Novedades de Abril en Hispanoamérica.
The latest in new releases, magazine issues, conventions and more in Hispanoamerica
The latest in new releases, magazine issues, conventions and more in Hispanoamerica
If you’re like me, a voracious reader with eclectic yet widespread tastes, you’ll read it from cover to cover and be well satisfied.
In this week’s viewing: My Next Life as a Villainess goes on vacation, Tower of God lets its hero catch his breath, and more!
Announcing the Kelvin award and the second Interac SF Script writing contest
With so many people engaging in tasks that are often thought of as repetitive (baking all kinds of breads and cakes, sewing and crocheting and knitting and long involved projects like filling coloring books or creating mandalas…) these kinds of time-waster games are filling a similar need.
In this week’s viewing: Love spoils everything in Tower of God, might rescue everything in Listeners, and more!
In this week’s viewing: Listeners sets up a classic falling villain, My Next Life as a Villainess gets the main plot going, and more!
In this week’s viewing: Appare-Ranman finds its hook, My Next Life as a Villainess is way too optimistic, and more!
We are in a world of castles and enchantments. Torian, the protagonist prince, must face his destiny, between marrying or following the path offered by a vampire mermaid. Vampire Mermaid! Who needs more than that!?!
A newly-orphaned young lady from small-town Ontario winds up coming of age on a Caribbean island that, like her, is haunted by legends of its past.
In this week’s viewing: A few more premieres, and a second look at last week’s standouts.
Let A God in Chains pull you in – The further into it you get, the deeper you are drawn into the quest, the greater your desire to find out what happens next.
Since you can’t go to the readings and signings, Amazing Stories brings them to you! Learn about the world-building and historical background for Barbara Barnett’s Apothecary series!
In this week’s viewing: The first helping of spring premieres, featuring way too many mobile game adaptations.
Apache editions releases, a new contest and online presentations – with translation – to help you while away the hours
Northern lights: anthology of Finnish science fiction (Osuuskumma International, 2016), edited by Magdalena Hai and Anne Leinonen is an interesting and novel proposal to approach, in Spanish, Finnish science fiction and fantasy.
Steve continues his F&SF reviews with the current (Mar-Apr) issue. He finds it a nice blend of SF (even some “hard SF”) and fantasy (even “hard” fantasy!).
In this week’s viewing: The winter season all wraps up, for a nice tidy transition to spring.
Steve is unforgivably late with his review of the Jan/Feb 2020 F&SF. He hopes you’ll forgive him if he posts the next two issues’ reviews on time!
A list of currently active magazines, a new anthology and a call for mini fiction
Ecuadorian writer Pablo Gómez Morán gives us The Wars of the Children of the Sun, a rewrite of Andean myths
When it comes to saprophytes, we are ALL Egon (“I collect spores, molds and fungus”)
In this week’s viewing: ID: Invaded displays a vanishing act, Magia Record and Hanako-kun try reappearing ones, and more!

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