Andy Lane - Short Stories

Short Stories

  • ‘Living in the Past’ (in Doctor Who Magazine, Issue 162, July 1990)
  • ‘Crawling From the Wreckage’ (in The Ultimate Witch, Dell 1993)
  • ‘The More Things Change’ (in Doctor Who Yearbook, 1994)
  • ‘Lovers, and Other Strangers’ (in Interzone, issue 87, September 1994)
  • ‘Fallen Angel' (in Decalog, Virgin 1994)
  • ‘It’s Only a Game' (in Doctor Who Yearbook, 1995)
  • ‘Faceless in Ghazar’ (in Blake’s Seven Poster Magazine. Issue 2, Jan 1995)
  • ‘The Old, Old Story’ (in The Ultimate Dragon, 1995)
  • ‘Saving Face’ (in Full Spectrum 5, 1995)
  • ‘Where the Heart Is’ (in Decalog 2, 1995)
  • ‘Four Angry Mutants’ (with Rebecca Levene) (in The Ultimate X-Men, 1996)
  • ‘Dependence Day’ (with Justin Richards) (in Decalog 4, 1997)
  • ‘No Experience Necessary’ (in Odyssey issue 2, 1997)
  • ‘As Near to Flame as Lust to Smoke’ (in Shakespearean Detectives, 1998)
  • ‘The Gaze of the Falcon’ (in The Mammoth Book of Royal Whodunnits, 1998)
  • ‘Blood on the Tracks’ (in Bernice Summerfield - Missing Adventures, 2007)
  • ‘Only Connect’ (in Short Trips - Transmissions, 2008)
  • ‘The Beauty of Our Weapons’ (in Torchwood Yearbook, 2008)
  • ‘Who by Fire?’ (in Torchwood Magazine, Issue 14 ; 2009)
  • ‘Closing Time’ (in Torchwood Magazine, Issues 16 & 17; 2009)
  • ‘The Curious Case of the Compromised Card Files’ (for a Barclay's Bank internal document; 2011)
  • ‘The Audience of the Dead’ (in The Strand Magazine, Issue 34, June-Sept 2011)
  • ‘Bedlam’ (a Young Sherlock Holmes short story published exclusively for the Kindle ebook reader, Dec 2011)

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Famous quotes containing the words short and/or stories:

    Swift as a shadow, short as any dream,
    Brief as the lightning in the collied night,
    That in a spleen unfolds both heaven and earth,
    And, ere a man hath power to say “Behold!”
    The jaws of darkness do devour it up.
    So quick bright things come to confusion.
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

    We live in a highly industrialized society and every member of the Black nation must be as academically and technologically developed as possible. To wage a revolution, we need competent teachers, doctors, nurses, electronics experts, chemists, biologists, physicists, political scientists, and so on and so forth. Black women sitting at home reading bedtime stories to their children are just not going to make it.
    Frances Beale, African American feminist and civil rights activist. The Black Woman, ch. 14 (1970)