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En noviembre del 2012 nació el blog "Cuentos para Algernon" con el objetivo de publicar traducciones on-line gratuitas de relatos escritos en inglés de ciencia ficción, fantasía y terror que, pese a su calidad e interés, continuaban inéditos en español. "Cuentos para Algernon: Año VII" es una recopilación gratuita, legal y descargable desde dicho blog en diversos formatos para e-book, que contiene los doce relatos publicados durante la séptima temporada (el año 2019). Entre ellos está el ganador del premio Hugo de 2019 y un finalista del premio Shirley Jackson. El contenido de la antología es el siguiente: . Los coleccionistas, de Adrian Tchaikovsky . A veces cazas al oso y otras…, de Tim Pratt . Consejos de seguridad para corredores humanos, de Marissa Lingen . Los relojes de Dalí, de Dave Hutchinson . Dígitos, de Robert Shearman . Cuento motivacional, de Eric James Stone . Monstruos caseros, de John Langan . La lepidopterista doméstica, de Natalia Theodoridou . Historias bíblicas para adultos, nº 31: La Alianza, de James Morrow . Siete minutos en el cielo, de Nadia Bulkin . Tu cara, de Rachel Swirsky . Las guías de la bruja: vías de escape. Compendio práctico de portales a mundos de fantasía, de Alix E. Harrow Enlace para la descarga
Authors


a former academic, adjunct, cashier, blueberry-harvester, and kentuckian, alix e. harrow is now a full-time writer living in virginia with her husband and their semi-feral kids. she is the hugo award-winning and nyt-bestselling author of THE TEN THOUSAND DOORS OF JANUARY (2019), THE ONCE AND FUTURE WITCHES (2020), a duology of fairytale novellas (A SPINDLE SPLINTERED and A MIRROR MENDED), and various short fiction. her next book, STARLING HOUSE will be out on halloween 2023! her writing is represented by kate mckean at howard morhaim literary agency. newsletter: https://writtenworld.substack.com/ email: alixeharrow at gmail.com insta: alix.e.harrow


UK writer who published four volumes of stories by the age of twenty-one – Thumbprints, which is mostly fantasy, Fools' Gold, Torn Air and The Paradise Equation, all as David Hutchinson – and then moved into journalism. The deftness and quiet humaneness of his work was better than precocious, though the deracinatedness of the worlds depicted in the later stories may have derived in part from the author's apparent isolation from normal publishing channels. After a decade of nonfiction, Hutchinson returned to the field as Dave Hutchinson, assembling later work in As the Crow Flies; tales like "The Pavement Artist" use sf devices to represent, far more fully than in his early work, a sense of the world as inherently and tragically not a platform for Transcendence. His first novel, The Villages, is Fantasy; The Push, an sf tale set in the Human Space sector of the home galaxy, describes the inception of Faster Than Light travel and some consequent complications when expanding humanity settles on a planet full of Alien life. Europe in Autumn (2014), an sf thriller involving espionage, takes place in a highly fragmented and still fragmenting Near-Future Europe, one of whose sovereign mini-nations is a transcontinental railway line; over the course of the central plot – which seems to reflect some aspects of Thomas Pynchon's The Crying of Lot 49 – the protagonist becomes involved in the Paranoia-inducing Les Coureurs des Bois, a mysterious postal service which also delivers humans across innumerable borders.
- See more at: http://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/hutc... Works * The Villages (Holicong, Pennsylvania: Cosmos Books, 2001) * Europe in Autumn (Oxford, Oxfordshire: Rebellion/Solaris, 2014) Collections and Stories * Thumbprints (London: Abelard, 1978) * Fools' Gold (London: Abelard, 1978) * Torn Air (London: Abelard, 1980) * The Paradise Equation (London: Abelard, 1981) * As the Crow Flies (Wigan, Lancashire: BeWrite Books, 2004) * The Push (Alconbury Weston, Cambridgeshire: NewCon Press, 2009)
