For your musical accompaniment needs:
Full size version of the lyric sheet here (9 MB) for all your printing needs. (You can really see the pixels!)
The Labyrinth Index, the latest in The Laundry Files series by Charles Stross, is in stores now.
Advertisement
Science fiction. Fantasy. The universe. And related subjects.
For your musical accompaniment needs:
Full size version of the lyric sheet here (9 MB) for all your printing needs. (You can really see the pixels!)
The Labyrinth Index, the latest in The Laundry Files series by Charles Stross, is in stores now.
Author
Charles Stross is a British SF writer, born in Leeds, England, and living in Edinburgh, Scotland. He has worked as a tech writer, a programmer, a journalist, and a pharmacist; he holds degrees in Pharmacy and in Computer Science. He has won two Hugo Awards for his short fiction, and his work has been extensively praised by, among others, Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman.
Stross is sometimes regarded as being part of a new generation of British science fiction writers who use the devices of "space opera" and "hard SF" to innovative new ends; others of this cohort include Alastair Reynolds, Ken MacLeod, Peter Hamilton, Liz Williams, and Richard Morgan. His inspirations and influences include Vernor Vinge, Neal Stephenson, William Gibson, Bruce Sterling, and Iain M. Banks, among other cyberpunk and post-cyberpunk writers, as well as older figures such as H. P. Lovecraft, Roger Zelazny, and Robert A. Heinlein.
Among Stross’s more recent novels are The Revolution Business and The Trade of Queens (in his “Merchant Princes” series), The Apocalypse Codex (part of the “Laundry” series of novels and stories), Rule 34, and, with Cory Doctorow, The Rapture of the Nerds.
See All Posts About
“You want stories?" Thom Merrilin declaimed. "I have stories, and I will give them to you. I will make them come alive before your eyes.”
Robert Jordan, The Eye Of The World
For compliance with applicable privacy laws:
Isn’t that last word supposed to be “Deity” on the image?
And a Happy All-Hallows to you!
Nicely done Sir.
The first four lines don’t follow the rhyme pattern and several later bits don’t fit the stated meter, which is somewhat jarring, but the rest is very well done.