Showing posts with label Anthology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anthology. Show all posts

6.11.2025

Review of Future Sci-Fi Tales #1 and #2

Indie Comic Series: Future Sci-Fi Tales
Reviewed by Lyndon Perry (affiliate links)

Future Sci-Fi Tales #1 (Oct 2018) from SnowyWorks (snowyworks.com) is the first of seven comic books (I believe) in this series created by Drew D. Lenhart. They feature collections of brief and entertaining comics and short stories. Most of the issues are available to read for free online (globalcomix.com) or download from Google Play or Amazon. (I've read the digital versions, btw.)

There are 5 quick reads in this first issue (black and white interior, 32 pages), all written by Lenhart. I found them engaging, a bit minimalist but often thought-provoking and quirky at the same time. The first comic is about mutant rodents called "Crizens" (10 pages with a page of background on the alien rat). Takes place in the year 2138, dystopic setting, angry farmer named Tenny, the screaching rats finally get on his nerves. The solution seems obvious, but Tenny's wife has a different plan. The art by Louie Escauriaga is a little frenetic but fits the vibe of the story. The 6-page sequel, "Tenny's Revenge," puts the final - but unexpected - nail in the coffin. Fun little 2-parter.

The next comic is a cute 5-page family drama with a nice twist. Escauriaga's sketches aren't as dystopic in this story but they still convey an energy that is compelling. Following this is a flash fiction piece (7 pages) without art called "Calzer's Clock" - a mantel clock whose hands should never be wound backwards! The ending is expected and slightly gimmicky, but flash fiction often relies on the gotcha finish. Enjoyable tale.

The last comic is just 3 pages called "Slowbot" (art by Lee Milewski) about an interstellar ship with 400 passengers and systems run completely by computers. I'm not sure if I got the point other than it took a long time to reboot. Still, intriguing. Overall, some fun sci-fi scenarios, super quick read, easy to digest, and entertaining. 4 stars. I'll definitely read the others in the series. (Review originally published on Goodreads.)

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Future Sci-Fi Tales #2 (April 2019) published by Drew D. Lenhart of SnowyWorks.com is a 40-page comic book with 3 comics and a short story by Lenhart that features an accompanying color illustration by Mike Cody. Unlike the first issue, the comics here are not written by Lenhart, but they are all well done. Quick and entertaining reads - like illustrated flash fiction.

The first entry is a 12-page comic titled "Clint Darius Homecoming," (I think Darius should have a possessive apostrophe) written and co-created by Jason Aaron Wong, and drawn and co-created by Francisco Paronzini; colored by Sandra Molina Juan and lettered by Dead Robot. Clint Darius is a space traveler stuck on an alien world. He needs to collect three magic artifacts from three royal princesses in various kingdoms to unlock the portal to return to earth. The story is well done, and the artwork is vivid and detailed. I had to read it twice, though, to understand the transitions and the surprising ending. Probably not the creators’ fault. I just miss things!

The second tale is an 8-page black and white comic written by Petri Hänninen, art by Andrea Meneghin. This is a horror story about an astro-scientist gone mad years after saving a marooned astronaut, marrying her and having a child. The child, all grown up, seeks answers to his father’s illness. The additional characters on the last two pages confused me so I had to read this story again to get the ‘ah ha’ ending. Overall, the plot was solid, and the line art was clean and expressive, if at times appropriately aggressive.

The third adventure is the short story by Drew D. Lenhart, “Crizen’s Journey,” which harkens back to Issue 1’s first comic about mutant alien rodents. These animals come from the planet Trappist 4. It’s a cool backstory about space explorer Jonathan Crizen and his ill-fated decision to bring back to Earth some living specimens – eventually named crizens – from his journey.

Wrapping up Issue 2 is a 6-page comic, “Clockwork Blues,” with art and story by L J Phillips. A nicely done minimalist, dystopic tale about human nature with bold, blocky, black and white drawings. It’s a kind of ‘enforcer’ story with a noir finish. The whole comic book was entertaining and I enjoyed the variety of stories and art styles in this short anthology.

Most of the flash fiction-like offerings in these first two issues of Future Sci-Fi Tales had surprise endings, which is often the case in such short works – and in most cases, the storytelling strategy did its job. 4.5 stars, for me. (I read the digital version.) Recommended series for those who enjoy sci-fi, space opera, dystopian, and far-future adventures. Most can be read online for free as well. (Review originally appeared on Goodreads.)


2.13.2024

Swords and Sorceries Vol 6 - Review

Review of Swords and Sorceries, Volume 6 

I won't rate this review, since I'm in it. But I will say, as a fan of the genre, I would not be disappointed if I'd bought this collection instead of getting a contributor copy. Here's my take, then, on Swords and Sorceries – Tales of Heroic Fantasy, Volume 6 (Amazon associate link) from Parallel Universe Publications, edited by David A. Riley (340 pages, paperback, published May, 2023).

Table of Contents:

  • Introduction by David A. Riley
  • 'Land of the Dead' by Dev Agarwal
  • 'The House of Bones' by Carson Ray
  • 'Threnody of Ghosts' by Phil Emery
  • 'Wardark and the Siren Queen' by Craig Herbertson
  • 'Otrim' by Lyndon Perry
  • 'Gods, Men, and Nephilim' by David Dubrow
  • 'Golden Witch of Adzelgar' by Scott McCloskey
  • 'Raiding the Graveyard of Lost Ships' by Tais Teng
  • 'A Place of Ghosts' by Andrew Darlington
  • 'Those Who Wear Their White Hair Proudly' by Lauren C. Teffeau
  • 'Trails for Treasure' by Harry Elliott
  • 'God of the Dreaming Isles' by Adrian Cole

As part of the ToC, I'll mostly talk about what I liked in each tale and highlight a few adventures that I really enjoyed. But my quick take is that this collection of 12 stories is a veritable feast of sword and sorcery – featuring an exciting variety of plots and tropes and offering something different for every kind of S&S fan. I think you'll enjoy diving into this sixth volume from PUP. I know I did.

Opening the collection is the editor's introduction of each of the authors. Most of the biographies, I assume, were provided by the contributors, but Riley adds a bit of commentary and ties the notes together in a comprehensive preface. I'm used to searching the appendices for author bios, so this was a nice change of pace, to be introduced to the writers ahead of reading their stories.

The first tale, “Land of the Dead,” is by Dev Agarwal whose hero, Baron Simeon (the Stone Snake), is captured, travels to the land of the dead, only to awaken in a stupor, finding himself facing a powerful opponent in a gladiator style fight to the death. This is the first Stone Snake tale I've read and it does feel like an episode in his and Princess Irene's ongoing quest to return home. Which is not a bad thing, per se. A lot of S&S tales are serial adventures within an overarching quest. It was easy to deduce that, in a previous tale, the Princess was abducted; and Agarwal's series evidently recounts the main characters' travels and plans to be reunited with the Emperor. A solid stand-alone installment in the author's fantasy universe, and one that will likely prompt a reader unfamiliar with Baron Simeon to track down more of his escapades.

Next up, “The House of Bones” by Carson Ray, features the swordsman Knox as he tracks down a Doctor Grim, an evil practitioner of the dark (and gruesome) arts of torture. This is a chilling tale well told – from Knox's clever entrance into the dungeon in order to complete his mission to his horrifying exit. This hero is one I'd like to get to know more about, and while I enjoyed this story, I wasn't completely sure what to think of him. Perhaps this is the slight downside to writing stories in a series – fans of the hero know the backstory, but new readers might be missing a bit of characterization. Still, a solid telling and a pretty gripping one at that.

I have to admit, I didn't quite get Phil Emery's “Threnody of Ghosts.” First, I had to look up the word threnody. This tells you more about me than the author, obviously. Also 'about me' – I'm not that well-versed in poetry; and this story certainly has a literary and lyrical quality to it that was, unfortunately, lost on me. I'm more of a traditionally-told tale type of reader – and I did enjoy the stand-off between Zain and the Banshees – but I was uncertain as to the story's conclusion and just what it all meant.

“Wardark and the Siren Queen” by Craig Herbertson is a novelet and well-placed in this volume. I was a bit confused at the beginning as to the parallel story lines and their times and settings, but eventually figured it out. As Riley mentions in the introduction, Wardark is a reiver, “doomed by the sorcerer Xianthus on a perilous quest where he must face the Siren Queen and the knights of the evil King Smaragd.” This is a battle heavy tale, full of action and derring-do as our hero leads his men to overcome their enemies. It climaxes with a shocking but satisfying ending, albeit with an expected 'there's more adventures to come' epilogue foreshadowing an eventual showdown between Wardark and Xianthus.

“Otrim” is my contribution to the anthology. It's a coming of age story featuring a young boy of the jungle, taken captive by raiders, who nevertheless survives the test of manhood. It's the origin story of my hero, the man Otrim who has left his traumatic past behind and risen in status to become Queen Philipa of Idessa's trusted paladin. That story is related in my short novel, The Sword of Otrim (Amazon associate link) by Lyndon Perry.

David Dubrow's “Gods, Men, and Nephilim” has a Celtic setting with a Pax Romana flavor. The premise is intriguing and the storytelling delivers – our heroes are Palaemon, an ex-Legionnaire, and his sister Abelia, a conduit and priestess for the water god, Tiberinus. They are (again from the intro by Riley) “tasked with killing a necromancer who just happens to be the son of a god!” Along the way they meet a Naphil who has a quest of his own to fulfill. It's a complicated plot that resolves in a surprising way, and points to a larger spiritual reality behind the gods and goddesses of the Roman pantheon. Very creative and one of my favorites, though the ending is not what one might expect from what purports to be a 'simple' quest tale. (At 40 pages this novelet is the longest in the book, I believe.)

In “Golden Witch of Adzelgar” by Scott McCloskey we have a first-person tale of a long-dead champion of the Ysir, the horsemaidens and sword wielders of an ancient people. An overconfident witch named Cyrilia, along with a bumbling lackey named Bartho, resurrects the revenant, invoking a rite that is supposed to bind the warrior to Cyrilia's purposes, to defend her people. As another reviewer put it, the champion's appellation of 'Blood of Ten Thousand' and 'End of Days' “should have been taken as a hint” as to what kind of help this dead-now-alive woman of the Ysir would provide. An exciting, action-packed story with some otherworldly twists, intriguing characters, and thought-provoking ending. Another favorite.

A second story in this volume I didn't quite understand was Tais Teng's “Raiding the Graveyard of Lost Ships.” It's set in Clark Ashton Smith's far-future world of Zothique, the Earth's final continent. Queen Desmei and her assassin accomplice, Avende, meet up with a sorcerer named Hamarid who is to assist them in plundering the Graveyard of Lost Ships. Some trickery and double-crossing ensue, but I wasn't able to grasp who the real villain was. In the end, I wasn't sure if I was supposed to admire or despise Desmei. When I read such stories, I never blame the author, I just assume I missed some important, though subtle, clues the writer has woven into the story which other readers, I'm sure, will get.

Another story that features a hero (well, in this case, an assassin) with previously published adventures is “A Place of Ghosts” by Andrew Darlington. I'd not read any of the author's other 'Eternal Assassin' stories so I have nothing to compare it to, but I thought this one pretty good. When I found out the backstory (by contacting Andrew directly), I liked the premise even more. Not all of his stories that feature this character are sword and sorcery. Since the assassin is a supernatural/immortal being, he moves from one host body to the next, living through the centuries, experiencing tales from every age and epoch. I'll have to track down more Darlington's Eternal Assassin stories.

The only reprint in this volume, I think, is Lauren C. Teffeau's “Those Who Wear Their White Hair Proudly.” Intriguing premise, though I didn't particularly warm to the idea that young girls are basically kidnapped to form the next generation of guardians. I would think being chosen for the task of fighting dragons would be an honor and the village would celebrate young Sidika's new path. Plus, I wish I understood the background mythos a bit more in order to cheer for the young warrior in training. Yet for this 'coming of age' story, the author chose this narrative path. (As a fellow writer, it's frustrating to hear others say something like: “If I were writing this story, I would do such and such...” but I'm not the writer, Lauren Teffeau is. So I'm not telling the author to do such and such, lol. All I can say is that it didn't quite work for me as a reader, but others will have different opinions, I'm sure.) Still, the ending turned out to be pretty satisfying and the storytelling was solid.

A good 'band of brothers' tale is “Trails for Treasure” by Harry Elliott, though one of the band is a female warrior who befriends a young woman runaway who is determined to return to her village to set things right. With the prospect of silver, one of the team, Gul by name, reluctantly agrees. With a bit of humor, great character chemistry, an adventurous plot, a tense fight scene or two, and an encounter with a giant, Elliott has provided us a strong story traditionally told. A good tale placed in a good spot in the anthology.

This volume concludes with “God of the Dreaming Isles” by Adrian Cole as well it should. The story is mythic in nature, set in the days of Atlantis, the Druids, and the gods. It's a high seas adventure as well, with our heroes captured by the Dreaming Isles for a purpose only the gods know. It's a creative tale with some tension, of course, with pathos and uncertainty but ultimately uplifting and satisfying. A nice finish to the collection. 

Conclusion: I'd definitely recommend Swords and Sorceries, Volume 6 for fans of the genre.

P.S. I had the privilege of editing my own sword and sorcery anthology in 2023 titled, Swords & Heroes (Amazon associate link). This collection contains tales by two writers appearing in PUP's Volume 6: Adrian Cole and  editor David A. Riley. Here's my blurb.

Swords & Heroes – A Sword and Sorcery Anthology – features 12 exciting tales of heroic adventure from some of the best writers in the genre today. Included are stories by Charles Gramlich, Gustavo Bondoni, Michael T. Burke, Teel James Glenn, Tom Doolan, Nancy Hansen, Tim Hanlon, Frank Sawielijew, Cliff Hamrick, J. Thomas Howard, David A. Riley, and Adrian Cole; along with a foreword by Jason M Waltz as well as a roundtable discussion of the current state of sword and sorcery.

1.19.2023

My Review of Feast of Fools and Other Tales

Anthology Review by Lyndon Perry

Feast of Fools and Other Tales, edited by Robert Poyton; an Innsmouth Gold Book (Nov 2022, 250 pages, available on Amazon and other platforms). Includes 11 stories of sword and sorcery. 

Start with a disclaimer: I’m in this antho (my story is “To Tame a Demon”) so I won’t review it as I would a collection that I have no connection with, but I will share a few thoughts below on the stories and authors in the ToC.

Quick take: I enjoyed the 11 tales (including mine!) and would recommend the collection to fantasy fans in general and sword and sorcery fans in particular. Though I liked all of them, I had a few favorites, including: “The Horn of Tur” by H. R. Laurence; “The Rotting Goddess” by B. Harlan Crawford; “The Lucky Thief” by Tim Mendees; and “Wind” by Russell Smeaton.

1) In “The Horn of Tur,” Laurence offers an exciting escape and attempted rescue tale featuring our hero Heodric, who is to be sacrificed to the bull-god Tur. There’s a good fight scene, a monster that actually occasions some sympathy, and a nice turn of events at the end.

2) The second story is mine, “To Tame a Demon.” It involves an ambitious and devious wizard who bargains with a few devils in his quest to become the most powerful mage of the Seven Manors. I actually wrote this a few years ago and it never quite worked. When I found out about Feast of Fools, I tweaked and edited it and evidently the story finally worked well enough to be included in this volume.

3) This titular tale by Poyton features Llorc, who is the hero of six novels (check out the author’s The Wolf Who Would BeKing saga) and a collection of stories, including this antho’s “The Feast of Fools.” Feast is a solid quest and revenge tale where our thief – facing sorcery and powerful spells – meets up with an unlikely accomplice, each aiding the other in their separate goals. Nicely told. I hope to read the first novel in Poyton’s Wolf saga soon.

4) The heroine of “The Rotting Goddess” by Crawford is Seanai who takes on a mercenary task for a grieving couple. All is not as it seems, however, and the gruesome sacrifice to the slug-god Lugloth goes awry – thanks to Seanai, of course. This fantasy is a good example of the author’s penchant for writing sorcerous horror. Check out some of his other tales featuring our heroine in the free Whetstone: Amateur Magazine of Pulp Sword andSorcery.

5) “The Colour of Decay” by Ashley Dioses is an intriguing blend of the senses and sorcery and creative magic. The heroine Adara meets the spider-god, Atlach-Nacha, and comes to a surprising end. This one fits nicely with the rest in this volume because of its different feel.

6) Tim Mendees tells a rollicking tale about “The Lucky Thief” – although we wonder throughout the telling if our hero, Rivvens, is all that lucky. Mendees is a good writer, adding humor to the grotesque and alternating between a tavern setting where the story is being told and the flashback sequences that unfold the adventure. I’ll definitely be looking up more of his stories. Tim also has a YouTube Channel where he hosts an excellent podcast. Check it out this show where he hosts the Feast of FoolsLaunch Party

7) In “Wind” by Russell Smeaton we have another quest tale – this time set in the frozen north – with an unexpected series of unfolding disasters. The chill, the wind, the eerie and horrible atmosphere – along with the utter carnage the monster beast of a god wreaks – just wow! Good storytelling and an author I need to look up.

8) Gavin Chappell’s “The Haunter of the Catacombs” describes his anti-hero perfectly as a thief and a liar – and Talon’s character flaws and misadventures get him into some pretty dire circumstances. This is a darkly humorous quest with two storylines (the other featuring Elenara) that converge, the story ending with a perfect set up to introduce more tales featuring an adventuring male/female duo. I had the privilege of reading another Talon and Elenara story and Chappell assures me more adventures are on their way.

9) “Skyfall” by Glynn Owen Barrass is a fun and fascinating blend of SF, fantasy horror, and future (i.e., lost technology) magic. A short, charming, and thoughtful tale with just the right amount of tension and danger, along with a bit of humor at the end. It was well done.

10) Shelly de Cruz, who also created the cover art and interior illos for this volume, offers a solid showdown adventure in “The Guide, the General, and the Priest.” After a long and dangerous trek, Tehmjin, our mercenary guide, engages in an exciting and climactic encounter with a rogue priest-turned-sorcerer, finally retrieving the object of the group’s quest. Of course, he ultimately says farewell to his traveling companions to head off toward his home country leaving me wanting to follow along and watch him get in and out of more scrapes. Very enjoyable.

11) The final entry is by Lee Clarke Zumpe and is titled, “One Sword Against the Gluttonous Gods.” The story features another rogue priest, but this time the protagonist is the one and fifty year old Emperor Tumen. Zumpe’s is a rich fantasy world with a lot to explore and caps off the collection with an epic tale of mayhem, magic, and sorcery.

Overall impression: editor Robert Poyton pulls together an enjoyable collection of heroic adventures that will likely appeal to fans of the wider genre of fantasy fiction. Not all the entries are tales of sword and sorcery, strictly speaking (mine certainly wasn’t), but the storytelling is fairly solid throughout and most authors wrap up their tales in a satisfying manner.

Quite a few of these adventures showcase an endearing anti-hero mercenary who deigns to guide his charges on some dangerous quest. And while there are similarities in trope, each tale has its own unique take on the plot’s direction and conclusion. While I won’t rate this antho, I will say I’m proud to be a part of it!

(Note: Amazon affiliate links throughout.)

12.11.2022

Future Bristol from Colin Harvey

Future Bristol, edited by Colin Harvey, is an anthology of short fiction by nine British writers connected to a city they love, respect, and want to see flourish. And rightly so, for Bristol, England, is a city worthy of both real and fictional exploration, and this volume is a perfect travel guide to get us started. 

Each story propels the reader into both the near and distant future of the United Kingdom’s famous industrial city of Bristol. While the significance and historical import of this port city in South West England is probably unfamiliar to many American readers, these speculative pieces immediately bring life and color to its past and present, while painting surprisingly vivid and imaginative scenarios of its future. 

In a sense, this volume represents not only a future look at what might be in store for Bristol, but a hopeful looking forward to what the city may become. Through a wonderfully accessible selection of stories and genres — from steampunk to biotech suspense to superhero fiction — this anthology is entertaining, compelling, and thought-provoking. As for the writing itself, the craftsmanship of each story is superb. 

Editor Colin Harvey did a fine job of compiling a diverse yet complimentary collection of short fiction that celebrates, in his words, “the city that we moan about but also love. A city that, like British SF, believes in itself again.” Well, if the authors of Future Bristol continue to write at this high a level, then the future of British speculative fiction — and Bristol itself — is secure. 

This volume is a delight for science fiction fans of all stripes. Liz Williams begins this anthology with “Isambard’s Kingdom,” a first-person tale that alternates between two narrators: Olaudah Jea, the future’s “Welcomer” and Isambard Kingdom Brunel, the famous 19th-century engineer. The story flips between past and possible as well, nicely blending a bit of steampunk with future history and social commentary. 

The plot centers on whether Isambard will be able to complete (in either age) the Clifton Suspension Bridge, a distinctive area landmark and architectural triumph. The engineer faces a choice—to act on the utopian vision he’s received from Olaudah or simply accept the status quo. What underlies the story is the theme of cultural repentance for the role Bristol played in expanding the slave trade from Africa to the Americas. Brunel stands in for Everyman; Olaudah represents an offer of redemption. Tackling the concept of “collective sin” is a challenging feat, but Williams handles the issue deftly and avoids turning this into a moralistic tale by focusing on an original plotline that brings two intriguing protagonists together. 

The title of John Hawkes-Reed’s offering,”The Guerilla Infrastructure HOWTO,” was a little off-putting, but his fast-paced and action-packed opening sequence dispelled any hesitation to put the story down. Hawkes-Reed quickly introduces an interesting concept (what’s the reverse of bio-terrorism, bio-aid?) through witty dialog and believably modern characters. While certainly a science fiction piece, “HOWTO” combines suspense and conspiracy with an antiestablishment message that doesn’t overwhelm the story. The disruptive biotechnology that the guerillas introduce will transform public transportation—to the delight of the masses—but Corporate Britain will fight to prevent it or control it. I’m not doing justice to the plot; it’s much more subtle and complex than that. The author, however, maintains intrigue and interest throughout; and what’s more, who wins is a mystery until the end. An enjoyable read. 

 “After the Change” by Stephanie Burgis is a modern-day superhero story with old-fashioned beat-the-bad-guy morals and a feel-good ending. I admit I’m partial to this traditional storyline, but the challenge is finding quality storytellers who handle it without resorting to cliché. Burgis is one such writer. She includes the right mix of relational conflict, love triangle romance, kidnap suspense, and internal moral crisis which, when set in a speculative context, makes for good fantasy reading. Andrew encourages his girlfriend, Neve, to discover the reason behind her angel-wing mutation. But like any transformation, the partner who hasn’t changed is often left behind. As Neve warms up to her new role as crime-fighter and city protector, Andrew feels disconnected and hurt. What he does with that hurt is what makes “After the Change” worth reading. 

Genetic manipulation is at the core of Christina Lake’s “A Tale of Two Cities.” The title, of course, evokes a Dickensian relationship between France and England, which the author skillfully weaves throughout this first person flashback narrative. Another anti-corporate tale, this story involves a French pharmaceutical company owned by Valèry Evrémonde, competently cast as the manipulating mogul who is frantically searching for his rogue niece Charley—and her cloned daughter. The reader slowly unwinds the connection between Syd (our storyteller who works in Bristol) and Charley, as well as Syd’s sister, Lucie (the clone), and Valèry Evrémonde (the owner of their “parent” company, hint hint). While a bit confusing at times due to the number of characters and the flashback structure, the plot resolves nicely, and the purposeful complexity simply showcases the competence of Lake’s skill at handling such an intricate story. 

The weakest link in this collection, although still somewhat charming in its own way, is “Trespassers” by Nick Walters. It’s a predictable and campy over-the-top time-warp specimen-hunting human-meets-alien yarn that works reasonable well if you enjoy those type of cult classic, Doctor Who-style stories. In fact, Walters is the author of a number of Doctor Who novels, so I’m not disparaging the writing; it’s full of pithy dialog (though it has a bit too much vulgarity for my taste) and four fanciful characters. Two human “urbex” gamers are exploring an ancient underground train station and encounter two strange creatures who seem to be doing the same thing…imagine! Of course, the reader knows what will happen (it has something to do with a zoo)—once Matt and Simon convince themselves they aren’t dreaming (oh, what a tiresome device). The pulp-inspired plot makes up for the lack of suspense, so if that works for you, then the story works as well. 

My favorite story was “Pirates of the Cumberland Basin” by Joanne Hall. As mentioned earlier, the variety of sub-genres represented in this collection is refreshing—and this swashbuckling SF mystery on the high seas (an ocean-covered England the result of global warming) is a nice change of pace. Each story in the anthology alludes to something Bristolian, and the famous ship, the SS Great Britain, is referenced here. None of the historical or cultural icons steal the show, however; they simply add place and context for well-developed plots and characters—especially in “Pirates,” which features detective Harry Muller, a dead socialite, a missing baby, a crime boss, child slavery, artifact smuggling, and, of course, pirates. Hall maintains interest as the reader sleuths along with Muller and, by story’s end, ties up all the loose strings in typical British fashion. Entertaining, but with an underlying message that gives one something to chew on after the caper concludes. 

Colin Harvey offers an expansive telling (in the unique first-person present voice) titled, “Thermoclines.” Although this is another mutant story, the setting is far future with winged humans scavenging for food in a postapocalyptic world that is sliding back toward barbarism. Young Garyn, our protagonist, is the most agile hunter among his small village among the trees. He returns from a foraging expedition to find a pair of rare visitors, who turn out to be a father/daughter team traveling and tricking gullible hosts out of their scarce resources. Despite the con, Garyn falls for Kazia and chases after her upon their midnight escape. The dangerous flight forces them to pass through dangerous thermoclines that threaten to push them into “the Grey”—the vast ocean of atomic and chemical waste that covers the Earth and which long ago forced mutant humanity to the skies. Yet this lethal ooze has another role to play—the transformation of humanity yet again, as Garyn finds out when Kazia is exposed to the poison. Themes of death and resurrection, love and forgiveness, and danger and hope undergird this narrative. Harvey has a powerful story here and one worthy of expansion into novella form. I hope he considers this or writes a sequel since the conclusion was a bit compressed and left me feeling that the word count played a factor in wrapping up the story prematurely. Still, one of the best offerings in this collection. 

The title, “What Would Nicolas Cage Have Done?” by Gareth L. Powell, is a humorous nod to the movie, It Could Happen to You, where Cage’s character, dining at a coffee shop, promises to split his possible lottery winnings with the waitress in lieu of a tip. In Powell’s story, John, fresh from a breakup, meets Bobbie at a café, and they strike up a friendship. In a fit of whimsy, Bobbie makes John promise that if he wins the lottery, he’ll split the earnings with her. Well, lightning strikes, and a choice appears—in this case the world comes to an end and John is reconstituted in a utopian future. He’s allowed to resurrect one other person…Indeed, what would Cage have done? The story is short enough (and surreal enough) to allow the reader some patience in order to endure the inevitable predictability of the plot. But overall, this is a well-told story strong on relational dynamics. 

The final story in Future Bristol is by Jim Mortimore, “The Sun in the Bone House.” This is a weird and operatic feature that somehow manages to cap the collection off in a complete and satisfying manner. I like to read anthologies straight through, for I assume the editor is creating an overarching narrative or thematic arc for the reader’s benefit. I sensed that was the case in this volume as each of the stories flowed nicely together, with “Bone House” wrapping up the various genres, themes, and ideas and transporting them into the vast and distant future of not only Bristol, but of humanity itself. The story takes us on a journey from the early days of Bristol (Briggstowe in Anglo-Saxon times) through recent history (alluding to famous area landmarks and discoveries) to the far future via the mind (the “sun” in the bone skull) of a child-turned-timeless woman. The pace picks up as the ages pass, characters come and go like actors on a stage, and still the sun offers wisdom, guidance, and direction to the town she loves. It’s an inventive tale that has many layers and, as mentioned, nicely rounds out this anthology of a city the authors “moan about but also love.” 

 My Personal Rating: 8 out of 10. Published by Swimming Kangaroo Books (April 2009) (Reviewed back in 2009.)

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)

1.09.2011

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

#

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.

#


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.

9.06.2010

Review of Zero Gravity from Pill Hill Press


Guest reviewer, Fred Warren (author of The Muse and blogger of Frederation) takes a close look at Zero Gravity: Adventures in Deep Space, published recently by Pill Hill Press. And he comes away fairly impressed. Here's what he has to say:

If you love stories about lone-wolf pilots, sentient spaceships, interplanetary power politics, rogue computers, lost colonies, and Terrors From Beyond, Zero Gravity, a new anthology of science fiction adventures from Pill Hill Press, will light your boosters and shove you deep into your acceleration couch.

To infinity! And...well, you know.

Anthologies are often a grab bag of stories that don’t quite fit together. In Zero Gravity, Editor Alva J. Roberts has selected 13 short stories that coexist nicely—they all have a space opera-ish feel to them, a “new frontier” spirit embodied in a human race beginning to extend its boundaries into near space and beyond. The authors pay tribute to a variety of intrepid explorers, adventurers, and entrepreneurs—people of courage, determination, and ingenuity. We witness wonders, and horrors, in those dark, lonely places between the stars.

Zero Gravity leads off with “Junkers Fancy,” by Rosemary Jones. It’s the winsome tale of a young salvager living by her wits among the asteroid fields between Jupiter and Mars who discovers something unexpected in a wrecked spaceship. A feel-good story with a spunky heroine and a hint of romance.

A smuggler runs into trouble when his metahuman cargo escapes from a sealed compartment, in Scott W. Baker’s “Leech Run.” Leeches drain electrical energy—a dangerous ability that has marked them for genocide. The missing leech seems to have plans beyond safe passage to a friendlier star system, and if Titan doesn’t figure out what’s going on, it could cost him a lot more than his commission. A locked-room mystery that introduces an intriguing universe and characters that deserve more exploration.

The mystery of a derelict ship and its suicided crew takes a bizarre turn when the investigators’ shipboard computer discovers love in “A Space Romance,” by Paul A. Freeman. An interesting twist took this story in an unusual, and, I think, better direction than the beginning implied.

“Hawking’s Caution,” by Mark Rivett, reminds us there’s a chance we might not like what we discover in the search for intelligent life beyond Earth. Beginning with a frantic warning message, the story then flashes back to the events that spawned the message, as an exploration team leapfrogs across the galaxy using a new teleportation technology. The ending had a Twilight Zone flavor, but the final reveal lacked impact—the beginning of the story gave away too much of what was to come.

A solitary hitman and his salvaged droid could be the last hope for a spaceborne community ruled by powerful criminals in David Shembri’s “Parhelion.” Though the setting was interesting, this somber story didn’t quite come together for me. The cynical tone undermined the optimistic ending and left me with serious doubts about the hero’s chance of success.

In Kenneth Mark Hoover’s “To Stand Among Kings,” a political crisis challenges the wisdom of a Papal inquisitor plunged into a struggle among rival human and post-human societies—but the future of all humanity may ultimately be decided by the most unlikely sacrifice of all. There’s a lot of byzantine intrigue in this story, but a nice payoff at the end—and some questions to ponder about what being human really means.

In “The Unicorn Tree,” Alethea Kontis tells the story of a young artist sent to recover a legendary treasure from a blasted, dying world. To her surprise, she discovers she has more in common with the survivors than she ever imagined. Not a lot of action in this one, but plenty of heart. Like “Leach Run,” this felt like an episode in a larger story worth telling in full.

A ragtag fleet of human and alien vessels from twenty worlds flees an unspeakable horror in “A Beacon of Hope,” by Gregory L. Norris, but is it all an illusion? A young woman must choose whether to continue the mission she’s trained for her entire life or join a revolution led by a charismatic rebel. A good story, but it’s plucked from the middle of a desperate multispecies exodus across hundreds of years, and we see neither the beginning nor the end of that journey.

“Tangwen’s Last Heist” by C. B. Calsing tells the tale of another lone-wolf adventurer living one step ahead of the law. She’s offered absolution in exchange for handling an awkward situation for the authorities, but she discovers there’s more than one side to the game she’s entered, and if she’s lucky, she might only end up dead. I thought Tangwen was a great character with plenty of attitude, but the conclusion, though satisfying in its own way, didn’t quite fulfill the promise of this story.

A crewmember on a long-range planetary survey mission awakes from stasis and discovers something’s very wrong with the ship and the telepresence androids operating it. Or is the problem in his own mind? Peter Butler’s been living in a virtual reality dream world for so long, he’s having trouble distinguishing between truth and imagination, and the tug to return to the comfortable world of semi-consciousness is powerful. Gef Fox spins a convincing web of paranoia in “The Stand-Ins.”

Will Morton’s “Glacier Castle” takes us to a world of eternal ice and snow—and one woman’s obsessive plan to save a doomed colony. In a story reminiscent of Moby Dick, Morton explores the fine line between genius and madness and the human drive to survive despite impossible odds. A good read.

In Margaret Karmazin’s “Rescue,” a mishap in space strands a pilot on a dead alien world that proves to be not quite so dead after all. Something’s stirring outside Kasi’s crashed spaceship, and it’s trying to get inside. A moderately-interesting first contact story that, unfortunately, didn’t venture very far beyond the first contact.

A rescue team intercepts a space freighter speeding toward uncharted space. It’s broadcasting a quarantine warning, it’s full of corpses, and the ship’s computer, Zeus, a sophisticated artificial intelligence, is the only survivor. Is Zeus responsible for the mayhem, or is there a subtler danger lurking within the ship? Murray Leeder’s “At One Stride Comes the Dark” is a whodunit, a horror story, and an exploration of the potentially hazy boundary between programming and sentience that kept me guessing until the end.

Overall, I found Zero Gravity a very solid collection of science fiction stories. While I was impressed with the variety and compatibility of the stories in this anthology, the attention to detail could have been better. There were an annoying number of misspellings and other typos in my electronic review copy, though they may have been fixed in the print version. The cover art is attractive and could double as an illustration for most of the stories in this anthology.

Blog Owner's Note: ResAliens Press received a free PDF review copy of Zero Gravity and asked Fred Warren to review it. You may purchase your copy here of Zero Gravity: Adventures in Deep Space, edited by Alva J. Roberts (ISBN-13: 978-1617060007 - Available for purchase in print or Kindle at Amazon.com.)

1.23.2010

Review of POW!erful Tales

My review of editor Michael Lea's collection of super human fiction, POW!erful Tales, is up at TangentOnline.com. Here's my opening take:
I have to admit at the outset that I’m not a super huge fan of superhuman stories, but I do like well told speculative adventures, which is what this anthology boils down to. And for the most part, the stories contained in POW!erful Tales, edited by Michael C. Lea, are fairly well told fictions featuring superheroes and super villains battling it out in and over Beta City, “the hero capital of the world.”

The setting of Beta City (on the shores of a post-cataclysmic Lake Erie) is important as it serves as a unifying thread for a collection of (for the most part) disparate stories written by thirteen different authors. Lea did a fairly good job tying them together with a running narrative that grouped thematically similar adventures into four sections. He even referred back to some of the characters and situations in his climactic story, “Uncreation Myth.” The overall project was maybe a bit ambitious as the groupings were somewhat forced, but I have to admit it was fresh and creative and did serve to set this anthology apart from the various other hero fiction collections out there.

After a fictional introduction by Lea that seeks to offer the reader some rationale for the increased hero activity in and around Beta City, the dossier is opened and we are invited to judge for ourselves the origins of the sensational happenings as well as the “menaces catalogued” there.
Read my reviews on all 15 stories included in this collection. And if this is your type of lit, then I'd give it a recommended thumbs up, a 6.5 out of 10.

10.28.2008

Silly Western Antho ~ Submission Window Closed

The Silly Western Anthology
~ NOW CLOSED TO SUBMISSIONS ~
Watch for the Publication Early 2010
~*~

Howdy Pardners!

Mosey on up ta the bar and let me tell ya about the darnedest, silliest, most outrageous Western anthology this side of the Mississip'.

Y'all heard right! CyberAliens Press'll be spittin' out another one o' them themed anthos sometime in early 2010.

We'll be featuring hilarious stories of the Wild West, some sappy Prairie Romance, and even a little bit o' SteamPunk, along with some super funny knock-you-on-your-butt cowboy poetry and limericks, art and comics, and anything else that's sure-as-shootin' silly.

Just in case you weren't listenin'...
~ WE ARE CLOSED TO SUBMISSIONS ~
Watch for the Publication Early 2010
~*~

In the mean time, you'll want to purchase Strange Worlds of Lunacy, our silly space and fantasy anthology that had several reviews appear in the gamma quadrant...must have got there via a singularity...but still. Until then, enjoy!

~*~
Are you a Member in Good Standing?



Can't get enough silliness? Visit CyberAliens Silly Blog!

Other antho markets at Ralan's SpecFic & Humor Webstravaganza.

12.01.2007

A Day at the Zoo & Too Many Crooks!

A Day at the Zoo
by Lyn Perry

A Tche’klovian was visiting his friend in Ba’laxia. When asked what he wanted to do while on vacation, the Tche’k replied, “I would like to visit the Galaxy-renown Ba’laxian Zoo.” This was a wonderful suggestion and so the next morning the two set off to tour the famous zoological gardens.

As they were strolling through the zoo, they came upon an exhibit which housed a pair of super-sized, genetically altered gorillas from a distant planet called Earth. They were just reading how dangerous these animals were when, all of a sudden, one of the gorillas busted out of its cage, ran toward the visitors, grabbed the Tche’k and swallowed him whole.

The friend barely escaped to safety and called for help. The zoo keeper arrived at once, but both gorillas were back in their cage licking their lips. The Ba’laxian explained what had happened and the official immediately grabbed an axe and asked the man, “Quick, we don’t have much time before he suffocates. Which gorilla did it? Was it the male or the female?” The Ba’laxian couldn’t tell the difference.

“Well,” the zoo keeper said, “the female is usually more aggressive so we better start there. I hope we’re right or your friend’s a goner.” He quickly split the female gorilla open but found nothing. “I’m sorry,” the zoo keeper said, “but it’s too late. It seems…”

“No, don’t tell me,” the Ba’laxian pleaded.

“Yes,” the zoo keeper explained, “the Tche’k is in the male!”


###



Too Many Crooks!
by Crystalwizard

An evil giant caught some thieves breaking into his home. He captured them and stuck them in a cage. While he was trying to decide what to do with them, he poured himself a beer and sat down on a bench to think. His friend happened by the window and asked what he was doing.

"I caught some thieves," the giant replied. "I'm trying to decide what to do with them." He picked up the cage and showed the five frightened men to his friend.

"Oh," said the friend. "Humans. They're too small to eat for lunch, but they taste great as a snack with beer. I had some just the other day."

"Beer?" The giant turned the cage around and peered at the thieves. "That sounds interesting. I'll have to try it. Thanks." The giant's friend waved and wandered off. The giant watched him go, then scrutinized the occupants of the cage. "Beer… I believe I'll try that right now."

He opened the cage door and pulled one of the men out. The thief struggled and tried to bite the giant, but his mouth wouldn't open far enough. "Stop wiggling," the giant thundered. The man managed to slip out of the giant's grasp and fell into the beer. Something in the beer reacted with his skin and a nice bit of foam appeared in the mug.

"Oh hey," the giant squinted into the mug, "I like that." He pulled a second man out of the cage and dropped him into the mug too. The foam got even higher. The giant cackled and dropped the other three men into the mug one at a time. Each time, the foam rose until he dropped the fifth man into the beer. As the last thief splashed into the liquid, the foam burped and dissipated.

The giant scowled into the beer, then reached down and plucked one of thieves out. As soon as the man left the beer, a nice foamy head rose almost to the top of the mug.

"Well," said the giant as he dropped the extra thief back into the cage and shut the door, "I guess I'll stick with four. Evidently too many crooks spoil the froth."


###



Want more general silliness? Then own Strange Worlds of Lunacy, and anthology of silly stories, jokes, limericks, poetry, and cartoons. It was compiled and edited by me (Lyn Perry) and Crystalwizard. Here's the official blurb.

Strange Worlds of Lunacy is a compilation of the funniest fantasy and sci-fi humor in the galaxy, the known universe, and all nine-million planes of existence! (Okay, well, maybe just the surrounding 5 blocks.) More than 50 short stories, limericks, and poems by breakout authors and seasoned veterans alike. This antho will have you laughing so hard you'll wet your...

"...a squeaky-clean bathroom buddy." ~ Colin P. Davies

10.30.2007

Residential Aliens Anthology

VOLUME ONE
Speculative Fiction from the Seven Stars


Available Now from Lyn's Storefront at Lulu.com!

Showcasing 17 short stories from featured ResAliens authors Andy Bowers, James K Bowers, Rob Carr, Patrick G Cox, D S Crankshaw, Merrie Destefano, Dan Devine, George L Duncan, Dave Gudeman, Rick McQuiston, Alex Moisi, Lyndon Perry, Curtis Schweitzer, Stoney M Setzer, G Glyn Shull Jr, and Gerry Sonnenschein.

Plus 7 never-before-published spec fiction found only in Residential Aliens Anthology, Volume 1:

The Golden Laughter of the Sun
A Spacehawk Adventure by George L Duncan
Author of the newly released A Red Wine Silence (Capstone Fiction)
++ +++ ++

Harry and the Thinking Machine
A Harry & Ferghal Adventure by Patrick G Cox
Author of the new book Out of Time (AuthorHouse)
++ +++ ++

You Use What You've Got
A Mutant Hero Story by Dan Devine
Author of the novella War on the Blind Sea (Free ebook at Lulu.com)
++ +++ ++

Coloring Book Garden
A Tale of Inner Struggle by Andy Bowers
Writing as Arthur Ford in Superlative Tales (Ink & Feather Comics)
++ +++ +++

Nana's Story
A Story from the Old Country by James K Bowers
Founder of The Herscher Project.
++ +++ ++

Combatant's Glory
An Investigator Aren Shel Huern Story by G Glyn Shull Jr
The Original Christian Soldier blogs from Iraq.
++ +++ ++

Enamored
A Story of Spiritual Warfare by Stoney M Setzer
Author of In the Shadow of the Sphinx (ResAliens, Issue 3)
++ +++ ++

Residential Aliens Anthology, Volume 1
Edited by Lyndon Perry

A Lost Genre GuildTM Book, Published by ResAliens
In association with The Writer's Cafe Press (2007)

Now Only $11.97! (plus shipping)
Or a SPECIAL $1.50 for Digital Download
223 pages, 6x9 Perfect Bound, Trade Paperback
Available now from Lyn's Storefront
ISBN-13: 978-1-934284-07-0

1.04.2007

Silly Fantasy Anthology

PRESENTS
~*~
Strange Worlds of Lunacy
The Galaxy's Silliest Anthology



Strange Worlds of Lunacy is a compilation of the funniest fantasy and sci-fi humor in the galaxy, the known universe, and all nine-million planes of existence! (Okay, well, maybe just the surrounding 5 blocks.) More than 50 short stories, limericks, poems, and illos by break out authors, artists, and seasoned veterans alike. This antho will have you laughing so hard you'll wet your...

"...a squeaky-clean bathroom buddy."
~ Colin P. Davies, author of Tales from the Iron Horse

~*~ ~*~


Own Your Copy Today
: Available at Lyn's Storefront

224 pages containing over 50 shorts, stories, poems, limericks, and illos.
6x9 glossy trade paperback - looks super slick! (If we do say so ourselves!)
All for the low low price of $12 (plus shipping) or $3 for the e-book.

Published by CyberAliens Press
~ An imprint of Cyberwizard Productions
~ Edited by Crystalwizard & Lyn Perry
~ ISBN: 9780979578892

~*~ ~*~ ~*~

Own Strange Worlds of Lunacy Today!
Only $12.00 (plus shipping)