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Jim Baen's Universe magazine launches
01/06/2006 Source: Jessica Martin 

Jim Baen's Universe has launched. Help save SciFi short stories, editor Eric Flint tells SFcrowsnest.

The first issue of the new electronic science fiction and fantasy magazine, Jim Baen's Universe, is now available for sale, as of June 1, 2006. A one-year subscription-six issues, published bimonthly - can be purchased for $30.

Universe is available to read online in HTML, and for download in HTML, Microsoft Reader (.lit), Rich Text format (.rtf) Mobi-pocket reader (.prc), Palm Doc (.pdb), Rocket Ebook (.rb) and Postscript Portable Document Format (.pdf).

All of these formats are completely unencrypted, without Digital Rights Management or copy protection schemes. They can be downloaded into a home computer, laptop, palm, blackberry, pocket pc, ebook reader, or almost any other electronic device.

Subscribers can also simply read the magazine without downloading it, on any internet-enabled mobile device. Or, if hardcopy is preferred, the PDF version of the magazine is specifically designed for home printing.

Jim Baen's Universe will soon offer a CD version for individual issue purchase.

Here is the Table of Contents for the first issue:

Science Fiction Stories

* Chilling by Alan Dean Foster
* Bow Shock by Gregory Benford
* Pimpf by Charlie Stross
* What Would Sam Spade Do? by Jo Walton
* Brieanna's Constant by Eric Witchey
* Bob's Yeti Problem by Lawrence Person
* Slanted Jack by Mark Van Name
* Candy-Blossom by Dave Freer
* The Darkness by David Drake

Fantasy Stories

* The Cold Blacksmith by Elizabeth Bear
* Poga by John Barnes
* Build-A-Bear by Gene Wolfe
* The Opposite of Pomegranates by Marissa Lingen
* 'Ware the Sleeper by Julie Czerneda
* The Thief of Stones by Sarah Zettel

Classic

* Light of Other Days by Bob Shaw
* The Facts Concerning The Recent Carnival Of Crime In Connecticut by Mark Twain

Serials - parts and parts

* The Ancient Ones Part 1 by David Brin
* Travails with Momma by John Ringo
* Fish Story, Episode 1 by Andrew Dennis, Eric Flint and Dave Freer

Introducing: Stories by new authors

* Fancy Farmer by Pamela Uphoff
* The Puzzle of the Peregrinating Coach by George Phillies
* Astromonkeys! by Tony Frazier
* Giving it 14 Percent by Ani Fox
* Local Boy Makes Good by Ray Tabler

NonFiction articles

* Gods and Monsters in Hollywood by Gregory Benford
* Back to the Moon by Travis Taylor

Columns

* The Editor's Page by Eric Flint
* Salvos Against Big Brother: Why We Oppose DRM by Eric Flint
* Publisher's Podium: Why Die? by Jim Baen
* Singularity Watch: Upload Your Life Now by Mark Van Name
* The Gutenberg Column by Michael Hart

Universe is paying better rates to authors for short stories than any F&SF magazine has in decades. That will give well-known authors-from all publishers, not just Baen Books-a financial incentive to write stories aimed at a popular audience and re-establish the connection that used to exist between the magazines and the novel market.

"In decades past," said editor Eric Flint, himself an author, "it was the size and health of the magazines that allowed new writers a place to be published, allowed midlist writers a place to hone their craft, and allowed very popular and well-established writers to move easily from short fiction to novels and back again as they developed their fascinating and imaginative settings. The range of magazine markets also meant that an exceptional story could still be published even if it was beyond the then-boundaries of acceptable SF."

Publisher Jim Baen agreed. "Today, that's almost completely vanished. The economics of modern paper publishing and distribution have hammered the magazines badly, and the decline of short form SF has hurt the field as a whole. When once science fiction and fantasy was a cheap refuge from reality for bright teenagers, now the ticket to entry is a full-length novel-often enough, at hardcover prices. Instead of getting a peek at the work of half a dozen to a dozen authors, new readers see one-and if that one doesn't suit their taste, well, there's always videogames or TV. The genre is aging, and if something isn't done about it, SF and fantasy could vanish with the Baby Boomers."

"The great editor, John W. Campbell, used to say that the more good SF magazines there were, the healthier the field was," says assistant editor Paula Goodlett. "We agree with him-but the revolution starts here, with your chance to join a community dedicated to rescuing short form fantasy and SF," Goodlett continues.

More over at www.baens-universe.com

click here to buy Stephen Hunt's The Court of the Air

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