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Showing 3540 Columns
Showing 3540 Columns
November 6th, 2015
I should probably start with the giant poop story. Giant poops speak volumes. This could be a very short column that makes one very oversized, brown, awful, compelling point. Instead, I'll start with this: I've been a library worker for over 11 years, and a librarian for about 8 of those years. It's my chosen profession, and there are things about it I love.
Read Column →November 6th, 2015
Are any of you gamers? If so, you know November is going to be a particularly tough month for us. You see, I'm the sort of gamer that when I admit I'm a gamer, I feel a little shame about it. It has nothing to do with a belief that video games are a guilty pleasure. Rather, I just engage in video games to an extent that I realize I could be doing more productive things. Yet, in the space of a few short weeks, we're getting hit with a new Star Wars game, Halo 5, and my most feared nemesis, Fallout 4. It's going to eat me alive.
Read Column →November 5th, 2015
Charlie Huston has a talent of grabbing the reader and not letting go. This aptitude for immediacy is best demonstrated in the Joe Pitt Casebooks, five novels about the eponymous vampyre (Huston's spelling) hard case. Released between 2005 and 2009, these New York City-set throwbacks to 1970s crime fiction are told in first-person perspective present tense, a storytelling method Huston used with his first five published books. What's unique is Huston never cheats, having the reader experience the world as Pitt does.
Read Column →November 5th, 2015
If you have even a passing knowledge of cinema history, you know about the Hollywood Ten—a group of creatives who refused to testify before the House Committee on Un-American Activities (or HUAC, an organization lead by J. Parnell Thomas) against fellow members of the Communist Party. The ten were subsequently blacklisted and barred from working on motion pictures, as well as imprisoned for one year for contempt of court.
Read Column →November 4th, 2015
So you want to write flash fiction but don’t know where to start. Here are some tips and trick for writing excellent flash fiction. It’s not easy, somewhere between prose poetry and a short story, but it can certainly pack a wallop.
Read Column →November 2nd, 2015
Have you started yet? Has your word count crept from the tens to the hundreds? Is your initial hey-this-is-the-best-idea-ever enthusiasm already begun to curdle into this-is-crap-and-I-suck-at-writing despair?
Read Column →October 30th, 2015
It's Halloween night, you're all alone at home and it's too early to party or watch that horror flick you've got waiting for you. But you still want to be scared. Check out these spooktacular stories I've selected for you, available for free online, courtesy of some of the best horror short fiction magazines out there. Enjoy.
Read Column →October 30th, 2015
Flash fiction: A style of fictional literature marked by extreme brevity Welcome to LitReactor's Flash Fiction Smackdown, a monthly bout of writing prowess. How It Works We give you inspiration in the form of a picture, poem, video, or prompt. You write a flash fiction piece using the inspiration we gave you. Put your entry in the comments section. One winner will be picked and awarded a prize.
Read Column →October 29th, 2015
With the first full trailer finally available, the Internet has been abuzz about Marvel’s latest Netflix offering, Jessica Jones. Similar to their surprise hit Guardians of the Galaxy, the show centers around a character that is mostly unknown outside of the comics. It’s a pretty bold move, considering Jessica is even lesser-known than the Guardians once were, having rarely cameoed in other Marvel media. And even within the world of the comics, Jessica isn’t a big name in superheroism. So who is this Jessica Jones?
Read Column →October 29th, 2015
Guillermo del Toro’s Crimson Peak has been in theaters since mid-October, and its mild box office is unworthy of the lush and wildly unusual film. It’s likely that Legendary and Universal were unsure what to do with this movie, singular as it is. It’s released in October, it’s a ghost story and it’s directed by the man behind such fright fare as The Devil’s Backbone and Cronos, so it makes sense to market Crimson Peak as a horror movie.
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