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Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet No. 31 Kelly Link et al.
We’re almost sure this issue of LCRW is made up of more than a hundred thousand letters and can guarantee that most are in the right place. This is the ebook edition. The paper edition is available here.
Reviews… More
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The Entropy of Bones Ayize Jama-Everett
A Liminal People novel. A young martial artist finds there is more to the world than she can kick, more than she can see.
Chabi doesn’t realize her martial arts master may not be on the side of the gods. She does know… More
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The Liminal War Ayize Jama-Everett
A Liminal People novel. Taggert wants to look after his family so when his adopted daughter disappears he only has one option: find her.
There is something wrong in this world and Taggert must do what he must.
“I … More
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Young Woman in a Garden: Stories Delia Sherman
Selected as one of Publishers Weekly Best Books of the Year and recipient of 2 starred reviews.
Read a story: “Miss Carstairs and the Merman” · “Nanny Peters and the Feathery Bride”
A long anticipated… More
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Exit, Pursued by a Bear Greer Gilman
Faerie. It’s only theater. What could go wrong?
Welcome to Ben Jonson’s second adventure, courtesy of none other than Greer Gilman. Her first exceptional Jonson adventure, Cry Murder! in a Small Voice, was a … More
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Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet 30 Kelly Link et al.
With the thirtieth issue, LCRW—(maybe? probably? perhaps, for now?) the only zine named after Winston Churchill’s mother—changes everything. We turn blue into tree. We make electricity solid. We publish … More
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Sherwood Nation Benjamin Parzybok
As drought-stricken Portland, Oregon falls apart, a new city rises from within.
New: the first edition of our new Reader’s Guide and Companion.
In drought-stricken Portland, Oregon, a Robin Hood-esque water… More
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Things Will Never Be the Same: A Howard Waldrop Reader: Selected Short Fiction 1980-2005 Howard Waldrop
In this Locus Award finalist, Howard Waldrop selects sixteen of his own short stories (with help from Michael Walsh and Jonathan Strahan). At some point Hollywood will discover the one and only culture mashup genius… More
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Other Worlds, Better Lives: Selected Long Fiction, 1989-2003 Howard Waldrop
Seven novellas that cover ground the way that only Waldrop can featuring Wagner, Fats Waller, Picasso, Thomas Wolfe, and more.
In 2007, Old Earth Books, an independent press located in Baltimore, Maryland, brought… More
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Prophecies, Libels, and Dreams: Stories Ysabeau S. Wilce
Fantastical stories of rockstar magicians, murderous gloves, bouncing boy terrors, vengeful plush pigs, blue tinted butlers, and a Little Tiny Doom set in an opulent quasi-historical world of magick and high manners… More
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Questionable Practices Eileen Gunn
io9 Best of the Year:“Gunn’s talent for the surreal and bizarre is pressed into the service of exploring how our own subjectivity, and the ways we construct our selves, help to imprison us.”
Interviews: Eileen on the … More
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Emma Tupper’s Diary Peter Dickinson
Emma is spending the summer with her Scottish cousins—who are wonderful material for her attempt to win the School Prize for most interesting holiday diary. The cousins, lofty And... -
Horse of a Different Color Howard Waldrop
November 2013 · 9781618730732 · trade cloth and ebook Howard Waldrop’s stories are keys to the secret world of the stories behind the stories . . . or perhaps stories between the... -
Spider in a Tree Susan Stinson
“Stinson restores personhood and complexity to figures who have shriveled into caricature. . . . the payoff is not just the recovered history but the beautifully evoked sense of lives lived under the eye, not only of … More
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Cry Murder! in a Small Voice Greer Gilman
September 2013. A new chapbook from Greer Gilman.
London, 1603.
Ben Jonson, playwright, poet, satirist . . . detective?
Someone is murdering boy players and Jonson, in the way that only Greer Gilman could write him—”Fie,… More
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North American Lake Monsters: Stories Nathan Ballingrud
These are love stories. And also monster stories. Sometimes these are monsters in their traditional guises, sometimes they wear the faces of parents, lovers, or ourselves. The often working-class people in these … More