A 501(c)(3) organization: It is the mission of Parsec “to promote awareness of the richness of speculative fiction as literature, art and music; further general education in the sciences and arts, support contributions–both scientific and artistic–to society and to espouse the enjoyment of speculative fiction as literature, art and music with others.”
A 501(c)(3) organization: It is the mission of Parsec “to promote awareness of the richness of speculative fiction as literature, art and music; further general education in the sciences and arts, support contributions–both scientific and artistic–to society and to espouse the enjoyment of speculative fiction as literature, art and music with others.”
Parsec Ink’s Triangulation anthology, Dark Hearts, is open for submissions!
Dark Hearts opened for submissions on Nov 1, and the Triangulation team has been hard at work reading the stories and poems in the queue.
So far, we’ve been receiving a good number of fantasy and horror pieces. We want science fiction, too. Send us leading ladies who are space captains, cyborgs, scientists, hackers, eco-warriors. Send us near futures and far-flung worlds. We’ll read anything that’s speculative, but right now sci-fi is a less competitive genre.
That said, don’t self-reject. If you have a great speculative story of any genre featuring a shady lady, we’d love to read it.
Parsec Ink is proud to announce its 18th collection of short stories. Triangulation: Habitats contains 35 stories and poems from around the world that explore the theme of sustainable habitats in tune with their surroundings. Our authors have created compelling narratives driven by characters required to make hard choices in settings that push the boundaries of imagination. A man learns where he draws the line when it comes to living sustainably. Generations discover the human cost of leapfrogging through the solar system. A woman seeks a ghostly experience at an Eco Lodge. Three people learn the difference between a home and a homestead on an asteroid. A woman lives in a treehouse designed by aliens as she nurtures both a prenatal human and a sapling house. A three-hundred-year-old house dreams of its former occupants. Includes the Theodore Sturgeon reprint, Prutzy’s Pot.
Please join us in our explorations!
With These Authors and Stories:
Chris Hewitt, Anywhere but Elsewear
Jameyanne Fuller, Moon by Moon We Go Together
Liam Hogan, Parallel Rooms
Katherine Quevedo, Discount Night at the Haunted Eco Lodge
Cayce Osborne, Planting Trees
Octavia Cade, Metamorphosis
Andy K. Tytler, Leaf Glacier
A’liya Spinner, Homemaker
Maura Lydon, Desert Seeds
Salinda Tyson, House of Stone
Brett Kozlowski, Reduce, Repulse, Revile
Jennifer R. Povey, Homestead
Raluca Balasa, To My Grandson, From a Time in Which I Might Have Loved You
Jamie Lackey, The Voice of the Mother Whale
Jennifer Hudak, A Gardener Teaches His Son to Enrich the Soil and Plan for the Future
Kurt Newton, Tiny House
Rhian Bowley, SustainaCrock™
Oliver Smith, The Hoyle-Wickramasinghe Rose
Lisa Timpf, This Future At Least Has Cows
John C. Mannone, In Plain Sight
Sandra Kasturi, In The Future We Will Live In Broken Houses
Robert Borski, The Fauna of Lilliput
Juleigh Howard-Hobson, I am Already Tired of Earth.2