Possibilities
- Authors
- McCalla, Alicia
- Publisher
- ffpincolor
- Tags
- state of black science fiction , liberation , cultural fiction , poetry , popular culture fiction , sword and soul , fiction human alien encounters , africanamerican fantasy fiction speculative fiction action adventure , paranormal , fiction fantasy short stories , atlanta georgia , slavery , racial acceptance , urban science fiction , fiction action teen and young adult , africana literature , black speculative fiction , steamfunk , fiction fantasy urban life , fantasy , pan africanism , africana studies , flash fiction , africanamerican short stories , racial identity , fiction afrofuturism , black men , racial equality , racial divide , africana , steampunk , racial discrimination , pictures , black women , theme fiction , black science fiction , afrofuturism , short stories
- Date
- 2012-11-06T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 1.70 MB
- Lang
- en
State of Black SF authors have created a flash fiction anthology that opens imagination to the idea of what Black speculative fiction can become… What’s the flash fiction prompt? A mystical bracelet. Specially created Black SF images along with the 500-word super short stories are morsels of raw potential. Join artist Winston Blakely and authors L.M. Davis, Milton Davis, Margaret Fieland, Edward Austin Hall, Valjeanne Jeffers, Alan Jones, Alicia McCalla, Balogun Ojetade, Rasheedah Phillips, Wendy Raven McNair, and Nicole Sconiers as they endeavor to explore the possibilities of Black SF in the broad ranges of Science Fiction from Paranormal to Steampunk. Readers will see the immense possibilities of Black SF.
Anthology Content
Introduction by L.M. Davis
“Opening” by Edward Austin Hall
“The Mathematical Genius” by Alicia McCalla
“Color Blind” by Alan Jones
“Possibilities” by L.M. Davis
“Amazon in Atlanta” by Milton Davis
“The Eternals” by Wendy Raven McNair
“Soulless Cargo” by Balogun Ojetade
“Ouroboros Rising” by Thaddeus Howze
“The Family Circle” by Rasheedah Phillips
“Set Him Free” by Valjeanne Jeffers
“Neck Less” by Margaret Fieland
“The Scarlet Bracelet” by Nicole Sconiers
“Closing” by Edward Austin Hall
Remarks from the Editor by Alicia McCalla