Noticias Literatura 27-5
Alpha Eridiani publishes “Tierra Mestiza Chronicles” by Javier Cosnava; the Terbium conference hosts a new session.
Alpha Eridiani publishes “Tierra Mestiza Chronicles” by Javier Cosnava; the Terbium conference hosts a new session.
Works from a writing workshop published in fanzine form and a good handful of new stories in traditional form
Lots of title colons, an accurate book cover(!) and realistic space battle physics. The Lost Fleet series is one its best to start at the beginning.
Who wouldn’t be discombobulated, finding oneself expelled from suspended animation amid the remains of a starship scattered across an alien world?
Ricardo brings us a detailed report on the finalists of the Finalistas Premios Ignotus 2015 award and additional spanish language news
Be it film, radio, or just reading the short story, Arthur C. Clarke’s All the Time in the World is a must for every member of fandom to experience.
Gonzalo Montero Lara reviews Ivan Prado Sejas’ work
Intrusion is a novel, published in 2012, by Scotland’s preeminent writer of serious hard SF. It was nominated for both of the UK’s top science fiction awards, the British Science Fiction Association Award and the Arthur C. Clarke Award.
In the vein of Harry Harrison’s Bill, the Galactic Hero, Bob Shaw gives us the story of a man who joined the Space Legion to forget. Now if he can only remember who he is.
Upcoming – Celsius 232, book signings on The Day of the Book & more
Napoleon’s zombie army crosses the channel
Ebooks versus traditional books, as filtered through an Ecuadorian lens.
A special dystopian fiction magazine issue and a micro-story contest
A job in the field!, magazines, books, radio, conventions and on the web – all the latest!
Living Next-Door To The God Of Love is a hard book to write about without giving away its manifold secrets, and to do so would be to do the novel a disservice, for the greatest pleasure it holds is in the gradual uncovering of the extraordinarily detailed and original fictional universe Justina Robson has created.
An interview with author David Calleja; a report on a fantastic film festival and the 2nd Eurocon 2015 progress report.
G. J. Koch (aka Gini Koch) takes readers on a fast-paced, space opera romp, filled with pirates, derring-do, donkeys, sewage, and, well… boobs.
Heightened by the fears of the unknown, stories within the mysterious confines of space made for colorful entertainment and speculation, and Clarke used this tension to his advantage in Who’s There.
Three really great Kickstarter campaigns you ought to know about.
Two novels in review….one that reads like literary chinese boxes
The Minotaur award, a new release and a conference on the dystopian genre
Harry Turtledove, student of Byzantium, talks about alternate history. On this timeline anyway.
The Real is a parallel world in which the Second World War never happened, where Alan Turing emigrated to America in the 1950’s and laid the foundations for the development of Turing Gates. By 1968 the CIG was beginning to use the Gates to secretly explore parallel worlds. … There is a lot of plot in Cowboy Angels. There is also a lot of Bourne-movie style action. McAuley builds the suspense well and the set-pieces are effectively conceived.
Spiral Science Fiction announces a new collection from Félix González Díaz, “Back to Earth”
A profile of Ibero-American Bolivian author Adolfo Cáceres Romero.
The Peyti Crisis: Rusch deftly manages to handle a large cast of characters without missing a beat

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