Showing posts with label Kaaron Warren. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kaaron Warren. Show all posts

Mar 27, 2015

Review of Australian Fiction Vol. 13 Issue 6 – Warren and Goldsmith

imageThe Review of Australian Fiction continues to support not only Australian speculative fiction but Australian fiction in general, publishing two stories every two weeks. Volume 1, Issue 6 delivers us two great Australian writers, one notably at the top of her game and the other who should be making waves in the very near future.

Kaaron Warren’s Mine Intercom, is everything you’d expect of a Warren story - unsettling and off kilter but subtle and familiar.  It’s well paired with Goldsmith’s The Jellyfish Collector, which while still speculative and unsettling is tonally much lighter.

The Mine Intercom is a story about Xanthe, a resident of an apartment building constructed over a mine that was the location of a mine collapse 20 years previously, entombing miners .  Part of her reason for moving there is the rumour that residents hear voices of the departed and she hopes that she might be able to communicate with her sister.  Warren hooks you in early with sympathy for the protagonist and the life she has endured and then strings you along with hope.  Great stuff.

Thankfully The Jellyfish Collector begins somewhat lighter with aquariums, beaches, and fond childhood memories.  The hardships that the protagonist Eva endures are those which most of us are likely to encounter at some stage.  The reader is treated to snippets of Eva’s life and her her trajectory from a child interested in Jellyfish and the sea, to a marine biologist attempting to protect a particular marine ecosystem from development.  There’s faint commentary on political indifference to the environment but essentially it’s interesting science mixed with the fantastic.

The Warren leaves me feeling delightfully chilled. The Goldsmith, while a kinder tale, leaves me with a sense of sad longing.

This copy was provided free of charge. You can subscribe to RAF here.


aww-badge-2015This review is part of the Australian Women Writers Challenge 2015.  Please check out this page for more great writing from Australian women.

 

 

 

 

 


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Mar 7, 2014

Galactic Chat 42 with Kaaron Warren

David McDonald sits down to chat with the wonderful Kaaron Warren (who’s not as evil and terrifying as her books and stories might lead you to believe)

You can play the interview through the player below or download here.

In this our first show for 2014 David McDonald chats with Kaaron Warren about the early years of her writing, her growing recognition outside of Australia and some of her recent works including The Gate Theory from Cohesion Press and her inclusion in the upcoming Datlow anthology Fearful Symmetries.  

Warren recently visited the Aradale Asylum to hunt ghost stories and deliver a writing workshop while staying overnight. She also talks about some of the strange happenings that occurred.

To see the picture that Kaaron refers to in the interview please checkout our Facebook page.

You can find Kaaron on Twitter   and at her website.

 


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Aug 14, 2013

Aussies represent! The World Fantasy Award

crandolinAs announced by Tor a couple of days ago the shortlist for the world fantasy award has been announced ahead of the World Fantasy Convention in Brighton this year and it’s great to see four Aussies( and some other notable non-Anglophone personalities) in the running for what is a world fantasy award. The nominated peeps are:

Novel

 

Novella

  • Sky,” Kaaron Warren (Through Splintered Walls)

under-my-hat

 

Anthology

 

Artist

 

 

 

and a shout out to the ever hard working Charles A. Tan for his Bibliophile Stalker blog  which is up for a Special Award—Non-professional.


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May 4, 2013

Aussies in Shirley Jackson Awards Line-up

The Shirley Jackson shortlist has been announced and I am pleased to congratulate Margo and Kaaron (and their publisher Alisa) for making it to the list. 

 

The nominees for the 2012 Shirley Jackson Awards are:

NOVEL

  • The Drowning Girl, Caitlín R. Kiernan (ROC)
  • The Devil in Silver, Victor LaValle (Spiegel & Grau)
  • Edge, Koji Suzuki (Vertical, Inc.)
  • Gone Girl, Gillian Flynn (Crown Publishers)
  • Immobility, Brian Evenson (Tor)

NOVELLA

  • 28 Teeth of Rage, Ennis Drake (Omnium Gatherum Media)
  • Delphine Dodd, S.P. Miskowski (Omnium Gatherum Media)
  • I’m Not Sam, Jack Ketchum and Lucky McKee (Sinister Grin Press/ Cemetery Dance Publications)
  • The Indifference Engine, Project Itoh (Haikasoru/VIZ Media LLC)
  • “Sky,” Kaaron Warren (Through Splintered Walls, Twelfth Planet Press)

NOVELETTE

  • “The Crying Child,” Bruce McAllister (originally “The Bleeding Child,” Cemetery Dance #68)
  • “The House on Ashley Avenue,” Ian Rogers (Every House is Haunted, ChiZine Publications)
  • “Reeling for the Empire,” Karen Russell (Tin House, Winter 2012)
  • “Wild Acre,” Nathan Ballingrud (Visions, Fading Fast, Pendragon Press)
  • “The Wish Head,” Jeffrey Ford (Crackpot Palace, William Morrow)

SHORT FICTION

  • Bajazzle,” Margo Lanagan (Cracklescape, Twelfth Planet Press)
  • “How We Escaped Our Certain Fate,” Dan Chaon (21st Century Dead, St. Martin’s)
  • “Little America,” Dan Chaon (Shadow Show: All New Stories in Celebration of Ray Bradbury, William Morrow)
  • “The Magician’s Apprentice,” Tamsyn Muir (Weird Tales #359)
  • “A Natural History of Autumn,” Jeffrey Ford (Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, July/August 2012)
  • “Two Houses,” Kelly Link (Shadow Show: All-New Stories in Celebration of Ray Bradbury, William Morrow)

SINGLE-AUTHOR COLLECTION

  • Crackpot Palace, Jeffrey Ford (William Morrow)
  • Errantry, Elizabeth Hand (Small Beer Press)
  • The Pottawatomie Giant and Other Stories, Andy Duncan (PS Publishing)
  • Remember Why You Fear Me, Robert Shearman (ChiZine Publications)
  • The Woman Who Married a Cloud, Jonathan Carroll (Subterranean Press)
  • Windeye, Brian Evenson (Coffee House Press)

EDITED ANTHOLOGY

  • 21st Century Dead, edited by Christopher Golden (St. Martin’s)
  • Black Wings II, edited by S. T. Joshi (PS Publishing)
  • Exotic Gothic 4:  Postscripts #28/29, edited by Danel Olson (PS Publishing)
  • Night Shadows, edited by Greg Herren and J. M.  Redmann (Bold Strokes Books)
  • Shadow Show: All-New Stories in Celebration of Ray Bradbury, edited by Sam Weller and Mort Castle (William Morrow)
  • [source]

           


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          Apr 28, 2013

          Book Review – In Fabula-divino edited by Nicole Murphy

          infabuladivinocover-sml

          In Fabula-divino is one of those projects that seemed to fly under my radar, despite being aware of and following many of the authors, the editor and publisher of the project.  I’ll let the Editor, Nicole Murphy explain the concept in her own words:

          In March 2009, author and editor Nicole Murphy began the In Fabula-divino project – the aim being to provide up-and-coming authors with their first taste of a professional editing experience, mentor them through the ups and downs of a writing career and give a leg up to some talented writers.

          The first few months were crowdfunded via Indiegogo. The first four stories were turned around in just three weeks, undergoing at least three rounds of editing in that time. The later stories were edited over a two month period.

          Each story was published online, available for a month here on this very website, before it was replaced by the next fabulous story.

          Unfortunately, time and family health issues meant the project couldn’t continue at the standard Nicole had set….

           

          The anthology was made available in electronic form and despite all the poor luck it had to confront getting there, a paperback version was launched over this past weekend at the Australian Natcon.

          But you want to know about the stories don’t you?

          I wasn’t a big fan of anthology’s or a big reader of short stories before I became a reviewer, so the last two years has been a bit of an education in reading the shorter form and getting the feel of how anthologies work and what defines a good one.  No anthology is going to be 100% everybody’s thing, it’s the nature of getting a large number of writers together and building something cohesive but that still allows individuality. 

          In Fabula-divino lacks a unifying theme, but it’s a slim read so I didn’t feel that it impacted on my reading experience.  What Murphy has done is given us a sprinkling of reprints and original works (all we new to me) from well known authors of speculative fiction interspersed with some well work-shopped and edited work from new or up and coming authors.  It was a quick, satisfying read with some excellent work from new and seasoned writers alike.

          From the seasoned writers, I was emotionally gutted by Kaaron Warren’s White Bed (her first published story if I’m not mistaken)- I should know by now what to expect from Kaaron, but this story is a prime example of why she picks up awards for her writing.  The second seasoned writer story that made an impact was Angela Slatter’s Dresses, Three, a fairy tale retelling.

          Of the new writers SG Larner would have tied with Slatter for the story with the most emotional impact with her Regret, had the Warren not been included in the collection.  It’s a really good example of the kind of speculative fiction that easily straddles the boundary between fantasy and magical realism i.e. it would not have been out of place in a Lit Journal.

          Stay Out of the Park by Janett L Grady was another story that I felt mixed emotion, horror and hope in any interesting fashion.  Finally I was kicking myself for not seeing the reveal in Holy Kench’s Zombie story, The Secret Life of a Zombie Fan, having been exposed to her unique fiction via her blog.

          In Fabula-Divino is a mixed bag in the best sense of the word, a selection of good (some great) short stories, there’s no liquorice in this bag of lolliesY.

           

          In Fabula-divino was published by eMergeant Publishing in partnership with Nicole Murphy and can be purchased through Amazon and Smashwords in electronic form. A review copy was provided for this review.


          YI used to hate liquorice as a kid, and dreaded finding liquorice in bags of mixed candy.  I have come to appreciate it especially in Sambucca form.


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          Apr 13, 2013

          Australian Shadows Award Winners

          The Australian Shadows Awards are:

          … the annual literary awards presented by the AHWA and judged on the overall effect - the skill, delivery, and lasting resonance - of horror fiction written or edited by an Australian. [source: Australian Horror Writers Association]

          Here are the winners:nightshade

          NOVEL

          Perfections – Kirstyn McDermott

          LONG FICTION

          Sky – Kaaron Warren

          SHORT FICTION

          Birthday Suit – Martin Livings

          EDITED PUBLICATION

          Surviving the End – Craig Bezant

          COLLECTION

          Through Splintered Walls – Kaaron Warren

           

          The list includes two writers that I have read recently.  And I am very happy to see them win, I don’t tend to read much horror,but those selected were certainly good writing.  Congrats to Kaaron, Kirstyn and the others, whose works I have yet to read.

          Oh and isn’t the trophy delightfully macabre, it’s made by Nightshade Fx


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          Apr 3, 2013

          Ditmars 2013–Best Collected Work

          Epilogue_lg_mediumA category dominated by the dedicated (some say slightly unhinged) folk that dedicate their lives and mortgages to bringing us collections of short fiction, a section that speaks of love of the genre. They unearth and support neophyte writers, connive with mistresses and masters of craft to bring us work that might not fit less imaginative markets.

          I own all the works on the list, but in what sounds like a familiar tune, I haven’t had time to read them all.  The Twelve Planets are nice, bite sized collections easily devoured the others in the list, particularly the last, are treasure troves that really do need time to sit own and ponder over.

          So I have read Cracklescape, Through Splintered Walls, Light Touch Paper…, and have dipped in and out of the others. 

          And the difficulty here as in some other sections is that they are almost all different beasts. I don’t know that you can really compare them other than to try and go with an intuitive gut feeling about which one made the greater impression.  A method that invariably leaves books I have barely read at a disadvantage.

          Best Collected Work
          ————————————————————————

          • Cracklescape by Margo Lanagan, edited by Alisa Krasnostein (Twelfth
            Planet Press)
          • Epilogue, edited by Tehani Wessely (FableCroft Publishing)
          • Through Splintered Walls by Kaaron Warren, edited by Alisa Krasnostein
            (Twelfth Planet Press)
          • Light Touch Paper Stand Clear, edited by Edwina Harvey and Simon
            Petrie (Peggy Bright Books)
          • Midnight and Moonshine by Lisa L. Hannett and Angela Slatter, edited
            by Russell B. Farr (Ticonderoga Publications)
          • The Year’s Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2011, edited by Liz
            Grzyb and Talie Helene (Ticonderoga Publications)

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          Mar 31, 2013

          Ditmars 2013 – Best Novella or Novelette

          crackle And it turns out I have read everything in this category and still would have if Jason Nahrung’s Salvage had been a sentence or two shorter and fallen into it.  And it’s further proof that having read everything doesn’t help with your voting.  I suspect that there are many worthy reads within the eligibility list, the trouble being  access to them, some hidden away in collections and time to read them.

          The nominees are:

          Best Novella or Novelette
          ————————————————————————
          * “Flight 404”, Simon Petrie, in Flight 404/The Hunt for Red Leicester (Peggy Bright Books)
          * “Significant Dust”, Margo Lanagan, in Cracklescape (Twelfth Planet Press)
          * “Sky”, Kaaron Warren, in Through Splintered Walls (Twelfth Planet Press)

           

          Comments:

          I reviewed Flight 404 here. A good hard science read, where that science is the backdrop, it influences story but is not THE story. My final thoughts on it were:

          I really enjoyed this story, felt that that the character was an honest and positive representation of a transgender person and I was captive to the mystery and story right until the end.

          Significant Dust is my favorite from Cracklescape, which I reviewed here.  Not my favourite Lanagan short, that honour goes to singing my sister down but as I said in the review of Cracklescape:

          Significant Dust was the story that had me reaching for the tissues.  It’s not quite so gutting as my favourite Lanagan, Singing My Sister Down, because there’s a hopeful ending or at least Margo has left enough room for me to imagine one.

          Kaaron-SpinteredWalls-011 Sky was part of a fairly even collection, each of the stories presented something of value to me and I don’t have a feeling of Sky standing out above and beyond the others.  Here’s the review for Through Splintered Walls that contains the novella.

          Of those that didn’t make it on to the ballot that I have read and that I think really stood out were "Elyora", by  Jodi Cleghorn, in the Review of Australian Fiction.  I am not sure the novella hit a wide enough audience.  I think it sits well in the Australian Gothic Horror genre as outlined in Dr Hannett’s article for This is Horror.  If you’re fans of Nahrung or McDermott I encourage you to check out Elyora, which will be republished this year by a UK publish under a different title and with a longer prologue.

          The second is The King’s Man by Rowena Cory Daniells (though I’m not sure it was published in Australia or if that even matters by the rules) its a novella set in the KRK universe.  It’s gritty, largely self contained at still manges to carry the emotional punch of Daniells’ much larger novels. 

           

           


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          Jan 3, 2013

          eBook Review–Through Splintered Walls by Kaaron Warren

          through

          Though Splintered Walls is the most recent of the Twelve Planets series from Twelfth Planet Press.  And like the rest of that series, the quality is high, the selection of story and author perfect.

          Splintered Walls follows the loose format of previous Twelve planets volumes with four stories – 3 shorts and a novella.

          They are: Mountain, Creek, Road and Sky. Gemma Files in the book’s introduction  says of Warren that:

           

          [she] has the true gift of spell-casting, the sort of deceptively direct, declamatory literary style which says: I simply have to speak a thing, and no matter how odd it may seem in the telling, it is instantly rendered so—solid, actual, honest, real.

          And I am not going to argue. I also think that Warren, like Lanagan has given us a collection that is identifiably Australian without belabouring the point. I found each of the settings recognisable, each of them resonated at some level within me.

          Mountain tapped into my experiences of driving through the Glasshouse mountains and long road trips with my family, Creek awoke memories of drownings in desert waterholes, Road, flashes of roadside death markers and Sky, well Sky made me look at my small rural community in a entirely new and not altogether comfortable way.

          Her “declamatory literary style” makes for stories that you just slip into, they are matter of fact, uncontrived.  They could be “your” story until the reveal of course.

          In looking back at the three shorter pieces I feel myself questioning which is truly horrific, the supernatural or the very real tragedy that occurs in the mundane?  I think it’s the mundane situations in these stories that effect me the most.  Once you get past the blood and guts in horror, past the suspense, it’s the empathy with characters, the horror they perform or are at the receiving end of that makes a piece work for me.

          If you are into good, understated horror, horror in the everyday, then pick up this collection.

          This book was purchased from the wonderful Wizard’s Tower Books.


          awwbadge_2013

          This review is part of the Australian Women Writers Challenge 2013.  Please check out this page for more great writing from Australian women.

           

           

           


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          Nov 21, 2012

          Twelfth Planet Press eBooks via Amazon

          tppheader4-copyTwelfth Planet Press is rolling out yet more eBooks via Amazon.  So for all you internationals you now have no excuse. Currently available are:

          Cracklescape, Salvage, Thief of Lives, Bad Power, Above Below, Love and Romanpunk, Through Splintered Walls and Showtime.

          Go here to check them out.

           


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          May 21, 2012

          Giveaway–Through Splintered Walls by Kaaron Warren

          13793120Twelfth Planet Press are running another giveaway comp on Goodreads.  This time it’s for Kaaron Warren’s Through Splintered Walls.

          You may enter here.

          Of course if you are tempted to buy it you can go to the TPP site and put in a pre-order.

          What the lucky so and so’s who have read it people are saying:

           

          ‘Every Warren story is a trip with no map.’ – Gemma Files

          ‘Her fiction shifts across genres smoothly and intelligently, never settling for the easy path… she doesn’t flinch.’ – Andrew Hook

          ‘As with most of the best horror writing … the power of Warren’s strongest stories comes from the mirror they hold up to our everyday practices and prejudices.’ – Ian McHugh

          Not sure about short collections?  Check out my reviews of other books in the series:

          Nightsiders

          Love and Romanpunk

          Thief of Lives

          Bad Power

          As you can see, I am a bit of a TPP fan.


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          May 14, 2012

          eBook Review – Ishtar (Eds.) Amanda Pillar & K.V. Taylor

          ishtar

          Ishtar is a collection of novella’s written by three of Australia’s top female speculative fiction writers.

          Indeed, the collection itself has been nominated for both an Aurealis and a Ditmar, and the individual novellas have picked up nominations in both awards as well.

          Published by Gilgamesh press 1. for the rather paltry sum of $5.95 in ebook form, it’s well worth the money.

          The Tales

          The stories in Ishtar, as the title suggests, centre on the Assyrian Goddess Ishtar, goddess of fertility, war, love, and sex.

          The first novella, The Five Loves of Ishtar by Kaaron Warren is set in Ancient Assyria.  The story is told by successive generations of washer women indentured to the Goddess as she is wife or partner to 5 great men, beginning with the deity Tammuz. 

          The story is written in the first person, and the language is somewhat stilted (though not in a negative sense).  I think Warren is trying to create a text that feels mythic and reserved, not quite biblical but certainly encouraging more formal tone:

          My goddess Ishtar had five great loves in her thousand years of living. Many lovers; so many even I lost count, I, who can tell you the number of girdles in every household in the city. But five men she loved, and five times she risked all for love.

          I’ll admit that this tale took me the longest to get into.  The repetition of the form , however, the continuity of generations of washer women telling the story, gave me both a sense of history and gradually drew me in.

          The second novella was Deb Biancotti’s And the Dead Shall Outnumber The Living and is set in present day Sydney. It’s a police procedural  that morphs into a surreal dark fantasy where the goddess Ishtar appears again, flexing her powers.

          She crouches and grips the edge of a drain outlet, peering in. The stench is unbearable. Every shitting, vomiting junkie in the city crammed into one room couldn’t smell this bad. The body looks like a sack pushed up against the grate, spread out, blocking nearly the whole outlet. Water rushes around it, making the skin ripple. It’s naked, and the dark hairs on its chest and arms and legs, the dark V of hair around its genitals, are pressed flat by the weight of water. The insides must’ve floated away by now, out to sea.

          “Kids thought it was a balloon or a clown suit or something,” Tarling says. “Until the face rolled round and looked at them.”

          “Counselling?” Steve asks.

          “Oh, years of it, I’d imagine,” Tarling says.

          I am a fan of Biancotti’s work in Bad Power and the writing echoes that same beat cop, police procedural with an edge of dark fantasy, only in this instance it’s more than an edge.  The ending is…unconventional perhaps, but fits into the whole package beautifully.

          The final novella is Cat Sparks’ The Sleeping and The Dead. It gave me visions of a post apocalyptic gothic wasteland - Necromaidens with a fetish for skulls…

          She watches nuns dancing in the dust, spinning and twirling as if the stuff’s not killing them. Necromaidens. Fallout wraiths. Praising absent gods for their blisters as well as their dreams. Like her, they have no formal training. Their cult has grown organically, exponentially as the years have dragged. Anna became conscious of the neatness of the skulls long before glimpsing the girls’ demented Tinkerbell antics around the gritty edges of Truckstop’s barbed perimeter. She might have dismissed the girls as ghosts — the barren landscape groans beneath the breathless, phantom weight of them, but no, the nuns are solid. As solid as forty-five kilos of half-starved girl can get.

          To pick a favourite

          It’s hard to pick a favourite out of these three, viewed as three parts of a whole they are both wonderfully distinct yet dovetail into each other smoothly.  We have a mythic retelling, a police procedural and a post apocalyptic tale but it does feel like one continuous tale told from different perspectives. 

          The Sleeping and The Dead probably edges in front as my preferred story but it’s close.  I have a penchant for the post apocalyptic.

          Hits the mark

          Ishtar fits Gilgamesh Press’ vision beautifully.  Here we have three quality writers giving us their take on Assyrian myth, breathing life into a culture that underpins our own. Ishtar steps from the pages; a living, breathing, sensual and violent goddess – come and meet her.

          If you like your fiction dark and your women powerful don’t go past Ishtar.


          1.Gilgamesh Press is an imprint of Morrigan Books. Gilgamesh Press has a vision to promote awareness of the Assyrian people and their history through literature.


          awwc2012This review is part of the Australian Women Writers Challenge 2012.  Please check out this page for more great writing from Australian women.

           

           


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          Apr 17, 2012

          Cover Candy - Through Splintered Walls by Kaaron Warren

           

          Amanda Rainey has done another fantastic job on this Twelve Planets book cover. 

          It’s a little while till we get it (the book), but seeing the cover and having encountered Warren’s work before I think its an excellent choice.

          TPP has released the back cover blurb:

          Country road, city street, mountain, creek.
          These are stories inspired by the beauty, the danger, the cruelty, emptiness, loneliness and perfection of the Australian landscape.

          Canadian Horror writer Gemma Files gave it this intro:

          Every Warren story is a trip with no map… If you are bent on opening this book, therefore, remember: Keep your eyes open, accept all of what it has to offer without qualm, and beware the only thing I can promise you is that you will be taken where you may not want to go.

          For Kaaron Warren, while many things, is very much not your Mum; she owes you nothing except the words on the page, this open door into four very different someplaces else through which she will escort you, then take her leave, without a single glance back. And it will be entirely contingent on you to get yourself back out.

          The book will be launched  at Continuum in early June, which segues nicely into my panhandling on the NAFF race:

          I have been nominated to run in this years fan fund for the National Science Fiction Convention to be held in Melbourne.

          If you appreciate the work that I do in Australian Speculative Fiction Fandom and you have a spare $5, you can vote for me here and help send me to the National Conference.


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          Apr 8, 2012

          Goodreads giveaway for Ishtar

          ishtarI am overjoyed to have found out that I am the winner of a hardcopy of Ishtar after participating in a competition on Deborah Biancotti’s blog. 

          I had actually gone out and purchased the ebook version from Smashwords owing, I contend, to subliminal messaging in Deb Biancotti’s post.

          Ishtar is edited by Aussie editor Amanda Pillar, and contains three novellas written by Australian women writers. 

          Here’s the description lifted from Smashwords:

          This novella collection is powerful, sexy and very, very deadly.


          'The Five Loves of Ishtar': Kaaron Warren


          Follow the path that the goddess Ishtar takes through the eyes of her most devoted worshippers, her washerwomen. Sharokin, Atur, Ninlil, Shamiran, Ninevah and Ashurina share in their goddess' loves, losses and triumphs, as kingdoms rise and fall in the Land of Rivers.

          'And the Dead Shall Outnumber the Living': Deborah Biancotti


          In modern-day Sydney, male prostitutes are dying. Their bones have turned to paste and their bodies are jelly. As Detective Adrienne Garner investigates the deaths, she finds rumours of strange cults and old gods whose powers threaten her city and, ultimately, her world.


          'The Sleeping and the Dead': Cat Sparks


          Dr. Anna remembers little of her life before the war, merely traces of the man she used to love. When three desperate travellers rekindle slumbering memories, she begins a search that takes her to Hell and beyond. A search for love and, ultimately, enlightenment.

          The collection has been nominated for an Aurealis Award. If you’re keen on reading good speculative fiction, or you are at a loss for works to read for the AWW2012 challenge you can:

          Enter in the Goodreads giveaway here or if you simply can’t wait, shoot over to Smashwords and pick it up. Ishtar is only $5.95


          “I sing for my supper, cause it makes me feel so good”

          I have been nominated to run in this years fan fund for the National Science Fiction Convention to be held in Melbourne.

          If you appreciate the work that I do in Australian Speculative Fiction Fandom and you have a spare $5, you can vote for me here and help send me to the National Conference.

          Monies raised go towards this and subsequent years funding.


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