F&SF on Kindle

Kindle customers who subscribe can receive all of F&SF’s editorial content and one short story at no cost. This includes editor’s recommendations, “Curiosities” (odd books of enduring interest), film reviews, book reviews, cartoons and humor, and “Coming Attractions” (highlights of each issue).

The complete content of each issue is available for $12 a year — with everything in the digest edition plus several additional short stories and novelettes. Individual issues of the extended edition are available for $2.99. F&SF publishes six times a year.

Stephen King, in his capacity as a long-time fan of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, applauded the arrangement: “This is the best fiction magazine in America. Kindle readers are in luck.”

[Thanks to Michael Walsh for the link.]

F&SF at 60

Paul Di Filippo, Carol Emshwiller and Ron Goulart will help editor Gordon Van Gelder celebrate 60 years of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction during the New York Review of SF Reading on October 6.

It all goes down at the South Street Seaport Museum at 12 Fulton Street in New York from 6:30-9:00 p.m. Admission is by a $5 donation.

[Thanks to Jim Freund for the story.]

Seeds of Change, Then and Now

Rose Fox intereviews John Joseph Adams in her “Genreville” column for Publisher’s Weekly:

The assistant editor for The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction and a longtime book reviewer, he has recently turned his hand to editing anthologies. I interviewed him about Seeds of Change (Prime, August 2008).

Seeing a new anthology with the title Seeds of Change reminded me of Laser Books, the imprint created by Harlequin Books in 1975. The company hoped to repeat its success with Harlequin Romances in the sf genre, putting out three books a month, a Kelly Freas cover on every one. Laser Books’ initial marketing strategy included sending multiple cartons of the line’s first novel, Thomas F. Monteleone’s Seeds of Change, to sf conventions across North America to be given away. All they proved is that even free books can become a glut on the market. As Alan Chudnow recalls:

Unfortunately [Seeds of Change] was not very good and immediately attracted the mockery of a large number of convention attendees. I happened to attend the Equicon SF convention in Los Angeles that year. By Saturday night of the con, groups of fans were gathered around on the upper balconies of the hotel publicly mocking the text as it was read aloud. As each page was finished it was ceremoniously ripped out of the book and flung out over the balconies to the convention floor below.

The web shows the 1975 Equicon was held in San Diego, but I remember such a scene at the 1975 NASFiC in Los Angeles. Perhaps that’s what we’re both remembering.

The launch of Laser Books anticipated today’s marketing technique of offering free downloads of sf novels — with the critical difference that publishers now understand how much it helps to pick books people will like.