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AntiSf Radio Show

antipod-show-50The AntipodeanSF Radio Show delivers audio from the pages of  this magazine.

The fortnightly program features five stories, usually narrated by the authors themselves, wrapped in selected electronic music.

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Michael Shermer


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Podcasts

Next Issue

Strange Brew
By Eleni Konstantine

Life & Death
By Julie Wornan

The Lottery
By Shaun A. Saunders

A Moving Memory
By Wes Parish

The Gloriously Cunning Plan
By Mark Webb

Winter
By Kevin J. Phyland

Frozen Moments
By Steve Duffy

Mega Star
By Gregory Mellor

What Have Future Generations Ever Done For Me
By Bart Meehan

All Possible Worlds
By Pavelle Wesser

 

Why Not Visit

bmu-iconDo you like your SF in audio?

Of course you do. Well, why not visit Beam Me Up Podcast and radio show, often featuring selected stories from AntipodeanSF, run by your host Paul Cole of WRFR.

 
2010 Second Republican Short Story Competition Announced PDF Print E-mail

 

Republican Challenge to Australian Speculative Fiction Writers

The 2010 Second National Republican Short Story Competition opens on 1 May 2010 and will close on 31 August 2010. The winner will be announced on 6 November 2010.

The Second National Republican Short Story Competition continues the momentum built from the successful 2009 First National Republican Short Story Competition. 2009 was a milestone as it was 10 years on 6 November 2009 since the republican referendum was lost. To commemorate this event and to remind Australians what they still didn't have the Australian Republican Movement ran the First National Republican Short Story Competition.
The theme for the Second National Republican Short Story Competition is 'Life and Death in an Australian Republic'. Short stories will speculate on Australian republican futures.

It seems strange there is no tradition of republican speculative fiction in Australia. In colonial times there were republican poets such as Charles Harpur writing in the 1840s and 1850s, and republican writers such as John Dunmore Lang and Daniel Deniehy in the 1850s and William Lane, Henry Lawson and John Norton in the 1880s and 1890s. But where have been the republican stories for the past century? There have certainly been many republican writers during this time but almost no examples where republican settings or arguments have been explored in Australian fiction. Republican arguments and explorations of the past and imaginations of the future are always written within the framework of constitutional debates.

Where do the people of Australia fit into this? Where are their myths and stories to tell and retell and remember about Australia's emerging republican identity?

This Second National Republican Short Story Competition challenges Australia's fiction writers to speculate on the possible futures of the Australian republic.

Speculative fiction writers deal with possibilities.

They speculate.

They make the future seem real.

However, we can't achieve anything unless we imagine it first. Before every great invention and before every great journey is the idea. Without ideas and imagination, we are all trapped in the past.

So, the ARM (Q) would like to point the way forward through Australian stories with a republican backdrop. They don't have to be political thrillers or constitutional whodunits as long as they are an exploration of our future, our republican future.

 

More information at http://republicanfiction.blogspot.com

 

My biography:

Dr Glenn A Davies is a teacher, historian, author, republican activist and life-long Science Fiction fan. In any spare time, which seems increasingly rare, he is an occasional SF writer and reviewer.

When he was seven Glenn made his own Time Machine from bits of string, pulleys and corrugated iron found around his house in country Queensland. It didn't work! When he was nine he founded a UFO society in his neighbourhood, with badges, ranks and full-blown conspiracies. As a teenager he read every science fiction book in his school library, watched Star Wars and Star Trekover and over again, and could be found every week night watching Dr Who. At university he immersed himself in the study of history and emerged at the end as a high school history teacher with a PhD. As Dr Davies he can now transcribe but not prescribe - a concept his students seem to struggle with. Now that he's all grown up, it constantly amazes him how many times he can refer to Star Wars and Stargate during his Ancient History classes.

Glenn's family have been members of the Scout Movement for over 50 years and have lived by the motto, "Be Prepared!" Perhaps this is why he is drawn to post-apocalyptic stories about human survival

In 2008 and 2009 Glenn was an Aurealis Awards Science Fiction Short Story Judge. In 2009 he established and convened theFirst National Republican Short Story Competition for which he blogged daily at http://republicanfiction.blogspot.com - the success of which led to the Second National Republican Short Story Competition in 2010.

Glenn now lives in northern Brisbane with his beautiful wife, two gorgeous kids, a haughty cat and a King Charles Cavalier who has recently agreed to renounce the monarchy and accept his republican family's ways.



 

New Books

minepossess-covMine to Possess

The Psy-Changeling Series

Nalini Singh

Nalini Singh's psy-changeling series returns with another stunning novel.

Clay Bennett is a powerful DarkRiver sentinel, but he grew up in the slums with his human mother, never knowing his changeling father. As a young boy without the bonds of Pack, he tried to stifle his animal nature. He failed...

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