Plate Armor and Spacesuits Both Hold Farts is now up at Smashwords! The fruit of my blood, sweat and chyle is now available for you completely FREE, in the hope a small percentage of you will favourably review it.
These quirky tales of sci-fi and fantasy will take you to realms where lightspeed meets light-hearted and you can't say awkward without orc. From the perils of being a dragon's beauty consultant to hidden benefits of software in whiteware, S J Cavanagh shows that he's outstanding in left field. Includes "Elf Esteem", which made ASIM's Best of Fantasy Vol 1.
Waddaya waiting for sweethearts, breakfast in bed? Go get it!
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Thursday, July 19, 2012
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
New antho coming soon!
With Axefall Echoes taking the world by.. uh.. light breeze, I'm also compiling some of my comic sci-fi and fantasy into a new anthology!
This anthology will be FREE and is entitled Plate Armor and Spacesuits Both Hold Farts. It includes Girl Power and Elf Esteem, short and flash fiction, the high fantasy to the lowbrow (but you already knew that).
Watch this space!
" " <-- and this one. Really.
This anthology will be FREE and is entitled Plate Armor and Spacesuits Both Hold Farts. It includes Girl Power and Elf Esteem, short and flash fiction, the high fantasy to the lowbrow (but you already knew that).
Watch this space!
" " <-- and this one. Really.
Sunday, July 01, 2012
Axefall Echoes is out!
Axefall Echoes, an antho collecting seven of my horror stories, is out now on Amazon and Smashwords. Inspiration for the stories came from all over; my life growing up on the farm, commuting in the city, how a relative was treated when they got old, etc. Below are some things people have said about the stories so far:
-TangentOnline.com
a great story that really rounds out #11 well, and is a worthy winner of the 2006 AHWA Flash Fiction competition...a tale of parent-child tragedy, a topic that almost approaches taboo status to some authors and readers.
Mr.Cavanagh handles the subject deftly and with the greatest of sensitivity. This isn't really a scary story, just a very emotional and heart breaking one where we hear and feel every gust of wind, every rattle of a branch, every flutter of the narrators heart and, in the end, I shed his tears too.
-HorrorScope
Steven Cavanagh paints a heart-breaking portrait of a father’s loss
-Dark Scribe Magazine
I don’t recall having read anything by author Steven Cavanagh before, but I shall certainly be searching out his work in future. This story is an absolute gem.
-Chuck McKenzie
Finding the Words is a very innovative tale which explores the emotional power of loss (specifically the death of a child) under the guide of a horror tale. It is a superb and creative use of a genre tale to explore personal emotional pain.-Robert Black
Starting [the anthology] off on a good foot. Keen-esque.-Skullring.org
The book starts off strong with “Street Smarts”.-monsterlibrarian.com
It's a well structured narrative with some original humour and is sharply written, especially towards the end.
-Prof Jane Goodall
-Shadowed Realms.
Steven Cavanagh’s “Moving Dad” was another favorite of mine... Using a magic-realism style, Cavanagh manages to capture a strange sense of grief and remorse, and it transfers through to the reader.-LitHaven.com
Cavanagh writes in a deliberately matter-of-fact style regarding a situation that is anything but and this, for me, is one of the highlights of the story
Beginning with whimsical familiarity, moving to poignancy. A lovely slow reveal, blurring the line between the infirmity of advanced age, and the shambling corruption of undeath. An exploration of a universal horror – the realisation of the mortality of the father – I won’t spoil the ending, but Cavanagh kicks off beautifully into an even deeper horror in the last line. Fantastic dialogue in this one too.
-Australian Specfic In Focus
Well, what are you waiting for? Go check it out!
Finding the words
Easily the most powerful piece in issue 11 of Shadowed Realms. While technically horror, it’s a touching story of a man laying his daughter to rest. Cavanagh’s style is fluid and uses sense imagery to ground the reader in reality. It’s touching and it's tender and it's heartfelt, something I’m not used to seeing in horror.-TangentOnline.com
a great story that really rounds out #11 well, and is a worthy winner of the 2006 AHWA Flash Fiction competition...a tale of parent-child tragedy, a topic that almost approaches taboo status to some authors and readers.
Mr.Cavanagh handles the subject deftly and with the greatest of sensitivity. This isn't really a scary story, just a very emotional and heart breaking one where we hear and feel every gust of wind, every rattle of a branch, every flutter of the narrators heart and, in the end, I shed his tears too.
-HorrorScope
Steven Cavanagh paints a heart-breaking portrait of a father’s loss
-Dark Scribe Magazine
I don’t recall having read anything by author Steven Cavanagh before, but I shall certainly be searching out his work in future. This story is an absolute gem.
-Chuck McKenzie
Finding the Words is a very innovative tale which explores the emotional power of loss (specifically the death of a child) under the guide of a horror tale. It is a superb and creative use of a genre tale to explore personal emotional pain.-Robert Black
Street Smarts
good thought for detail and a sensation of realism to it.-Flames RisingStarting [the anthology] off on a good foot. Keen-esque.-Skullring.org
The book starts off strong with “Street Smarts”.-monsterlibrarian.com
World of Hurt
A rivetting piece of flash fiction.-Sue CrawfordIt's a well structured narrative with some original humour and is sharply written, especially towards the end.
-Prof Jane Goodall
Moving Dad
Moving Dad presents a clever parody of life after death. This story was highly original… Moving Dad has strong central characters that express real emotions, and we are able to feel for them because they are so lifelike.-Shadowed Realms.
Steven Cavanagh’s “Moving Dad” was another favorite of mine... Using a magic-realism style, Cavanagh manages to capture a strange sense of grief and remorse, and it transfers through to the reader.-LitHaven.com
Cavanagh writes in a deliberately matter-of-fact style regarding a situation that is anything but and this, for me, is one of the highlights of the story
Beginning with whimsical familiarity, moving to poignancy. A lovely slow reveal, blurring the line between the infirmity of advanced age, and the shambling corruption of undeath. An exploration of a universal horror – the realisation of the mortality of the father – I won’t spoil the ending, but Cavanagh kicks off beautifully into an even deeper horror in the last line. Fantastic dialogue in this one too.
-Australian Specfic In Focus
Well, what are you waiting for? Go check it out!
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