firestorms in exotic island locales to strangers playing a last game of baseball in abandoned America; through the eyes of sentient robot hunters or businessman suicide bombers; in the strongholds of alien-built bases and across the body-strewn beaches of Asia; looking down from spacecraft and peering up from bunkers, the only certainty is that our Earth is terminal and we will look for a way to continue, somehow, somewhere.


Reviewed by Fred Warren

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This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang, but a whimper
- T.S. Eliot, The Hollow Men


Whatever narrative of the apocalypse you prefer, you’re likely to find your favorite poison in Terminal Earth, a new anthology of science fiction short stories from Pound Lit Press. Editors Neil Thomas and Michael Stewart have selected stories that focus not so much on how the world ends as on what people do about it, and this might inspire contemplation of the reader’s own response to the terminal scenario. Would I put up a fight, meekly accept my fate, work on my “bucket list,” or just stand there with my mouth hanging open, wondering what happened?

Hmm.

There are twenty-three tales of humanity’s twilight here, from the mundane to the bizarre, so settle down into your bunker, pop open a can of Spam, cue up The Doors on your MP3 player (I recommend “Riders on the Storm” or “The End”) and watch it all burn, freeze, explode, assimilate, or simply wink out of existence. I love short fiction, especially short science fiction, and there are some pretty good stories in this collection.

In "Fields," by Desmond Warzel, mankind literally goes down swinging in one last World Series before Earth is consumed by mutant wheat. Didn’t see that coming. It’s a bittersweet tale with a lot of heart, told by a homeless African-American man who finally discovers a place he belongs, just in time for the end of the world.

Barry Pomeroy’s "First at the Dump" takes us to a community of scavengers who find something unusual in their post-apocalyptic landfill. Perhaps their island isn’t the final outpost of humanity, and the world isn’t ready to end quite yet.

Two people ponder Earth’s final sunset from a balcony, naked, in Frank Rogers’ "As the Sun Sets." Not so much a story as an extended meditation on the ultimate futility of mankind.

David Turnbull posits a world subjected to death by...wait for it...tattoo, in a story sensibly titled, "Tattoo." Didn’t see that coming, either. Most of the story is spent explaining what happened, and waiting for the inevitable result, but there is some cool imagery along the way. I won’t be “getting ink done” any time soon, thank you very much.

Next is "The God Complex," by Neil John Buchanan. Alas, we should have known better. A probe searching for traces of God in the remnants of the Big Bang returns to mankind bearing delusions of God-hood, with predictable results. Standing between us and total assimilation is one woman in symbionic armor. Nifty, emotional, and spine-tingling.

A neighborhood committee attempts to maintain normalcy in the face of a cosmic catastrophe in Neil Coghlan’s "Outstanding Matters." They succeed about as well as any homeowners’ association. A gentle, sad story of good people clinging to the mundane for comfort.

Circumventing the end of the world via time travel may require more than one attempt and a little bit of good fortune in Jonathan D. Harris’ "Lucky Heather." Make that a lot of good fortune.

The world ends not by fire, but by ice, in Scott Davis’ "The Cooling Sun," but it may be history repeating itself.

Andrew Hook’s "Jump" provides a rather odd solution to the classic “planet-killing meteor” scenario that founders on a rather mundane impediment. I didn’t find the plan to save Earth plausible, but the story does illustrate the human tendency to grasp at straws in a desperate situation.

From a certain point-of-view, the end of the world might not be a bad thing at all. In Bill Schwarz’ "The Tipping Point," it mostly puts everybody's priorities in order.

Human society is pushed into the abyss with chilling ease, aided by an odd little bit of synchronicity, in Simon Hood's "You Can't Force an Owl." Perhaps the scariest story in the collection because we’ve already seen it happen on a smaller scale.

Mark Romasko offers a brief intermission with his poetic conversation, "On a Beach at the End of the World."

Speaking of beaches, Donna Burgess clues us that if dead things start washing up on the beach en masse, you might be approaching the apocalypse, in "Light at the End." In light of the odd bird and fish die-offs of recent weeks, this one seems eerily prophetic.

"The End of Dave," by Jamie Marriage, isn't cause for anxiety--it's just another corporate restructuring, though this one is a little more comprehensive than most. If you're quick on your feet, you might just end up running the whole firm. A lighthearted tale, in the spirit of Douglas Adams and Terry Pratchett.

It's back to the beach with Alexander Zalanyj's "The Fire We Deserve," in which two people witness the fulfillment of a planet-scorching dream.

The only thing worse than experiencing the end of the world might be surviving it, as N.E. Chenier reminds us in "Fragment." This is a tale of madness--gory and sexually explicit, not for the tender-stomached.

A starship carries the hope of mankind from a dying Earth--but something else doesn't want to be left behind, and doesn’t care at all if we survive, in Amanda Taylor's "The Gloss of Midnight."

In Eric Ian Steele's "Cycle," there's not much left to do but wait to be eaten by a very large monster. From one very particular point of view, this is progress.

A young man, abandoned as a child to a life of hard labor in space, returns to Earth--what's left of it--to confront his parents, in John Atkinson's space-opera-ish "Homecoming."

Soldiers ride out the apocalypse in an underground bunker, but they aren't prepared to handle what's waiting for them outside. Natalie J.E. Potts brings the claustrophobia and paranoia in "Beyond Black."

"A Quiet Pint at the End of the World," by Robert Long, is just that--two guys share a drink in a pub and talk about a girl. It might be the likeliest future vision of them all, if not the most exciting.

Pesky humans are full of surprises as they maneuver through an alien warehouse under the watchful camera of a jaded security guard, but what do they want? Erick Mertz provides the answer in "The Beautiful Room is Empty," but despite an intriguing premise, the ending felt a little, well, empty.

Finally, "Pa's Worm Farm," by Jamie McNabb, treats us to the dreariest apocalypse of all--the Green Apocalypse. Honest farming folk just can't catch a break in the Brave Gaian World, but country boys will always find a way to survive and prosper--even if it means eating worms. Some homespun laughs here, but it’s all rather bleak when you look beyond the caricatures. I would have preferred finishing up with something more hopeful and uplifting after watching the world end twenty-two different ways.

Ah, well...you can’t have everything, even if you’re the last man on Earth. Terminal Earth is a nice assortment of apocalyptic sci-fi shorts. Overall, I think it could have used a couple more action-oriented stories and a couple less depictions of humanity talking itself to death, but if you’d rather ponder the world’s end than fight the future, don’t wait until 2012 to pick up a copy of this book.

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Note: ResAliens Press (that's me) received a review copy of Terminal Earth from Pound Lit Press and I asked Fred Warren to share his thoughts.