Posts Tagged ‘Science Fiction’

DailyLit’s Sci Fi Channel

DailyLit’s short installments are designed to arrive in your inbox and give you a chance to escape from your day. The same spirit applies to our new Sci Fi Channel, which will help you escape to the weird worlds and futures of science fiction. We’re kicking things off with shorts stories from Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine and recommendations from sci fi superstar (and DailyLit favorite) Cory Doctorow.

Featured Book Friday: The Turn of the Screw

The Turn of the Screw
Henry James
Published: 1898

The creepy kid motif has been popular in movies for decades–think Damien (aka the Antichrist) in The Omen and the child characters in The Shining, The Sixth Sense, and The Ring. The Turn of the Screw is the granddaddy of them all.

The book opens with a group of travelers gathered in an inn, telling stories to pass the time. One character begins to read from a manuscript of a governess he claims to have known, but who is now dead. It is her story that makes up the rest of this short novella.

The governess takes charge of two young orphaned children whose uncle remains in London and, strangely, demands that the governess never contact him regarding the children. Flora is already at the country house and Miles, her brother, joins them after being expelled from his boarding school under mysterious circumstances. As the days go by the governess begins to see strange things–or apparitions?–at the country house, and the children seem to be wrapped up with these occurrences in unsettling ways. From that point to the end of the novella the governess’s world–or is it her mind?–unravel, leading to a final scene you won’t soon forget.

The first time I read this novella I did so in one sitting. It is deliciously eerie–the country house atmosphere is ominous, the children enigmatic, and the story from a dead woman’s hand. Read it here.

(If you’d like to recommend for a Featured Book Friday, email us at support[at]dailylit[dot]com.)

DailyLit News: August 2009

Note from the CEO
We’re thrilled to announce that DailyLit was selected to be the #1 Book Website by The Sunday Times (thanks, Sunday Times!) And thanks to all of you who have contributed ideas and enthusiasm which help spur us on to make DailyLit better and better. In fact, in our effort to continually improve, we have a survey we hope you’ll fill out.

Thanks again for all your support.

Sincerely,
Susan Danziger
Founder and CEO, DailyLit
susan@dailylit.com

NPR’s List of “Best Beach Reads Ever”
Our usual Big Read is on vacation this month (it’s August, after all!). Instead, we thought we’d highlight books on DailyLit that made NPR’s list of “Best Beach Reads Ever” (as determined by its audience). Here they are—all available for FREE on DailyLit:
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen;
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain;
Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy;
The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas;
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott;
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll;
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte;
Dracula by Bram Stoker;
and Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson. FREE for the taking.

Get Organized, Get Away, Get Thrills: New Books on DailyLit
—Get Organized: Staying organized doesn’t come easily to most kids—or to most parents for that matter. I’m definitely signing up for this series on Organizing the Disorganized Child: Tips and Tricks. It’s being made available for FREE on DailyLit thanks to HarperStudio, which is coming out with Organizing the Disorganized Child this fall.

—Get Away: August may be a popular vacation month, but if you can’t get away, escape with our Travel Books. Check out the 100 Places Every Woman Should Go or head out on safari with Whatever You Do, Don’t Run: True Tales of a Botswana Safari Guide.

—Get Thrills: If you’d rather read for thrills, we’re offering more short stories from best-selling author Jeffery Deaver in More Twisted and a pulp sci-fi classic, Star Ways, by award-winning author Poul Anderson.
Reader Challenge: Summer in 6 Words
With summer starting to wind down (ugh, can’t believe I said that!), this month’s reader challenge highlights a favorite back-to-school assignment. Tell us what you did on your summer vacation in—you guessed it—six words, and share your odes to summertime in our Reader Challenge Forum.
Tips and Tricks on DailyLit

Here are some useful tips you may not know that can help make DailyLit even easier to use:

—Customize: You can completely customize the delivery date, time, format (HTML or plain-text), and length (normal, 2X, or 4X) of your installments. Click on “Advanced” while you’re signing up for a book or click on the “Manage Your Book Settings” link at the end of any installment—then click on “More” next to the name of the book you want to edit.

—Connect: You can link your DailyLit profile to Twitter to let your followers know what you’ve been reading, become a fan of DailyLit on Facebook, and log in to DailyLit using Twitter, Facebook, Google, Yahoo, Windows Live, MySpace, AOL, and OpenID. Oh, and you can follow @DailyLit on Twitter, too!

—Keep Track: You can create Booklists on DailyLit to keep track of books you like or books you want to read. And, when you finish your current book, the next book on your To-Read list will automatically start coming to you.

—Show Off: Show your friends what you’re reading by putting the DailyLit book roll onto your blog. Login to DailyLit and you’ll see a link to “Add a book roll to your blog” under the “Your Widgets” heading.

—Keep Up: If sometimes your scheduled installments don’t appear, don’t worry. Check your spam folder to see if they ended up there. If not, you can easily resend installments to yourself by following the directions here.

Cory Doctorow’s “Little Brother” On Stage

The play’s the thing for one of our (and your) favorite DailyLit authors, Cory Doctorow.  His sci-fi novel Little Brother (which is free on DailyLit!) has been adapted for the stage and is currently being performed by the Griffin Theatre Company at the Athenaeum Theatre in Chicago. Boing Boing recently featured a few clips from the play, so everyone can checkit out. If you’re lucky enough to live in Chicago, you can see the play live–it runs through July 19. (And Cory himself will be stopping by on July 9!)