fictionable, to bookstodon
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Dive into the @fictionable , with readings and interviews from @mjohnharrison Joyce Carol Oates, Etgar Keret, Diana Evans, Evie Wyld and more…

Download for free at https://fictionable.world or via and elsewhere…

Image: Lee Campbell

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maxrjovbi, to scifi
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Lyanna

During the hourly wake of the city's mourners,
I escaped
to where none of us dared venture,
with the gynandromorphophile's long shadow
over my shoulder,
I escaped
to where no other nectar but yours—the XY-code's,
was harvested by the drones…




@scifi
@poetry
@writing

https://write.as/maxrjovbi/lyanna

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History December 19, 1900: French parliament gave to amnesty everyone who participated in the scandalous army treason trial known as the Dreyfus affair. The scandal began in 1894 when the state convicted Captain Alfred Dreyfus of treason. He was a 35-year-old French artillery officer of Jewish descent, falsely convicted for espionage and imprisoned in Devil's Island in French Guiana. Émile Zola's open letter “J'Accuse” helped build a movement of support for Dreyfus, putting pressure on the government to reopen the case. In 1899, Dreyfus was returned to France, retried and convicted again, but was pardoned and released. They eventually reinstated him as a major and he served during the World War I. Roman Polanski made a film about the affair called “J’Accuse,” after the Zola letter. However, much of Europe and the U.S. banned screenings of the film due to Polanski’s U.S. rape conviction.

@bookstadon

maxrjovbi, to scifi
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Freedom

We always found ourselves in Magdalena, a quaint, abandoned town nestled far in the western reaches, Lya and I, as we ventured into the Spree. I didn’t know why. And I had never really thought about it. Until now…




@scifi @poetry @writing

https://write.as/spree#freedom

18+ maxrjovbi, to scifi
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Milky-White Rose

In the neon-lit sprawl of tomorrow, I'll hoist
the milky-white rose
of synthetic essence—its fragrant code will weave
through the data stream, perfuming
the holonight's
Pro-Rata enthymeme
with sweet binary echoes of virtual "Qui Vive."

For Lyanna



@scifi
@poetry

Lyanna
Lyanna
Lyanna

maxrjovbi, to scifi
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Spree by Max R. J. Ovbi.

Step into the dystopian future of Spree, a genre-blending novella that throws all the storytelling rules out the window.

@FediFollows



@scifi
@poetry
@writing

https://write.as/maxrjovbi/spree

fictionable, to bookstodon
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Climb into the Fictionable archive, with exclusive from @mjohnharrison Joyce Carol Oates, Ali Smith, Sarah Hall, Diana Evans, Etgar Keret, Sabba Khan and more …

Get all these stories and a year of the most exciting new short and for £20 at https://fictionable.world

Image: Jean Vella

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maxrjovbi, to scifi
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For God's Sake

In the decipherment of man's enigma,
my moves defy the algorithms,
embracing his ethereal origin,
a being misplaced
in this three-dimensional prison.

Read more…




@scifi
@poetry
@writing

https://write.as/maxrjovbi/for-gods-sake

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History December 17, 1760: Deborah Sampson was born on this date in Massachusetts. Sampson disguised herself as a man in order to fight with the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War. She called herself Robert Shirtliff (as in don’t lift my shirt) and stood 5’9”, taller than the average man in those days. She fought in several skirmishes with British forces before being wounded and discovered and then honorably discharged from the army. She later petitioned the government to be repaid the wages that had been denied her because she was a woman. Her friend Paul Revere advocated for her full compensation. Finally, in 1816, Congress granted her request. There are several other women known to have secretly fought in this war. Sampson’s story has been portrayed in several plays and works of fiction, including “Portrait of Deborah: A Drama in Three Acts” (1959) by Charles Emery, “I'm Deborah Sampson: A Soldier of the Revolution” (1977) by Patricia Clapp and Revolutionary (2014), by Alex Myers, one of her descendants. Whoopi Goldberg played her in an episode of “Liberty Kids.”

#WorkingClass #LaborHistory #Revolution #deborahsampson #women #sexism #drag #books #fiction #play #author #writer @bookstadon

tinadonahuebooks, to bookstodon
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michaelshotter, to bookstodon
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maxrjovbi, to scifi
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thorncoyle, to bookstodon
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I’m part of another StoryBundle, this one featuring ten collections of wintertime short stories, perfect for reading in line at the market, or curled up with a cup of tea.

My Solstice collection, A Flame for Yuletide, is included. This ebook bundle is “pay what you can.” Enjoy!

https://storybundle.com/holiday

@bookstodon

maxrjovbi, to scifi
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mepurfield, to random
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5 NEW stories up for Patrons!

4 new and one Tenebrous Chronicles.

Check out the details here!

https://www.patreon.com/posts/new-stories-94772243

Not a part of my ?

So easy and affordable to join and be a part of my mission to bring to the world.

booktweeting, to bookstodon
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AN ASTONISHING, HARROWING, BEAUTIFUL novel mixes the everyday horrors of racism with the terrors of the supernatural in a tale of a brutal Florida reformatory haunted by the boys who died there. SOLID A

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-reformatory-tananarive-due/1142483982?ean=9781982188344

@bookstodon

#book #Books #bookreview #bookreviews #fiction #historicalfiction #novel #novels

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History December 15, 1973: The American Psychiatric Association voted to remove homosexuality from its official list of psychiatric disorders, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. In the 1950s and 1960s, some therapists used aversion therapy to "cure" male homosexuality. Like in Anthony Burgess’s, “A Clockwork Orange,” they would show patients pictures of naked men while giving them electric shocks or drugs to make them puke. In the 1973 vote, 5,854 members voted to remove homosexuality from the DSM, while 3,810 voted to retain it. In a compromise, they agreed to remove homosexuality from the DSM, but replaced it with "sexual orientation disturbance" for people "in conflict with" their sexual orientation. They did not completely remove homosexuality from the DSM until 1987.

#WorkingClass #LaborHistory #lgbtg #homophobia #transphobia #conversiontherapy #dsm #therapy #mentalhealth #torture #psychiatry #clockworkorange #books #authors #writers #fiction @bookstadon

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Writing History December 15, 1905: The Pushkin House was established in Saint Petersburg, Russia, to preserve the cultural heritage of Alexander Pushkin, (6/6/1799–2/10/1837). Pushkin was a Russian poet, playwright, and novelist of the Romantic era. He was influenced by Enlightenment writers and thinkers, like Diderot and Voltaire. He spoke out in support of social reform, and wrote poems, like “Ode to Liberty,” leading to the government exiling him from the capital. In 1920 the Pushkin House was renamed the Institute of New Russian Literature, with the main objective of preparing authoritative "academic" editions of works by Pushkin, Turgenev, Dostoevsky, and others.

@bookstadon

tinadonahuebooks, to bookstodon
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tinadonahuebooks, to bookstodon
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fictionable, to bookstodon
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Is that sleigh bells jingling?

Give the gift of a year's free access to the best and from all around the world, with from Joyce Carol Oates, Etgar Keret, Ali Smith, Lizzy Stewart and lots, lots more in 2024…

https://www.fictionable.world/gift_subscription.html

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fictionable, to bookstodon
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booktweeting, to bookstodon
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A SURREAL POST-APOCALYPTIC SETTING lends power to this dreamlike retelling of Macbeth. Hallucinatory, atmospheric prose captures the point of view of a man pushed to his limits with no options but to fight. B PLUS

https://www.amazon.com/Concrete-Crown-MacBeth-Retold-ebook/dp/B0CJ9SJ15M?ref_=ast_author_mpb

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michaelshotter, to bookstodon
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diazona, to bookstodon
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Very excited to have paper copies of my new favorite books, the Dragon Blood series! It's been a while since I bought any physical books but these were worth it. Even though I already had all the ebooks 😁

https://app.thestorygraph.com/series/126035

@bookstodon

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