SMFS list members are published in Black Cat Weekly
#103 out today. Published by Wildside Press, the issue is available here in
digital format. The members and their stories are:
O’Neil De Noux with “A Dirty, Dimly Lit Place.”
Shannon Taft with “The End of the Road.”
Publisher Description:
Our 103rd issue is just one shy of our second
anniversary issue, but we still have a whale of an issue for you. Regular
readers will notice a new category (“Adventure”) below, which will appear
occasionally to fit stories I like that aren’t necessarily mysteries, science
fiction, or fantasy. (Well…this one may be fantasy, depending on how you feel
about fish!) It’s from a pulp magazine called Mammoth Adventure, a companion to
Amazing Stories and Fantastic when they were published by Ziff-Davis. It’s fun.
Working our way through the table of contents, we have
a pair of original mysteries by O’Neil De Noux and Shannon Taft, thanks to our
hardworking Acquiring Editors, Michael Bracken and Barb Goffman. James Holding
has a crime story, and Golden Age British mystery author J.J. Connington adds a
terrific novel.
For adventure (and nature) lovers, something’s fishy
in “Only a Sucker Bites,” a whopper of a story about lake pike.
On the fantasy end of things, we have a tale of astral
projection from Adrian Cole, a vintage zombi (or jumbee) story by Henry S.
Whitehead first published in Weird Tales, and a pair of vintage science fiction
stories by Arthur Leo Zagat and George O. Smith.
Here’s the complete lineup:
Mysteries / Suspense / Adventure:
“A Dirty, Dimly Lit Place,” by O’Neil De Noux [Michael
Bracken Presents short story]
“Too Many Suspects,” by Hal Charles [Solve-It-Yourself
Mystery]
“The End of the Road,” by Shannon Taft [Barb Goffman
Presents short story]
“Reason Enough,” by James Holding [short story]
Murder in the Maze, by J. J. Connington [novel]
Adventure:
“Only a Sucker Bites,” by J. C. Stanley [short story]
Science Fiction & Fantasy:
“A Smell of Burning,” by Adrian Cole [short story]
“Jumbee,” by Henry S. Whitehead [short story]
“Lost in Time,” by Arthur Leo Zagat [novella]
Dynasty of the Lost, by George O. Smith [novel]
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