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Nicholas Hogg (born 26 June 1974) [1] [2] is an English novelist, short story writer and poet from Leicester, His first novel, Show Me the Sky, was published in 2008 and was followed by The Hummingbird and the Bear in 2011 and Tokyo in 2015. Hogg also writes poetry and short stories that have been published in various anthologies and journals.
Hummingbird, a 2001 single by Merzbow "Hummingbird" (1955 song), a 1955 pop song "Hummingbird" (Metro Boomin and James Blake song), 2023 "Hummingbird" (Seals and Crofts song), 1972 "Hummingbird", a song by Jimmy Page from the 1988 album Outrider, written and composed by Leon Russell "Hummingbird" (Restless Heart song), covered by Ricky Skaggs
The twenty stories included first appeared in issues 1-23 of Sirenia Digest, Kiernan's monthly digest of weird and dark fiction. It was published by Subterranean Press in July, 2010. The cover features an illustration by Richard A. Kirk, who has provided artwork for several of Kiernan's other collections. Jeff VanderMeer wrote the introduction.
Pages in category "Short story collections by Caitlín R. Kiernan" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
A number of the stories have a decidedly H. P. Lovecraftian flavor and the influence of Charles Fort, as does much of Kiernan's fiction published since Tales of Pain and Wonder. The stories are also united by a theme of cultural decay and loss of meaning in 20th-century society, as expressed by the collection's epilogue, Kiernan's only ...
Owen Johnson. Owen McMahon Johnson (August 27, 1878 – January 27, 1952) was an American writer best remembered for his stories and novels cataloguing the educational and personal growth of the fictional character Dink Stover.
The author provided afterwords for each story, discussing their inspiration. According to an interview conducted by Jessa Crispin, the title is a reference to the suicide of Kiernan's close friend, Elizabeth Tillman Aldridge, in 1995. [2] Kiernan's Alabaster, written in 2006, is dedicated to Aldridge as well. [3]
As Kiernan explains in the collection's introduction, most of these stories were originally written for "'shared world' and 'theme' anthologies," books wherein the authors have been asked to write stories set in the worlds of other authors or stories pertaining to some particular subject, respectively. The collection is notable in that includes ...