• more about #handwringing more comments →
    Greasy Breakfast: Interesting format! If you teamed up with an illustrator, you could add that much more depth to your content. I must say, however, your story needs an... more »
    jamesryan: That's exactly what I'm doing! I use a webcomic model for my novel, and have regular subscribers twice a week getting up to date through an RSS feed. ... more »
    braak: You are, as usual, completely correct.: That's probably why the best way to do it is to use a model akin to what webcomics do. A kind of a blog that can be supported via merchandise (collec... more »
    Purple Dave: About a year ago, I picked up around a dozen different short story anthologies that were published by the same company. I can't say I'd ever reread al... more »
    Ed Grabianowski: I think an io9 interview with Gardner Dozois would be pretty excellent. more »
    rroonnbb: So how is a new author going to 'break in' when all of these anthologies are presumably filled with stories that were contracted for them? Will there... more »
    Grey_Area: Astonished that "Turing's Apples" is the only piece from Eclipse 2 to make Dozois' list. I mean it was good but there are much stronger stories from t... more »
    JennaW: If F&SF and Asimovs would realize it's no longer 1950 and update their magazines' look and feel, maybe more people would be tempted to pick them u... more »
  • #shortfiction

    SF Must Write Its Own Future

    You've heard about the death of print sf, but could online outlets for stories of the imagination be just as doomed? Fantasy Magazine has a reality check on the future of speculative fiction. More »
  • #shortfiction

    Is Short Science Fiction Moving To Original Anthologies?

    Are magazines no longer going to be the source of the best short science fiction? Maybe. Two pieces of news make me wonder. More »