Maria Lectrix Podcast: The Moon Pool by A. Merritt

SFFaudio Online Audio

Maureen O’Brien, of the Maria Lectrix podcast, may be the hardest working narrator in podcasting, she has started recording yet another novel, The Moon Pool by Abraham Merritt. Maureen sez of it:

“Fantasy and horror in the South Seas! This 1919 classic influenced many writers and filmmakers, including the creators of the TV show Lost and the roleplaying game Dungeons & Dragons. Abraham Merritt was a journalist, editor, and pulp writer. He died in 1943. His novels Burn, Witch, Burn! and Seven Footprints to Satan have been adapted into movies.”

This was A. Merritt’s first novel and it was written in two parts. The first was called “The Moon Pool” it appeared June 22, 1919 in the early pulp called All-Story Weekly. Merritt followed up the successful tale with a longer sequel, “The Conquest of the Moon Pool,” which appeared in six installments starting February 15, 1919. Later they were combined to form the novel below…

Fantasy audiobook - The Moon Pool by A. MerrittThe Moon Pool
By A. Merritt; Read by Maureen O’Brien
35 MP3 Files – [UNABRIDGED]
Podcaster: Maria Lectrix
Podcast: January 2008 –
Dr. Walter T. Goodwin is sailing on the Southern Queen back to New York, after a botanical expedition to the d’Entrecasteaux Islands when he meets his old friend, Dr. David Throckmartin. Throckmartin looking haunted, relates a tale of disaster and death during an expedition on the Caroline Islands in the western Pacific Ocean. On the island of Ponape they found a strange stone door which…

You can download the MP3 files directly from the Internet Archive page for it or subscribe to the fantasy podcast feed:

http://marialectrix.wordpress.com/category/fiction/fantasy/feed/

Posted by Jesse Willis

AudioFile Magazine’s latest issue praises Variable Star audiobook

SFFaudio News

Audiofile MagazineAudiofile magazine’s February/March 2008 issue has designated an “earphones award” for an audiobook reviewed by SFFaudio’s own cool guy Scott Danielson.

Scott wrote, among other things, of Variable Star (by Robert A. Heinlein and Spider Robinson)…

“The novel is full of philosophical insight, exploding things, and space travel.”

Cool!

Also reviewed in this issue are…

Dune Messiah – The Dune Chronicles, Book Two
By Frank Herbert; Read by Scott Brick, Katherine Kellgren, Euan Morton, Simon Vance, et al.

Slan
By A.E. Van Vogt; Read by Oliver Wyman

A Civil Campaign
By Lois McMaster Bujold; Read by Grover Gardner

Blade Runner (Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?)
By Philip K. Dick; Read by Scott Brick

His Majesty’s Dragon – Temeraire, Book 1
By Naomi Novik; Read by Simon Vance

Marion Zimmer Bradley’s Ravens Of Avalon
By Diana L. Paxson; Read by Lorna Raver

Empire
By Orson Scott Card; Read by Stefan Rudnicki, Orson Scott Card

As She Climbed Across The Table
By Jonathan Lethem; Read by David Aaron Baker

Girl In Landscape
By Jonathan Lethem; Read by David Aaron Baker

And over in the Mystery/Suspense section you’ll find a review of…

The Wheel of Darkness
By Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child; Read by Rene Auberjonois

In the audio theatre section…

Infinite Crisis: Part 2 (Superman, Batman, Wonderwoman)
By Greg Cox (and DC Comics); Performed by a Full Cast

There are a few other SFFaudio related reviews in their too! Audiofile magazine isn’t available on any newstand or specialty bookstore that I’ve seen here in Canada, but it is available by subscription, and may be available on some newstands in the USA. Check out their website HERE for how to get a copy.

Posted by Jesse Willis

Submissions guide for the Mark Time / Ogle Awards 2007

SFFaudio News

Mark Time AwardsJerry Stearns, who hosts Sound Affects: A Radio Playground, writes in to remind us all that the Mark Time Awards submission deadline is fast approaching.

“The deadline for entry in the annual Mark Time Awards / Ogle Awards for science fiction and fantasy audio theater is coming up on March 1, 2008. The Mark Time/Ogle Awards are the only awards given solely for audio theater. This is their 12th year, and the entries are getting better every year. So, if you’ve produced science fiction or fantasy audio theater that you’re proud of in 2007, make it a point to enter. You will find an entry form at:

http://www.greatnorthernaudio.com/MarkTime/MT_Form.html

Just fill it out, add a $25 entry fee, and send it in with 5 copies of your entry. You can find out more at http://www.greatnorthernaudio.com/MarkTime/MarkTime.html, including past winners, the Mark Time SF Audio Hall of Fame, and
judging criteria.

The postmark deadline is March 1. The judges will notify winners by Mid-May. The awards will be presented at CONvergence, July 3, 2008. Winners will be given registration to the convention, a plaque and a t-shirt. It’s a real treat to meet with other producers and spend a weekend talking shop, in the company of others who love science fiction. We will perform a new original radio show at the beginning of the convention. And during the long weekend there will be time for an audio panel, and an autographing party, so bring your products with you.”

Posted by Jesse Willis

SFFaudio founder reviews SFFaudio Editor’s audiobook company

SFFaudio News

The Fix - Short Fiction ReviewIt is my proud honour to post that… the latest installment of Scott Danielson’s Audiobook Fix (his column at The Fix: Short Fiction Review) was just posted online. The subject, the wonderful world of Wonder Audiobooks. Wonder is run by Rick Jackson (AKA The Time Traveler) who is an editor here at SFFaudio. I’d happily point some hypocrite fingers about all of this being far too self-congratulatory but they’d have to be pointing my way too – I love Wonder Audiobooks and I’ll be damned if I’ll deny it. Check Scott’s column out HERE – then go buy some Wonder Audiobooks.

Posted by Jesse Willis