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overall 3 votes: rating onrating onrating onrating halfrating off
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Beautiful World by Kristina Tracer

When digital guerrillas revolt against corporate ownership of a virtual world, one person-turned-program and his closest friends are all that stand between freedom and deletion.

When Johnathan Dart, digital artist and world-builder, falls in love with a digital sapience living inside Irokai, the virtual world created by the Tadashiissei Corporation, his friends are skeptical of his intention to upload himself into their system.  Adam doubts that the soul can survive a destructive copy, and Julia doubts that Tadashiissei’s corporate policies are anything close to user-friendly.  . . .

A serialized novel, updating fortnightly.
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overall 3 votes: rating onrating onrating onrating onrating half
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Caught Somewhere in Time by David Schick

Time is always on my side.

The human race is unknowingly caught somewhere in time, and their very existence is at stake.  They will need a protector who always has time on their side.  This is a novel about how time travel helps save the future of humanity from a fate that no one suspects. . . .

A serialized novel, updating fortnightly.
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overall 8 votes: rating onrating onrating onrating onrating half
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Nomesque Fiction by Naomi Kramer

Because life wasn't odd enough

A collection of (mostly) serial short stories, in several genres.  Mostly light-hearted, primarily humorous, with a touch of the paranormal and fantastical. . . .

A collection of stories.
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overall 6 votes: rating onrating onrating onrating halfrating off
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God in the Machine by Peter Tzinski

"We are forever caught in between the silent dreams of the cold machines."

God in the Machine is an ongoing science fiction series, which begins with a freak accident that brings a pair of robots out of normal operation and into . . . consciousness.  Seemingly the only ones sentient, in a whole galaxy that’s full of nothing but robots, Loeb and Max have to find their way, and survive.  Because to the rest of the galaxy, . . .

An ongoing series, with new episodes fortnightly.
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overall 2 votes: rating onrating onrating onrating halfrating off
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Persephone: Twenty Past Midnight by EJ Spurrell

The Persephone virus swept throughout the known world, bringing civilization to its knees within days. Now, twenty years later, the survivors of Persephone have adapted to a new life in the remnants of the old civilization. The world is littered with small communities of traders, gangs, slavers and religious cults. One thing is certain. There is no law. There . . .

A serialized novel.
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overall 2 votes: rating onrating onrating onrating onrating half
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The Dark InSpectre by Jason Kahn

In a near-future society where “normals” fear and mistrust those with telepathic ability, Jack Garrett leads a special police unit of telepaths with the unique talent of contacting the psychic awareness of the dead.  Seven years after solving a notorious murder spree that culminated in the killing of his best friend’s daughter, Jack starts receiving visits from the murdered girl.  . . .

An ongoing series, with new episodes fortnightly.
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editor rating 1 vote: rating onrating onrating onrating halfrating off

Crossed Genres by Bart Leib and Kay Holt

Crossed Genres is a monthly magazine of science fiction and fantasy. Crossed Genres puts out an issue every month that is free to read online.  Each issue has (usually, with a bit of variance) 5 short stories, 1 article and cover art. The final issue of each year is double-sized. Every issue has a unique “theme” which all . . .

An online magazine of fiction, updated monthly.
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overall 9 votes: rating onrating onrating onrating onrating half
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The Vector by MCM

Eva thought she could outrun the plagues, but she was wrong. The bio-hackers that ripped the world raw are targeting her hometown of Prague, and this time there may be no escaping it. Now, hunted by police who think she’s a hacker herself, Eva must brave the rotting city streets to find her mother before it’s too late. But . . .

A complete novel.
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overall 11 votes: rating onrating onrating onrating onrating off
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The Metamorphosis of Prime Intellect by Roger Williams

A work of “singularity” fiction, in which reality itself is controlled and shaped by an intelligent agent for the benefit of humans who now live forever, can no longer harm one another (without consent), and in which no desire is left unfulfilled. In a world where everything is safe, where any whim can be instantly satisfied, what is there . . .

A complete novel.
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overall 8 votes: rating onrating onrating onrating onrating half
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A Town Called Disdain by Dan Leo

A sprawling fantastic tale of the ’60s, supposedly written by “legendary” B-movie director Larry Winchester. . . .

A complete novel.
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overall 6 votes: rating onrating onrating onrating onrating half
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Rate Me Red by Richie Chevat

a comic novel of the future

Gordy has a problem.  His girlfriend, Poppy Nicole, wants to meet him in REALITY (TM). That’s the premise of the comic sci-fi novel, Rate Me Red. It’s the year 2043 and Twitter, Facebook, You Tube, reality television and Ebay have all merged into the VidNet.  Everyone and anyone can have a VidNet show, but it’s the people who . . .

A complete novel.
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overall 3 votes: rating onrating onrating onrating halfrating off
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Best Before Death by Alex Rennick & Roy Laughlin

Ever thought about knowing your own 'best before' date?

Dillon thought his life was pretty standard, excepting the whole ‘seeing everyone’s death in their eyes’ thing (kind of morbid, imagine that).  Then Govcentral went and took an interest in him for it.  Four years later and he’s on the run, returned to the corner of space called home and facing something more terrifying than any government:  A Mercedes scorned. . . .

A serialized novel.
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Random Editorial Review

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MR. ABERNATHY

Nazis and Secretive Documents

Editor: Morgan O'Friel
October 9, 2008

As a head’s up: this site currently only has two chapters available. This review is subject to change as more of the work is released. Now, onto the review.

Both the website and the PDF files are very professional—they come off as concise, evocative, and moody, which is also the general [more . . .]

More editorial reviews . . .

Random Member Review

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STARWALKER

A Paradox of Structure

Member: Loribeth215
February 17, 2010

Starwalker is an engaging concept—-an AI of a computer telling the story of not only the ship, but her crew.

As a reader,I find Starwalker intriguing for two reasons: she’s a perfect omnipotent narrartor, seeing into the shadows and reading into the things that go on around (and literally inside) of [more . . .]

More reviews . . .