Read Wilde Stories 2014: The Year's Best Gay Speculative Fiction by Matthew Cheney, John Chu, R.W. Clinger, Sean Eads, Eli Easton, Casey Hannan, Clayton Littlewood, Sam J. Miller, J.E. Robinson, Damon Shaw, Cory Skerry, Robert Smith, Nghi Vo, Kai Ashante Wilson Online
Read [Matthew Cheney, John Chu, R.W. Clinger, Sean Eads, Eli Easton, Casey Hannan, Clayton Littlewood, Sam J. Miller, J.E. Robinson, Damon Shaw, Cory Skerry, Robert Smith, Nghi Vo, Kai Ashante Wilson Book] ! Wilde Stories 2014: The Year's Best Gay Speculative Fiction Online ^ PDF eBook or Kindle ePUB free. Wilde Stories 2014: The Year's Best Gay Speculative Fiction Authors in this volume: Matthew Cheney, John Chu (his story ''The Water That Falls on You from Nowhere'' is a finalist for the Hugo Award), R.W. Clinger, Sean Eads, Eli Easton, Casey Hannan, Clayton Littlewood, Sam J. Once more editor Steve Berman has collected a variety of stories that range from the fantastical to the eerie to surreal-yet all possess the spark of imagination that is what brings storytelling the closest to a divine act of wonder an individual can perform. Oscar Wilde said: ''I
Title | : | Wilde Stories 2014: The Year's Best Gay Speculative Fiction |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.42 (722 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1590215001 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 246 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2013-10-24 |
Language | : | English |
Wulfstan said A fine addition to this series. The latest installment in this series (begun in "A fine addition to this series" according to Wulfstan. The latest installment in this series (begun in 2008) contains fourteen selections first published during the calendar year 201A fine addition to this series The latest installment in this series (begun in 2008) contains fourteen selections first published during the calendar year 2013, either in print or online. The only common thread among all the stories is that at least one character is a gay male; otherwise the stories fall all over the speculative fiction map: four are horror, several more straddle the line between horror and dark fantasy, most seem set in some version of our world (two are clearly set on another world), one is a historical fantasy, and one is steampunk. Both female and male writers are represen. , either in print or online. The only common thread among all the stories is that at least one character is a gay male; otherwise the stories fall all over the speculative fiction map: four are horror, several more straddle the line between horror and dark fantasy, most seem set in some version of our world (two are clearly set on another world), one is a historical fantasy, and one is steampunk. Both female and male writers are represen. 008) contains fourteen selections first published during the calendar year "A fine addition to this series" according to Wulfstan. The latest installment in this series (begun in 2008) contains fourteen selections first published during the calendar year 201A fine addition to this series The latest installment in this series (begun in 2008) contains fourteen selections first published during the calendar year 2013, either in print or online. The only common thread among all the stories is that at least one character is a gay male; otherwise the stories fall all over the speculative fiction map: four are horror, several more straddle the line between horror and dark fantasy, most seem set in some version of our world (two are clearly set on another world), one is a historical fantasy, and one is steampunk. Both female and male writers are represen. , either in print or online. The only common thread among all the stories is that at least one character is a gay male; otherwise the stories fall all over the speculative fiction map: four are horror, several more straddle the line between horror and dark fantasy, most seem set in some version of our world (two are clearly set on another world), one is a historical fantasy, and one is steampunk. Both female and male writers are represen. 01A fine addition to this series The latest installment in this series (begun in 2008) contains fourteen selections first published during the calendar year 2013, either in print or online. The only common thread among all the stories is that at least one character is a gay male; otherwise the stories fall all over the speculative fiction map: four are horror, several more straddle the line between horror and dark fantasy, most seem set in some version of our world (two are clearly set on another world), one is a historical fantasy, and one is steampunk. Both female and male writers are represen. , either in print or online. The only common thread among all the stories is that at least one character is a gay male; otherwise the stories fall all over the speculative fiction map: four are horror, several more straddle the line between horror and dark fantasy, most seem set in some version of our world (two are clearly set on another world), one is a historical fantasy, and one is steampunk. Both female and male writers are represen. nutmeag said Not precisely my cup of tea, but very well done. I'm not a huge fan of spec-fic, so some of these stories didn't resonate with me, but I'm glad I picked this up. I love John Chu's short stories, so that alone was worth it. I also liked "Caress" by Eli Easton, though I'd read that one in another anthology. "The Revenge of Oscar Wilde" by Sean Eads was cute, and I liked it just for the fact that I love Oscar Wilde. If you're a fan of Chu's and Easton's more romantic stories, pick up the anthologies for the Gothika series (Stitch, Bone, and Claw), which are closer to PNR than spec-fic. But still, I'd recommend thi
Steve Berman owns a great many books, a great many of which are gay-themed and a great many of those are eerie and fantastical. Well, the stories, not so much the books themselves, but he does possess a book reported to turn any flower pressed between its pages into a cordial (he's never dared try because he fears getting the book wet) and a scandalous memoir penned by Didier de Grandin, the bastard gay son of Seabury Quinn's famous occul
Authors in this volume: Matthew Cheney, John Chu (his story ''The Water That Falls on You from Nowhere'' is a finalist for the Hugo Award), R.W. Clinger, Sean Eads, Eli Easton, Casey Hannan, Clayton Littlewood, Sam J. Once more editor Steve Berman has collected a variety of stories that range from the fantastical to the eerie to surreal-yet all possess the spark of imagination that is what brings storytelling the closest to a divine act of wonder an individual can perform. Oscar Wilde said: ''I think that God in creating Man somewhat overestimated his ability.'' Thankfully, the authors featured in Wilde Stories 2014 possess the ability to create men on the page that love and risk and suffer and mourn, deeds that deserve telling despite the frailties of fictional flesh. Miller (his story, ''57 Reasons for the Slate Quarry Suicides,'' won the Shirley Jackson Award!), J.E. Robinson, Damon Shaw, Cory Skerry, Robert Smith, Nghi Vo, and Kai Ashante Wilson.
Well, the stories, not so much the books themselves, but he does possess a book reported to turn any flower pressed between its pages into a cordial (he's never dared try because he fears getting the book wet) and a scandalous memoir penned by Didier de Grandin, the bastard gay son of Seabury Quinn's famous occult detective. . About the Author Steve Berman owns a great many books, a great many of which are gay-themed and a great many of those are eerie and fantastical
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