Update March 12: He’s reading HPMoR, thanks presumably to the 7+ fan reviews from LWers, tvtropers, and whatever you call an xkcd fan. Still no fan reviews for Luminosity or Hamlet and the Philosopher’s Stone.
Damien Walter reviews sci-fi and fantasy for The Guardian.He’s looking for weird, self-published online fiction to read over the next month, and he’ll review the best ones he finds. He’s just asked people to recommend stories in the comments to his latest article. If you want to see Methods of Rationality, Luminosity, or my Hamlet and the Philosopher’s Stone reviewed in a respected newspaper (there is precedent!), please consider heading over there and posting a short review (one link per comment, you can comment more than once). Each of the three is a hard sell even by online fantasy standards, and I imagine it would help if a disinterested party vouched for them.
Update March 12: He’s reading HPMoR, thanks presumably to the 7+ fan reviews from LWers, tvtropers, and whatever you call an xkcd fan. Still no fan reviews for Luminosity or Hamlet and the Philosopher’s Stone.
Damien Walter reviews sci-fi and fantasy for The Guardian. He’s looking for weird, self-published online fiction to read over the next month, and he’ll review the best ones he finds. He’s just asked people to recommend stories in the comments to his latest article. If you want to see Methods of Rationality, Luminosity, or my Hamlet and the Philosopher’s Stone reviewed in a respected newspaper (there is precedent!), please consider heading over there and posting a short review (one link per comment, you can comment more than once). Each of the three is a hard sell even by online fantasy standards, and I imagine it would help if a disinterested party vouched for them.
How about Three Worlds Collide?
Go for it if you want! I love the story, but I’m not sure how well it works as Rationality Outreach.
Success!