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In this engaging and accessible guide, Eugen Bacon explores writing
speculative fiction as a creative practice, drawing from her own
work, and the work of other writers and theorists, to interrogate
its various subgenres. Through analysis of writers such as Stephen
King, J.R.R. Tolkien and J. K. Rowling, this book scrutinises the
characteristics of speculative fiction, considers the potential of
writing cross genre and covers the challenges of targeting young
adults. It connects critical and cultural theories to the practice
of creative writing, examining how they might apply to the process
of writing speculative fiction. Both practical and critical in its
evaluative gaze, it also looks at e-publishing as a promising
publishing medium for speculative fiction. This is essential
reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students of creative
writing, looking to develop a critical awareness of, and practical
skills for, the writing of speculative fiction. It is also a
valuable resource for creators, commentators and consumers of
contemporary speculative fiction. Chapter 8, 'Horror and the
Paranormal' was shortlisted for the Australasian Horror Writers
Association (AHWA)'s 2019 Australian Shadows Awards.
In this lush interplanetary tale, Novic is an immortal Sayneth
priest who flouts the conventions of a matriarchal society by
choosing a name for his child. This act initiates chaos that splits
the boy in two, unleashing a Jekyll-and-Hyde child upon the
universe. Named T-Mo by his mother and Odysseus by his father, the
story spans the boy's lifetime ... from his early years with his
mother Silhouette on planet Grovea to his travels to Earth where he
meets and marries Salem, and together they bear a hybrid named
Myra. The story unfolds through the eyes of these three distinctive
women: Silhouette, Salem and Myra. As they confront their fears and
navigate the treacherous paths to love and accept T-Mo/Odysseus and
themselves, the darkness in Odysseus urges them to unbearable
choices that threaten their very existence.
Something is happening to Green. He is an ordinary guy,
time-jumping forward at a startling, uncontainable rate. He is
grappling to understand his present; his relationship is wholly
tattered; his ultimate destination is a colossal question mark.
Zada is a scientist in the future. She is mindful of Green’s
conundrum and seeks to unravel it by going backwards in time. Can
she stop him from jumping to infinity? Their point of intersection
is fleeting but memorable, each one’s travel impacting the
other’s past or future. And one of them doesn’t even know it
yet. Secondhand Daylight is a reverse story in alternate
timelines between two protagonists whose lives must one day
intersect. A titillating offering from World Fantasy Award-finalist
Eugen Bacon, an Otherwise Fellowships honouree for ‘doing
exciting work in gender and speculative fiction’. In
collaboration with three-time British Fantasy Society Award-winner
Andrew Hook.
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