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The online magazine released two special issues during its run: Issue #6 - the Continuum 3 convention/Australian Horror Writers Association launch issue (featuring Continuum 3 guests Poppy Z Brite and Richard Harland, plus Robert Hood, Terry Dowling, and the winners of the inaugural AHWA flash fiction competition); and Issue #9 - the "Redback ...
Flash Me Magazine is a defunct online magazine devoted to publishing flash fiction stories. Its last issue was in October 2010. It was a quarterly publication by Winged Halo Productions. [1] [2] It was a paying market, accepting all genres of fiction under 1,000 words. Issues were published on January 31, April 30, July 31, and October 31.
Every Day Fiction is notable for being one of the first online fiction magazines to abandon the print model that had been migrated onto the web by its contemporaries, and instead focus on a format in use by several major blogs—dynamic content published in high volume. A key component of the site has been its focus on social media, with ...
Access to the Internet has enhanced an awareness of flash fiction, with online journals being devoted entirely to the style. SmokeLong Quarterly , founded by Dave Clapper in 2003, is "dedicated to bringing the best flash narratives to the web whether written by widely published authors or those new to the craft."
Here it is. I still can't think of it without crying— FOR SALE. BABY SHOES. NEVER WORN." [1] This connection to Hemingway was reinforced by a one-man play called Papa by John De Groot, which debuted in 1996. Set during a Life magazine photo session in 1959, De Groot has the character utter the phrase as a means of illustrating Hemingway's ...
Pages in category "Online literary magazines published in the United States" The following 86 pages are in this category, out of 86 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
For a few days in October 2023, the capital of the science fiction world was Chengdu, China. Fans traveled from around the world as Worldcon, sci-fi ’s biggest annual event, was held in the ...
The magazine covered stories and narrative prose poems under 500 words. [4] Boston's Weekly Dig, the weekly arts magazine, said Quick Fictionwas “filled with great work from writers who respect the rigid, potentially gorgeous contours of microfiction and have a great deal to say in very little time.” [4] [5] Quick Fiction ceased publication ...