At Smashwords (so Kindle, Kobo, Obi Wan Kenobi should all work), Rhys Hughes' Sticky Situations of Zwicky Fingers is free. CODE: DL35A
As is his Ironic Fantastic issue of Sein Und Werden CODE: HU56B
APB-SAL is a blog about education, science, science education, fiction, science fiction, literature, literary stories, poetry, and anything else that strikes the blogger's fancy. NOTE: This blog interrogates art. It rarely make moral proclamations. For that attend the church or politician of your choice. This blog concerns aesthetics, not propaganda. Consider this as interviews with books where the interviewer presents interviewees, so you get what you need to do your own thinking.
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Showing posts with label Sein und Werden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sein und Werden. Show all posts
Friday, June 21, 2013
Monday, February 11, 2013
Writing & "Bad science" links
Karen Heuler on her story collection
Nathan Ballingrud on his story collection
David Farland on romance
DF Lewis on Sein und Werden's latest issue, The Ironic Fantastic edited by Rhys Hughes
Steven Barnes on writing (blog)
Bruce Bethke's Stupefying Stories provided ebooks of the Campbell award nominees's stories
Rachel Pollack's stories read:
Animation of asteroid that passes near Earth
Likewise, another study possibly confuses causation with correlation, but it's hard to tell as the article is full of ax-grinding.
Nathan Ballingrud on his story collection
David Farland on romance
DF Lewis on Sein und Werden's latest issue, The Ironic Fantastic edited by Rhys Hughes
(next issue's guidelines: Exquisite Corpse)
Steven Barnes on writing (blog)
Bruce Bethke's Stupefying Stories provided ebooks of the Campbell award nominees's stories
Rachel Pollack's stories read:
"The Souls in the Trees"George Orwell on politics and language
"The Pickpocket's Destiny"
Science animation
Animation of asteroid that passes near Earth
Bad Science (possibility of)Reader smartly challenges interpretation of scientific study about chewing gum aiding concentration. (however, I heard of a similar study several years earlier, so their study might have tried more to explain an earlier study's finding, but still smart and worth reading).
Likewise, another study possibly confuses causation with correlation, but it's hard to tell as the article is full of ax-grinding.
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