Monday, May 23, 2016
The teaser trailer for Beauty and the Beast
Disney has just released the teaser trailer for their live-action Beauty and the Beast. And it looks lush.
Bite-sized Beauty and the Beast
My retelling of Beauty and the Beast, The Summer Garden, is free this week on Amazon. Because we all need a free fairy tale every once in a while.
Labels:
Beauty and the Beast,
fairy tale,
free novelette
Saturday, May 21, 2016
Summer of Shakespeare #3
Freebie Fairytale Fiction
A Dream of Sun and Roses is still free on Amazon, so if you're looking for a short, futuristic fairy tale (based on Sleeping Beauty) you can get it here. I like rewriting fairy tales, not so much because I don't have ideas of my own, but because I like telling the stories in my own way. But at a certain point I realized that everyone picks the same five fairy tales--Beauty and the Beast, Cinderella, Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, and maybe...Red Riding Hood. When I started my "Modern Magic Series," I knew I wanted ten stories in all, so I had to go beyond the obvious. (Plus, outside of doing a werewolf take on Red Riding Hood, I didn't really see much I could do with the story)
Here's what I came up with:
Fashionista (Cinderella)
While My City Dreams (Rapunzel)
Hunter's Kiss (Snow White)
Hero's Kiss (Beauty and the Beast)
Beauty Sleep (Sleeping Beauty)
Unknown Road (East of the Sun, West of the Moon)
Hideous (Ugly Duckling)
Midnight's Daughter (The Twelve Dancing Princesses)
Lady in the Water (The Little Mermaid)
Soul Kiss (The Snow Queen)
I have covers for almost all of the stories--some women buy shoes, I buy covers. The amazing Joy Sillesen of Indie Author Services created some, and I bought the others as premades from various sources. Hunter's Kiss was created by Ravven, whose work is exquisite. I bought two of her premades last year as a Christmas present to me. I also picked up a couple on The Book Cover Designer. I know people can be sniffy about pre-mades, but there's some gorgeous work there.
Here's what I came up with:
Fashionista (Cinderella)
While My City Dreams (Rapunzel)
Hunter's Kiss (Snow White)
Hero's Kiss (Beauty and the Beast)
Beauty Sleep (Sleeping Beauty)
Unknown Road (East of the Sun, West of the Moon)
Hideous (Ugly Duckling)
Midnight's Daughter (The Twelve Dancing Princesses)
Lady in the Water (The Little Mermaid)
Soul Kiss (The Snow Queen)
I have covers for almost all of the stories--some women buy shoes, I buy covers. The amazing Joy Sillesen of Indie Author Services created some, and I bought the others as premades from various sources. Hunter's Kiss was created by Ravven, whose work is exquisite. I bought two of her premades last year as a Christmas present to me. I also picked up a couple on The Book Cover Designer. I know people can be sniffy about pre-mades, but there's some gorgeous work there.
Friday, May 20, 2016
The Time Traveler's Almanac
I am a fan of short stories. I'm a fan of time travel stories. So this collection of short stories (edited by Ann VanderMeer and Jeff VanderMeer) sounds like it's right up my alley. And I would never have known about it if I hadn't stumbled across the cover in a review. I love this cover. I love that the butterfly is a call out to one of my all-time favorite short stories, Ray Bradbury's "A Sound of Thunder." I remember reading that story for the first time and just being stunned by it. It was my introduction to Ray Bradbury and, most likely, the beginning of my life-long love of the short story form.
This is not the first cover this book has. When I went searching for it on Amazon--because to see it is to buy it--an older cover came up. And for me, the older cover was not as inviting. Maybe it's the background color. I used to work in print magazines and one of the things we were always doing is gathering data on which covers sold the best. (Covers with white backgrounds were not that popular.) For me this alternate cover looks like it might be a work of popular history or popular science. It doesn't say "fiction" to me the way the butterfly cover does. But either way, this book is on its way to me and I can't wait.
This is not the first cover this book has. When I went searching for it on Amazon--because to see it is to buy it--an older cover came up. And for me, the older cover was not as inviting. Maybe it's the background color. I used to work in print magazines and one of the things we were always doing is gathering data on which covers sold the best. (Covers with white backgrounds were not that popular.) For me this alternate cover looks like it might be a work of popular history or popular science. It doesn't say "fiction" to me the way the butterfly cover does. But either way, this book is on its way to me and I can't wait.
Thursday, May 19, 2016
Freebie Fiction
I'm going to be running free promotions for various books all the rest of this month and into June. I'm staring with A Dream of Sun and Roses, a long short story which was originally written for an anthology of future fairy tales that never happened. It's a version of Sleeping Beauty. The other freebie availale right now is Unsanctified, a horror story with spiders and other creepy stuff.
Labels:
fairy tales,
free fiction,
horror,
Sleeping Beauty
Saturday, May 14, 2016
Weekend Flash Fiction
DARKLING
by Katherine Tomlinson
The sun didn’t rise on Thursday. The
blogosphere, which never sleeps, outpaced the news channels in reporting
the situation, but CNN had posted a graphic (Black Thursday!) by 11
a.m. The parade of pundits began that afternoon, with self-styled
experts throwing out phrases like “Little Ice Age” and “global
hydrological cycle.”
Dr. Nicholas Solarz, whose theories on
nuclear winter had been published in the Journal of Geophysical
Research, seemed to be everywhere at once, basking in his moment of geek
glory. He talked a lot about the surface temperature of the earth being
300 Kelvin and predicted that without sunlight, the temperature would
drop by a factor of two in weeks.
When these statements were met by puzzled
looks from anchor-people who couldn’t do long division without a
calculator, he explained that 275 Kelvin is the freezing temperature of
water and that in a month; the planet’s surface temperature would be
down to 150 Kelvin. Then he had added, somewhat unhelpfully, “You do
the math.”
But to do the math, people needed to know
the difference between the Kelvin and the Celsius temperature scales
and have a passing grasp of the concept of “absolute zero” and most
everyone had enough problems just converting Celsius to Fahrenheit.
Also, a fair number of viewers thought Dr. Solarz was saying “Kevin”
and wondered who he was and what he had to do with anything.
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