Monday, July 11, 2011

My thirty-fifth Analog Magazine Story (and SF++).

In about ten days, 'The Lycanthropic Principle' my thirty-fifth Analog Magazine story will appear.

And a month after that, when the story is no longer under exclusive contract to Analog, I will e-publish (via Kindle & Nook) my very geeky anthology, SF++. (The lead story is 'The Lycanthropic Principle'.)



Table of Contents
Preface
01: The Lycanthropic Principle
02: The Architects' Playground
03: DECFSZ
04: Teddy Bear Toys
05: A Boy and his Bicycle
06: The Fruitcake Genome
07: Synthetic Sentience
08: We are the Cat
09: The Emancipation of the Knowledge Robots
0A: The Dyslexicon
0B: Transitivity
0C: The Skeekit-Woogle Test
0D: Roblocks
0E: Guess Who
0F: The Challenge of the Anthropic Universe
10: The Exoanthropic Principle
Book-jacket: Back Cover Notes
Other E-books



Forgive me for re-posting the following, but (geek that I am) I'm very enthusiastic about this anthology.

SF++  Science Fiction Stories for Linux Geeks.

This book will be free.





Why this book is free
SF++ has Linux in its title, and the Linux operating system doesn't cost anything. I thought then, to keep with the Linux philosophy, I'd make this book also not cost anything. And anyway, most of the stories herein have already paid for themselves—seven of them have appeared in Analog Magazine (the one SF magazine for Geeks).
However, if after you read the anthology you find you've enjoyed most of the stories, you might consider (hint, hint) e-hoofing it to Amazon or B&N (with your rooted Nook) and buying one of my other anthologies or novels.
Please visit my website, www.frithrik.com for information about my E-publications.



Preface
If you think the penguin on the cover represents the Penguin Publishing Group, then perhaps this anthology is not the book for you. On the other hand, if you fondly recognize Tux, the Linux penguin, then yes, you are among friends.
Annoyingly often in the science fiction movies of my childhood, one had the Evil Scientist and BSD (not what you might think) the Beautiful Scientist's Daughter. In the public mind, this arguably defined scientists as evil (but having pretty daughters) — whereas we paleogeeks more likely redefined the word 'evil' (evil = wicked, good, spiffy, way out, etc.).
Then, a generation later, geeks and nerds were lumped together and, with their stereotyped pocket protectors and thick, black-rimmed taped glasses, were thought of as smelly hapless misfits.
Not any more. Now, though the wuggies (see story 01) might not realize it, at long last, geeks rule!
I wanted to assemble an anthology for geeks—smart, independent, science and computer savvy geeks with a sense of humor. And, for me, that pointed to Linux. Linux types are smart—they have to be to use Linux well. They're independent enough not to use that other operating system. And finally, there's a tradition of humor and word play in the Linux community: PINE Is Not Elm, if you knew Suse, and all that.
And so, SF++ (Note: the anthology is not distro specific—except for one case where Ubuntu is assumed). ++ does not indicate a new object oriented language like c++. The first + indicates that in addition to stories, there's a science fact article (Challenge of the Anthropic Universe). The second plus indicates an experiment—a story (Roblocks) that can't be done in dead-treeware. It requires an html capable reader. And indeed, this collection is intended for Kindles, Nooks, or for any Grub (GRand Unified Book Loader).
Most of the 10 works in this ninety three thousand word collection have appeared in pro SF magazines. Many also appear in my earlier anthologies. (If words were kilo-miles, this anthology would stretch from the Earth to the Sun.)
We are Linux!
                        Resistance is...measured in ohms.


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