Rss

Archives for : anthology

Cyberfunk Anthology

Look out! We have an exciting black sci-fi anthology by some of the best African and African American authors in the business, including yours truly. Check out this incredible roster below with the story titles included.

A Sunken Memory  by Donovan Hall
Once Upon A Time In Virtuopolis by Ronald T. Jones
Unlimited Data by Eugen Bacon
Flesh of My Flesh by John Jennings
Comfort by Kyoko M
Lailai by Balogun Ojetade
Mama Africa  by Jarla Tangh
Somatosensory Cortex Dog Mess You Up 
You Sick Sack of S**t by Minister Faust
A Bird in the Hand by Gerald Coleman
Something for the Silent by Zig Zag Clabourne
The Daisy Chain by Hannibal Tabu
Talismaner by K. Ceres Wright
The Siege at Illinmorrow by Napoleon Wells
The Walker’s Alchemist by T.C. Morgan
Whosonever by Carole McDonnell 
Twisted Analog by Ashleigh Davenport 
Tony V  by Violette L. Meier
Playing The Odds by  Milton J. Davis
Hatched: A Cybil Lewis Story by Nicole Givens Kurtz

It is available right here. Don’t miss out on these incredible stories right in time for Black History Month!

Marvel’s Black Panther: Tales of Wakanda Anthology

Yes, you’re reading this right. I wrote a short story for Marvel Comics.

And you should totally buy it. Release date is March 9th, 2021. Purchase here. I can’t wait for you guys to check it out, but in the meantime, please spread the word!

You can read more right here on the official IGN announcement.

An Excerpt from “My Dinner with Vlad” – A Short Story from the Terminus anthology

Meet Cassandra Moody–a beautiful, graceful, snarky ass werewolf who has to entertain the Father of all vampires, Vlad Tepes, in the city of Atlanta for a night.

It was difficult to describe the way it felt when I changed. It didn’t hurt…but it didn’t not hurt. I’d once told a friend that it was like peeling off a fingernail where most of the skin wasn’t attached and so you didn’t bleed. My muscles shifted around. My bones popped and cracked as they rearranged into the lithe, streamlined form of a wolf that stood perhaps half a foot taller and several pounds heavier than a real one. When I was within the city limits, I always went with my full wolf form. I could switch to a form between the two that was bipedal—the kind that normal people wrote into movies like Van Helsing or the Benicio del Toro remake—but if anyone caught sight of me, that would be that. Supernatural folks stayed under the radar, if only because humans are ruled by fear and panic, and to know that a cute black girl could turn into something that could tear them apart in just the blink of an eye would induce instantly genocide on our kind.

My fur was dark-brown, matching the color of my skin, and my mane had black streaks running through it and along my spine, ending in a tuft at my tail. A shudder spilled through me once the transformation was done and I shook out my fur, getting used to the change in senses. I could smell who had been in this alley within the last four days. I could hear the kids playing basketball four blocks away. I could taste the vile air coming off the dumpster nearby. I could see through the veil of darkness draped over the city as if it were broad daylight.

Being a wolf is where it’s at, man.

Vlad turned around and smiled warmly at me. “Such a pretty thing. I’d forgotten.”

I rolled my-now-golden eyes and he chuckled before following my lead. He turned away and rid himself of the boxer shorts.

Vlad’s transformation was smoother and faster than my own. He just sort of…melted into a puddle of dark mass and then reformed into a black-furred wolf slightly taller than me, but not as bulky with muscle, with startling arctic blue eyes. He walked over and sniffed me a bit, then nuzzled me, his shoulder bumping mine playfully. I heard his voice in my head as clear as day even though his fanged jaws never moved.

Where are we off to, my dear?

Follow me, I replied. Stay close. People are jumpy around this area and you don’t want someone to pop a cap in your furry ass.

He laughed in my head as I broke into a sprint further down the alley.

Midtown Atlanta’s nightlife was delightful. I loved it. Music pounded through the buildings, whether just a private citizen jamming in their little studio apartment or a live band a local dive bar getting it in for the night. I could smell every dish from fine dining restaurants wafting out through their front doors as new customers walked in. I could hear people on their first dates walking towards their cars, laughing nervously and flirting. I could see the cars rushing back and forth over the pot-holes, honking and screeching and filling the air with noise.

Life. That was what I liked about Atlanta. Life happened. It never slept.


Want to read the whole short story? Grab a copy of Terminus: a short story anthology by the bestselling authors of Atlanta! Buy it here.