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:

    Man that is born of woman hath but a short time to live, and is full of misery. He cometh up, and is cut down, like a flower; he fleeth as it were a shadow, and never continueth in one stay.
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    Every one of my friends had a bad day somewhere in her history she wished she could forget but couldn’t. A very bad mother day changes you forever. Those were the hardest stories to tell. . . . “I could still see the red imprint of his little bum when I changed his diaper that night. I stared at my hand, as if they were alien parts of myself . . . as if they had betrayed me. From that day on, I never hit him again.”
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