-
80 votes
-
BBC list eighteen of the best new books for 2023
17 votes -
Recommendations and request for web serials
From what I have seen discussions here seem mostly about published books but I had figured I will try posting here and see if anyone is interested. They have both positives and negatives compared...
From what I have seen discussions here seem mostly about published books but I had figured I will try posting here and see if anyone is interested. They have both positives and negatives compared to published/or even just completed fiction but mostly I am interested in them for the higher variance which also means that it is harder to find something good.
Just listing some I liked over the years, both more and less known:
-
The Gods are bastards by DD Webb (on hiatus, extremely long) - set in a world in a magical industrial revolution where adventuring as career is all but over it follows a class of students in the University. Contains several other viewpoint characters and ever expanding cast.
-
Fall of Doc Future trilogy(and extras) by WD Rieder (on hiatus, very long) - a story about superhumans where the abilities and their effects are treated seriously. Contains some social commentary and several polyamorous relationships in later parts.
-
Time to Orbit: Unknown by Derin Edala (ongoing, long) - a psychological mystery/horror set on a colony ship. A colonist wakes five years early to find that the crew is missing and things are wrong. The mysteries so far constantly escalate but in way that mostly makes sense. The culture of this future is detailed and interesting.
-
Mother of Learning by nobody103 (complete, extremely long) - a time loop progression fantasy following Zorian - a student mage from a minor merchant family.
-
This Used to be About Dungeons by Alexander Wales (complete except epilogues, very/extremely long) - a slice of slice comfy story(at the beginning it slightly escalates later) containing extremely light litrpg elements. Focuses on the group dynamics of a party going to dungeons(sometimes).
What are some good ones that you would recommend?
19 votes -
-
Twine is an open-source tool for telling interactive, nonlinear stories
36 votes -
My mother-in-law wrote a book, and it's pretty good IMO
8 votes -
How can I be a more spontaneous fiction writer?
When talking with my therapist, the subject of writing is a constant. My obsessive approach to writing is a source of frustration. I write well in my first language, and aspire to create short...
When talking with my therapist, the subject of writing is a constant. My obsessive approach to writing is a source of frustration.
I write well in my first language, and aspire to create short fiction . But I'm an over planner and way too critical of my own writing.
Anything longer than a single page is impossible for me because I'll obsess with editing and some misguided sense of "perfection", cutting paragraph after paragraph until I'm left with a decent micro story that you can read in two and a half minutes. Most of the time I don't even get this far.
So my question is, how can I force myself to be less self critical and obsessive, let things flow, and write longer stories? Are there any advices, books, courses, practices and exercises I can use?
18 votes -
Amor Towles' A Gentleman in Moscow is chock-full of worldly musings. Have you read it and what is your take on it?
Here are a few of my favorite examples: "Long had he believed that a gentleman should turn to a mirror with a sense of distrust. For rather than being tools of self-discovery, mirrors tended to be...
Here are a few of my favorite examples:
-
"Long had he believed that a gentleman should turn to a mirror with a sense of distrust. For rather than being tools of self-discovery, mirrors tended to be tools of self-deceit." p. 36
-
"For if a room that exists under the governance, authority, and intent of others seems smaller than it is, then a room that exists in secret can, regardless of its dimensions, seem as vast as one cares to imagine." p. 64
-
"After all, what can a first impression tell us about someone we've just met for a minute in the lobby of a hotel? For that matter, what can a first impression tell us about anyone? Why, no more than a chord can tell us about Beethoven, or a brushstroke about Botticelli. By their very nature, human beings are so capricious, so complex, so delightfully contradictory, that they deserve not only our consideration, but our reconsideration - and our unwavering determination to withhold opinion until we have engaged with them in every possible setting at every possible hour." pg. 120-121
4 votes -
-
Review: Inform 7
7 votes -
MyHouse.WAD - Inside Doom's most terrifying mod
19 votes -
The Gostok (interactive fiction)
5 votes -
Turing test
3 votes -
Join the Counterforce: Thomas Pynchon’s postmodern epic Gravity’s Rainbow at fifty
6 votes -
To build a delightful library for kids, start with these ninety-nine books
7 votes -
Karin Smirnoff pens new Dragon Tattoo novel – picks up from David Lagercrantz in filling out the late Stieg Larsson's vision for a ten-book sequence
5 votes -
Katrín Jakobsdóttir, crime fiction fan and Iceland's Prime Minister, has published her first thriller novel with her close friend and bestselling author Ragnar Jónasson
4 votes -
Interview with the Vampire, Anne Rice, & 150 years of gay vampires
5 votes -
Inform 7 concepts and strategies
7 votes -
Standard patterns in choice-based games
11 votes -
A historian's perspective on the Battle of Helms Deep
13 votes -
When you only cast non-actors in your movies
3 votes -
JK Rowling's new book, about a transphobe who faces wrath online, raises eyebrows
19 votes -
The true history of the Knights Templar with Dan Jones
4 votes -
The Futures of Inform (Talk transcript and slides)
3 votes -
The Great Fiction of AI | The strange world of high-speed semi-automated genre fiction
9 votes -
Sanderson’s First Law for magic systems
17 votes -
She spent a decade writing fake Russian history. Wikipedia just noticed.
8 votes -
Reading to improve language skills? Focus on fiction rather than non-fiction
6 votes -
Idol words
8 votes -
Harry Potter (a literary analysis)
9 votes -
I gave psilocybin a try
Can you answer "yes" to that statement? Tell me about it.
18 votes -
Fifty years of text games
11 votes -
The melancholy decline of the semicolon
17 votes -
Marvel Unlimited - Free month
4 votes -
How to save the novel - self-censorship and problematic language in modern fiction
4 votes -
The poisons – real and fictional – used in Bond films
7 votes -
The 'Shoulder Check' problem, or when snippets of LGBT life feel out of place to others in fiction
9 votes -
A story about living in nature and the value of culture captures the spirit of Finland – Lizzie Enfield explores the remarkable legacy of 'Seitsemän veljestä'
9 votes -
Substack just made a major new hire as it goes after comic-book writers and expands its fiction efforts
4 votes -
Why is young adult fiction the defining literary genre of the last two decades? What does its popularity say about modern American life?
20 votes -
Did Twitter break young adult fiction?
10 votes -
Queer readings of The Lord of the Rings are not accidents
12 votes -
Who’s afraid of modern art: Vandalism, video games, and fascism
5 votes -
What are some great LGBT speculative fiction?
Speculative fiction contains elements that don't exist in reality. It includes genres such as science fiction, fantasy, and supernatural horror. A producer friend is looking for stories with a...
Speculative fiction contains elements that don't exist in reality. It includes genres such as science fiction, fantasy, and supernatural horror.
A producer friend is looking for stories with a focus on LGBT issues. As someone with a predilection for speculative fiction, it would be great to read/watch some speculative stories that deal with issues in that area. I am aware of some stories with LGBT characters, but gender and LGBT issues are generally not the main themes. I'd love to get suggestions for movies, TV shows, and books (especially short stories) that deal with those issues in a proper and inventive way.
As usual, Wikipedia has an extensive list on the subject, but I was hoping to get some more personal suggestions from the Tildes crowd.
Thanks!
7 votes -
The protagonist problem
13 votes -
It began as an AI-fueled dungeon game, it got much darker
14 votes -
The Paradox of Fiction
3 votes -
The best advice I've ever gotten for writing fiction
9 votes -
Ars’ plea: Someone make this into a series
8 votes -
The internet’s most beloved fanfiction site is undergoing a reckoning
15 votes -
The current New York Times Best Sellers list for combined print and e-book fiction, scaled according to demand for the e-book at a selection of US public libraries
6 votes