All Sci-Fi Friday Chat – Earth vs the Flying Saucers!
Washington gets attacked tonight by flying saucers with death rays!
Washington gets attacked tonight by flying saucers with death rays!
Do you enjoy reading science fiction romance? If so, Veronica Scott has some recent releases for you.
Darren Slade has come late to the Avatar party, and has mixed feelings about what he found there.
In this week’s viewing: Re: ZERO resolves its love triangle, Orange tackles that plus hardcore physics, and more!
We live in a golden age of science fiction and fantasy as highlighted by San Diego Comic Convention, but all some fanboys know how to do is whine about it.
Tanya Tynjala gives a rundown of article that appeared on the Amazing Stories Web site in June for Spanish readers.
In this week’s viewing: Orange and Re: ZERO spend a lot of time running away from things, and more!
Now that summer is winding down a bit, it’s time to start stocking up for winter reading – or – you’re TBR pile is just not tall enough!
A review of The Two Faces of Ganymede by Ecuadorian author Alicia Margoth Proaño Miranda
The comic Lost in Space: The Lost Adventures takes fandom back in time to one of those charming television shows we grew up with.
Club Report: Meet the SF Association of Shanghai Jiao Tong University
In this week’s viewing: Depression, suicide, the Despair Arc of Danganronpa 3, and lots more to bring you down! Plus, the lineup of the shows this column will be following for the rest of the season.
The Librarians and The Lost Lamp by Greg Cox is a fitting companion to the popular television series, filling that agonizing void until the show returns for its second season in November.
I told my psychiatrist everyone hates humorous SF. He said I was being ridiculous; everyone hasn’t read humorous SF…
In this week’s viewing: A possibly lucky thirteen premieres!
In a future galactic empire where Rome never fell, Wolf’s Empire: Gladiator by Claudia Christian and Morgan Grant Buchanan is a refreshing new saga where the past and future collide.
In this week’s viewing: Summer season starts! Sometimes it even starts at the beginning!
It used to be that if a genre movie didn’t make sense to you on some level, you might just turn to someone afterwards and say “Hold on. Is it just me or was that […]
In the tradition of the original 1996 film and the American holiday it was named after, Independence Day: Resurgence exhumes humanity’s same tenacity for facing insurmountable odds in true Emmerich/ Devlin fashion.
Canada Day, Steve’s 150th post for Amazing and – attack of the killers from space!
In this week’s viewing: Two finales and a cliffhanger, 100% Brexit-free!
20 papers were delivered at the first Fudan University conference on science fiction.
The age of the light novel adaptation has passed and the age of the video game adaptation is upon us. Plus a few other shows coming our way very soon…
The world’s gonna die! Steve looks at two British end-of-the-world movies from the 1960s, and finds them good. See what you think!
Steampunk can be a way of life, as evidenced by the blogs, Facebook pages and pinterest accounts I follow
In this week’s viewing: Concrete Revolutio explains what it’s really about, The Lost Village brings its monstrous story to a close, and more!
Mechanical Failure by Joe Zieja is a farcical adventure where the absurdity of reality becomes the template for the human condition and only our hero sees the silliness of it all.
Adolfo Caceres Romero discusses the importance of SF and fantasy in Bolivian literature.
Recent Comments