Genre-busting short stories, novellas, serials and graphic novels in a pulp anthology magazine.
In this issue:
- Joan MacLeod’s ‘The Salt Tour’, an exceptionally beautiful story from the golden age of European backpacking.
- ‘The Poison Pen Affair’, where Mel Anastasiou’s intrepid amateur sleuth Stella Ryman defies the constraints of her care home.
- Gritty storytelling that continues to amaze us in ‘Wager’ by Bob Thurber.
- Poetry by Diane Tucker, Darrell Lindsey and Jeffrey C Alfier.
- Susan Pieters’ ‘Invisible’, Laird Long’s ‘The Big Con’, and Conor Power-Smith’s ‘Love for Sale’, all stories that involve different kinds of love, and different kinds of blindness
- Our graphic novel adaptation of Sylvia Stopforth’s ‘Dragon Rock’, describing the biggest blind spot of all.
- Quantum physics in a handbag and stalker mascots in a theme park with Deborah Walker’s ‘Aunty Merkel’ and Fred Zackel’s “Snow White is Mine!”
- And our next installment of Allaigna’s Song, in which our heroine learns to illuminate the ordinary.
Genre-busting short stories, novellas, serials and graphic novels in a pulp anthology magazine.
In this issue:
- Joan MacLeod’s ‘The Salt Tour’, an exceptionally beautiful story from the golden age of European backpacking.
- ‘The Poison Pen Affair’, where Mel Anastasiou’s intrepid amateur sleuth Stella Ryman defies the constraints of her care home.
- Gritty storytelling that continues to amaze us in ‘Wager’ by Bob Thurber.
- Poetry by Diane Tucker, Darrell Lindsey and Jeffrey C Alfier.
- Susan Pieters’ ‘Invisible’, Laird Long’s ‘The Big Con’, and Conor Power-Smith’s ‘Love for Sale’, all stories that involve different kinds of love, and different kinds of blindness
- Our graphic novel adaptation of Sylvia Stopforth’s ‘Dragon Rock’, describing the biggest blind spot of all.
- Quantum physics in a handbag and stalker mascots in a theme park with Deborah Walker’s ‘Aunty Merkel’ and Fred Zackel’s “Snow White is Mine!”
- And our next installment of Allaigna’s Song, in which our heroine learns to illuminate the ordinary.