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Showing 3538 Columns
Showing 3538 Columns
December 14th, 2016
Christmas is coming up, we all have someone special we have to buy presents for. Some of those special someones happen to be witches. Either literal ones or just the type that likes to light candles and dust off the Ouija board—we don't judge. We've delved into Halloween Non-Fiction reads before, and then there's folk horror fiction.
Read Column →December 13th, 2016
Hello all, welcome back to LitReactor's monthly tech and product roundup, where we take a look at all the gadgets fit to grace a writer's backpack (or messenger bag, or purse, or garbage sack, or whatever you carry). As this is the merry month of December, I thought it'd be a good idea to take a look at some of the most sought after devices of 2016 and see if a writer has any use for these items whatsoever (other than, of course, pure enjoyment, which is also important).
Read Column →December 12th, 2016
Another year has come and gone. You know what that means, don't you? Time for a bunch of strangers to tell you what was good! And why should you care what the LitReactor writers think are the best books of the year? Trick question! You shouldn't. But what they have to say might interest you nonetheless, because they are good-looking and knowledgeable and they read like the wind. So for those who care, we submit for your approval/derision some of LitReactor's favorite reads of 2016 (part 2).
Read Column →December 12th, 2016
A snow day is coming. And before you tell me that you live in a place where it doesn't snow, let's define what a snow day is.
Read Column →December 9th, 2016
I've recently read and reviewed a lot of horror, crime, and bizarro written by women. Yes, it was by choice, but the choice was not to read books by women; it was to read the best weird fiction I could find, and it just so happens that women are writing some spectacular books. While the current political landscape makes me want to tell everyone to read solely works by women, POC, and members of the LGBTQ+ community, I won't do that because great fiction is great fiction regardless of who's writing it.
Read Column →December 9th, 2016
It's so easy to give crappy books as gifts, especially oversized ones meant for the coffee table. If you found it at the chain bookstore in the discount section, it probably sucks. Don't spend your money that way! Coffee table books are a weird book type, aren't they? They're like their own genre, encompassing other genres that involve pictures. Who reads a novel in coffee table format? Nobody. But everyone accepts a fashion retrospective in oversize as legitimate.
Read Column →December 5th, 2016
Another year has come and gone. You know what that means, don't you? Time for a bunch of strangers to tell you what was good! And why should you care what the LitReactor writers think are the best books of the year? Trick question! You shouldn't. But what they have to say might interest you nonetheless, because they are good-looking and knowledgeable and they read like the wind. So for those who care, we submit for your approval/derision some of LitReactor's favorite reads of 2016 (part 1).
Read Column →December 2nd, 2016
'Tis the season! To buy some stuff for the writer in your life! I'll be the first to admit, writers can be tough to shop for. Especially if you don't want to indulge some bad habits (booze), overindulge medium-bad habits (coffee), or do that copout thing where you give something like a certificate for 30 minutes of interruption-free time.
Read Column →December 2nd, 2016
It’s fair to say Westworld is winning television right now. HBO’s latest gem and 2016’s best argument for reboot culture is being watched, discussed and dissected with far more fervor than expected for a show based on a 1973 film that is mostly remembered for Yul Brenner perfecting the iconic killer robot walk.
Read Column →December 1st, 2016
Editors and publishers are getting weary of zombies, werewolves and vampires haunting their slush piles. Despite their pleas for change, new writers keep resurrecting the same old monsters for their latest horror submissions. There are a million strange and wonderful creatures out there that are dying to claw their way into your next manuscript. Here are five nasties you’ve probably never heard of that will inspire you to terrorize us with something new.
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