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[7] [2] Each issue includes new short stories, one reprint, new poems, non-fiction essays, and a pair of interviews. [6] The magazine pays its authors and artists. [6] It also produces a podcast where some of the magazine's content is read aloud. [8] They have a staff of 10 editors and receive between 1,000 and 2,000 submissions every month. [2]
The Next 100 Years is a 2009 speculative nonfiction book by George Friedman. In the book, Friedman attempts to predict the major geopolitical events and trends of the 21st century. Friedman also speculates in the book on changes in technology and culture that may take place during this period.
Lisa Yaszek states that in the early 1930s, the editor of Amazing Stories, scientist and science journalist T. O'Conor Sloane, wrote " 'mundane science fiction' before that term ever existed, and he banned faster-than-light travel from science fiction stories" in the magazine, so writers began using "dream narratives... as a way to travel through time and space and time."
John D'Agata (born 1975) is an American essayist. He is the author or editor of six books of nonfiction, including The Next American Essay [1] (2003), The Lost Origins of the Essay [2] (2009) and The Making of the American Essay [3] —all part of the trilogy of essay anthologies called "A New History of the Essay".
Geoff Ryman at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database; Author page at Small Beer Press; Comment on the victims of the 7 July 2005 London bombings; Interview with Geoff Ryman conducted by Kit Reed at Infinity Plus, discussing his novel Air and the Mundane SF movement. Compilation of reviews of Ryman's book The King's Last Song
Reviews of Ballard's work and John Foyster's criticism of Ballard's work featured in Edition 46 of Science Fiction magazine Archived 11 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine edited by Van Ikin. A review of Ballard's Running Wild J. G. Ballard's Running Wild – The Literary Life Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine; Source material
From 'Doppelganger' to 'King,' these are the most impactful nonfiction books published this year.
The author Paul O. Williams, who has written a series of science fiction books as well as books of regular haiku and senryƫ, has combined both interests with some published science fiction haiku. Scifaiku mailing lists