Scide Splitters: Antigrav: Cosmic Comedies by SF Masters edited by Philip Strick
Scide Splitters reviews an anthology from the 1970s featuring some of the most prominent names in SF humor at the time.
Scide Splitters reviews an anthology from the 1970s featuring some of the most prominent names in SF humor at the time.
Ricardo reports on the on-going progress of Celsius 232, coverage of SFnal things in mainstream media, a writer’s workshop and the serialization of Lopez Nevado’s Gossip Bible
Alastair Savage’s Self-Publishing Odyssey moves on to stage 4: Designing the cover.
The Dark Between the Stars by Kevin J. Anderson is the first book in the ambitious yet sure to please The Saga of Shadows, the follow-up to the successful The Saga of Seven Suns.
Matt takes on the task of reading and reviewing all of this year’s Sidewise Award nominees.
Tanya rounds up the most popular posts of May for our Spanish speaking audience.
Ediciones Irreverentes (Irreverent Editions) introduces two science fiction novels & the new issue of Valinor Magazine is available for free download.
What have you learned from science fiction? Travis shares his own lessons.
Is FTL ‘science’? YES. It is.
Tanya reviews Ivan Prado’s Hananpracha
Nova Swing (2006) won both the Arthur C. Clarke and the Philip K. Dick Awards and was nominated for the Campbell and British Fantasy Awards. Gary Dalkin looks back at this true space oddity.
Radi Radev and John Dodds introduce us to the world of Bulgarian Science Fiction.
Before Well’s The First Men In the Moon…before Verne’s A Trip To the Moon, there was…Fray Manuel Antonio de Rivas
Bastion Science Fiction Magazine presents new science fiction stories from up and coming authors as well as some you may have already heard of.
The skies are crowded and full of crazy “scientists” who ruin it for us nerds.
Rainbows End (2006) won the Hugo and Locus Awards for best novel and was nominated for the Prometheus Award. Sad to say there’s no pot of gold awaiting the reader at the end.
More than just a time loop story, All You Need is Kill by Hiroshi Sakurazaka is like a fast paced video game where the hero learns from his mistakes, getting better and better every time he is killed.
jacques Sadoul revived French SF in the 70s; today Black River Press is trying to do the same.
Beam Me Up Scotty has become a catch phrase – but is it possible?
Alexei Panshin is a well-known critic/reviewer of Heinlein and his works
One night a few years from now the stars go out …almost from when it was first published Robert Charles Wilson’s Hugo Award-winning Spin remains one of the finest hard SF novels of the new millennium.
A new take on an old Classic, this presentation of 1984 is double-plus good!
Scide Splitters reviews Harry Harrison’s tale of Hollywood behaving badly with a time machine.

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