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A robot "sin eater" is called to perform a vital service for the last human on earth. This story appears in the author's collection, entitled RAGGED MAPS.Content advisory: violence, death
Cześć! Witajcie w czterdziestym piątym odcinku Czytu Czytu, a zarazem w finale trzeciego sezonu! Jako że przez najbliższe dwa miesiące będziemy na podcastowych wakacjach, przygotowałyśmy dla Was odcinek nieco dłuższy niż zazwyczaj. Odpowiedziałyśmy też na wszystkie pytania z Waszych maili, więc czekamy na kolejną porcję wiadomości! A w listach wiele ciekawych zagadnień! Mówimy między innymi o tegorocznych funduszach na promowanie czytelnictwa, o korzeniach powieści young adult czy o czytaniu sezonowym. Oraz o kilku tematach pobocznych, takich jak pisanie prac magisterskich czy dzielenie ekranizacji książek na dwie części. Oczywiście mamy też dla Was książki z torebki. W tym tygodniu – nietypowa fantastyka z wampirami, komiks o rozbudowanej genealogii oraz biografia niesympatycznego biznesmena. Tradycyjnie czekamy na Wasze komentarze, a także na maile, które możecie słać pod adres czytuczytu@podsluchane.pl. Do usłyszenia! Spis treści Co mamy w torebce: 00:00:47 – „Czerwony śnieg”, Ian R. MacLeod (ebook) 00:09:18 – „Sambre”, Bernard Yslaire, Balac (papier), „Wojna Sambre’ów. Maksym i Konstancja”, Bernard Yslaire, Marc-Antoine Boidin (papier) 00:19:15 – „Goniąc czarne jednorożce”, Marek Zmysłowski (papier, ebook) Temat odcinka: 00:29:46 – Ludzie listy piszą #4 Czytu Czytu prowadzą: Magdalena Adamus (Megu) Marta Najman (Oceansoul) Katarzyna Czajka-Kominiarczuk (Zwierz Popkulturalny) Jesteśmy częścią sieci podcastów Podsluchane.pl: Odwiedź naszą stronę: www.czytuczytu.pl Napisz do nas na: czytuczytu@podsluchane.pl Sprawdź inne nasze podcasty: www.podsluchane.pl Polub fanpage naszej sieci: www.facebook.com/podsluchanepl Zobacz nasz sklep z gadżetami: www.podsluchane.pl/sklep
[…] Convertie aux vertus du libéralisme qui libère l’homme par le travail, la Salle 101 te parle rééducation et flexisécurité : Poumon vert, court roman déroutant, mais beau, de Ian R. MacLeod. Mes vrais enfants, roman pénible de Jo Walton. The handmaid’s tales, série américaine tirée du très bon La servante écarlate, de Margaret Atwood. [...]
[…] Convertie aux vertus du libéralisme qui libère l'homme par le travail, la Salle 101 te parle rééducation et flexisécurité : Poumon vert, court roman déroutant, mais beau, de Ian R. MacLeod. Mes vrais enfants, roman pénible de Jo Walton. The handmaid's tales, série américaine tirée du très bon La servante écarlate, de Margaret Atwood. […]
Our sixth podcast for March is “The Discovered Country” written by Ian R. MacLeod and read by Kate Baker. Originally published in Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine, September 2013. Subscribe to our podcast.
Our sixth podcast for March is “The Discovered Country” written by Ian R. MacLeod and read by Kate Baker. Originally published in Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, September 2013.
First Story: “The Master Miller’s Tale” Part 2 by Ian R. MacLeod THERE ARE ONLY RUINS left now on Burlish Hill, a rough circle of stones. The track which once curved up from the village of Stagsby in the valley below is little more than an indentation in the grass, and the sails of the mill which once turned there are forgotten. Time has moved on, and lives have moved with it. Only the wind remains. Once, the Westovers were millers. They belonged to their mill as much as it belonged to them, and Burlish Hill was so strongly associated with their trade that the words mill and hill grew blurred in the local dialect until the two became the same. Hill was mill and mill was hill, and one or other of the Westovers, either father or son, was in charge of those turning sails, and that was all the people of Stagsby, and all the workers in the surrounding farms and smallholdings, cared to know. Ian R MacLeod has been selling and writing professionally... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
First Story: “The Master Miller’s Tale” Part 1 by Ian R. McLeod THERE ARE ONLY RUINS left now on Burlish Hill, a rough circle of stones. The track which once curved up from the village of Stagsby in the valley below is little more than an indentation in the grass, and the sails of the mill which once turned there are forgotten. Time has moved on, and lives have moved with it. Only the wind remains. Once, the Westovers were millers. They belonged to their mill as much as it belonged to them, and Burlish Hill was so strongly associated with their trade that the words mill and hill grew blurred in the local dialect until the two became the same. Hill was mill and mill was hill, and one or other of the Westovers, either father or son, was in charge of those turning sails, and that was all the people of Stagsby, and all the workers in the surrounding farms and smallholdings, cared to know. Ian R MacLeod had been selling and writing professionally... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Our sixth piece of audio fiction for August is “Nevermore” written by Ian R. MacLeod and read by Kate Baker. First published in Dying For It: More Erotic Tales of Unearthly Love, edited by Gardner Dozois, 1997. Subscribe to our podcast.
Ian R. MacLeod reads the short story "Well-Loved" from his collection "Past Magic" (PS Publishing, 2006).
Besprochene Bücher: Charles Stross: Supernova / Ian R. MacLeod: Aether / Orson Scott Card: Enders Schatten / Philip K. Dick: Der galaktische Topfheiler