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Flying Island Press
FlagShip Science Fiction and Fantasy - March 2012
FlagShip Science Fiction and Fantasy - March 2012
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The March Issue is finally here. Included in this issue:
The Kody’s Shame, by Brand Gamblin. Return to the world of The Hidden Institute. The Kodys are a winning bear polo team… then the owner finds that someone has been doping his bears. Without his permission. When his own… direct… methods fail to flush out the guilty party, he turns to a young man with a nose for trouble and a talent for being in the wrong place at the right time – Dizzy. Can he find the culprit and keep his reputation and his skin intact?
Try and Try Again, by Wayne Faust. The Fold allowed scientists to play with human genetic code, upload the new embryos, and observe human development at a vastly accelerated pace. But when experiment after experiment fails to produce a good result, it was time once again to wipe the slate clean.
The Observation of Oral Porter, by Paul Siluch. Oral Porter was a mousy man with one great virtue. He was cheaper to hire than an AI. No one thought that manning a simple orbiting station would make him the savior of the human race, especially Oral. At least, not until he met two alien reality TV show producers…
And of course, there’s the Editor’s Column, and our own Gypsy Ninja Princess, Laura Nicole, reviews The Hunger Games.
The Kody’s Shame, by Brand Gamblin. Return to the world of The Hidden Institute. The Kodys are a winning bear polo team… then the owner finds that someone has been doping his bears. Without his permission. When his own… direct… methods fail to flush out the guilty party, he turns to a young man with a nose for trouble and a talent for being in the wrong place at the right time – Dizzy. Can he find the culprit and keep his reputation and his skin intact?
Try and Try Again, by Wayne Faust. The Fold allowed scientists to play with human genetic code, upload the new embryos, and observe human development at a vastly accelerated pace. But when experiment after experiment fails to produce a good result, it was time once again to wipe the slate clean.
The Observation of Oral Porter, by Paul Siluch. Oral Porter was a mousy man with one great virtue. He was cheaper to hire than an AI. No one thought that manning a simple orbiting station would make him the savior of the human race, especially Oral. At least, not until he met two alien reality TV show producers…
And of course, there’s the Editor’s Column, and our own Gypsy Ninja Princess, Laura Nicole, reviews The Hunger Games.