Posts Tagged ‘Hilary Mantel’
Ether Books: Sci-fi & Fantasy stories for iphones
They’re looking for Sci-fi and fantasy stories of 3,000 words or less, for their ‘Quick Reads’ category. The stories will be available on the FREE Ether Books app. More info on the Ether Blog….
Digital publishing: Short Stories
Mainstream publishing suddenly seems to have fallen in love with the idea of issuing short stories in digital formats. Orbit Short Fiction, the science fiction and fantasy imprint of the Hatchette Book Group which launched in the US in April, has announced that it will be publishing short stories in the UK from the start of 2012. And last week, Dan Franklin announced that Random House is launching a company-wide short story brand called Story Cuts, which will publish stories by the likes of Ruth Rendell and Julian Barnes.
The Bookseller reports Franklin as saying: “This is the iTunes model, really. It hasn’t ever been applied to books yet . . . ‘ Not so!! In the UK, Etherbooks and Shortfire Press are two digital-only publishers that have been specialising in short fiction for quite some time.
Etherbooks have a free app available from the AppStore, and via that you can download short content by various authors – including Paul MacCartney, Hilary Mantel and me – at various prices (mostly 69p). Shortfire stories can be read in PDF form or on Kindles, e-readers and mobiles and cost 99p. Both companies have been active for some time and can be congratulated on being ahead of the pack.
£30K Sunday Times EFG Private Bank Short Story Long-list
Hilary Mantel, Michael Faber, Tibor Fischer and Susan Hill are among the well-known names on the longlist for the Sunday Times EFG Private Bank Short Story Award 2011. But the list also includes several newcomers, including former bus conductor Fabian Ackler and actor and puppeteer Erin Soros. The prize is open to authors of previously unpublished work or stories first published after 1st January 2010. The shortlist will be announced on 13th March and the winner revealed at the Sunday Times Oxford Literary Festival on 8th April. Each shortlisted author will receive £500 and the overall winner receives £30,000.
Judge A S Byatt said: “The stories we read this year were both varied and well crafted. We had considerable difficulty in narrowing the list to 20 . . . We have the fantastic and the precisely real, the shocking and the witty, the distressing and the invigorating. We have stories by famous writers and stories by the unknown. Some are succinct and some are elegiac. All were debated with passion.” More information about the prize can be found on the excellent STORY website.