All posts by Elise

Issue #19, Methods of Divination

Shimmer 19
Shimmer #19

I first encountered Tara Isabella Burton’s writing through her non-fiction, one of her travel pieces, so was excited to see her name begin to turn up regularly in Shimmer‘s submissions.

She is brand new to Shimmer‘s pages and we’re delighted to have her. Her story in Issue #19, “Methods of Divination,” is haunting and if it leaves you with a vague sense of unease at the end, it’s only proper. It’s a Shimmer story, after all.

Be sure to explore Tara’s interview, and if you haven’t dived into our cover story…well, you have such wonders to discover.

Shimmer #19: The Earth and Everything Under

Welcome to the first digital issue of Shimmer!We are delighted to begin sharing the stories from Issue #19 with you.

Shimmer 19
Shimmer #19

We begin Issue #19 with our cover story:

It can’t possibly be a secret that K.M. Ferebee is one of our favorite authors. Her latest Shimmer story, “The Earth and Everything Under,” is in Issue #19,  but she’s been in Shimmer twice before. Issue #13 contains her well-reviewed tale “Bullet Oracle Instinct,” and “The Bird Country,” recommended by Locus, appeared in Issue #15.

Join us every other Tuesday for something Shimmery — and if you can’t wait that long, acquire the entire issue immediately!

Buy Shimmer #19!

Shimmer #19 Arrives

Shimmer 19
Shimmer #19

 

Have you heard the news? Shimmer has gone digital and Issue #19 is officially here!

We have so many lovely things to share with you in this issue, beginning with our cover. The artwork by Sandro Castelli is inspired by “The Earth and Everything Under,” by K.M. Ferebee. Ferebee has appeared in Shimmer before, with “Bullet Oracle Instinct” (Issue #13) and “The Bird Country” (Issue #15). We think she’s made of awesome, and are sure you will too!

We are also thrilled to welcome Robert Lee as our new Creative Director. He has brilliantly captured the spirit of Shimmer in his new design for us, and we can’t wait to see what he has up his sleeves!

In #19, we also welcome three new-to-Shimmer authors: Tara Isabella Burton, Margaret Dunlap, and Rachael Acks. If you haven’t already been exposed to their work, we believe their stories here will make for an excellent introduction.

Where can I get this wonderful thing, you are no doubt wondering! Issue #19 can be found in PDF, ePub, and mobi formats, all DRM-free.

You can grab Shimmer on this very site, Weightless, and of course Amazon. And for the first time, you can grab a Shimmer subscription from Weightless, too! When you subscribe to Shimmer, it’s like getting an issue free!

Note to subscribers: You should have received Issue #19 via email. If you haven’t gotten it yet, please take a moment to drop us a note via the contact form, and we will hook you up!

You can add #19 to your Goodreads lists, too!

Shimmer #19, a sneak peek

Shimmer #19 is fast approaching, but we could not wait to give you a peek at the gorgeous cover. The artwork for “The Earth & Everything Under” by K.M. Ferebee is by our art director, Sandro Castelli, with design by Robert N. Lee. We are positively certain you will join us on May 1st, to discover our first digital issue in its entirety!

Shimmer #19
Shimmer #19

Shimmer #18, In Review

Shimmer 18, cover art by Kurt Huggins
Shimmer 18, cover art by Kurt Huggins

Shimmer #18 hit the streets like a boss in February, and here are three reviews as to its gorgeousness!

SF Revu on Shimmer #18, “Shimmer Number 18, again I say, one of my favorite small press magazines. This issue is guest edited by Ann VanderMeer and she does a fine job with a very mixed lot of stories.”

Casual Debris, “There is less fantasy in a good sense, and instead a healthy combination of fantasy, science fiction and psychological horror.”

Lois Tilton at Locus Magazine, “The best is the Dustin Monk.”

We hope you loved Shimmer #18, and that you will join us for Shimmer #19 on May 1st, when we go absolutely and positively digital!

Shimmer 19

Shimmer's New Look!
*glitter* MEOWtastic! *glitter*

As it has always done, Shimmer Magazine strives to conquer new ground in the SFF community.

As Bright and Fierce People of Indeterminate Ages, we are gravely concerned with the continued graying of our glorious genre. Why stand on these increasingly shaky and crumbling foundations when we can soar through bright and/or dark new skies only somewhat possibly potentially muddied by the deepening haze and stench of global warming myths?

We envision a world where kittens and rockets live side by side! We envision a future where fluffy balls of fluff are shot into the darkest depths of space to spread peace, love, and purrs to everyone they meet! As 2014 goes forward, Shimmer Magazine remains staunchly committed to ensuring there will always be rainbows, glitter, and kittens.

Issue #19 – Table of Contents:

Dogs Live in Vain, Catwainer Smith

Fahrenheit OMG Sunbeamzzzzz, Rae Strawberries

The Cat Who Was Purred In, James Upatree, Jr.

The Left Hand Of Petting My Tummy, Ursula Le Kitten Heels

I Eated Algernon, Daniel Macavity

The Littery, Shirley Youjest

Johnathan Strange and Mr. Whiskers, Susanna Crookshanks

Good Omeows, Neil Greebo and Terry Pixel

The Nine Billion Names of Cats, Art “Holy Cats” Clarke

The Man Who Sold the Cat a Moon Made of Cheese, R. Fineline

 

The future’s so bright pink and yellow and glitter, we gotta wear shades! Download the PDF of issue #19 and roll around in it!

In upcoming issues, you can look forward to: A Girl and her Cat, The Word for World is Yarn, I Have No Kibble and Must Scream, The Cats Men Don’t See, and the novella-length We Can Shred It For You Wholesale, and The Catnip Chronicles.

 

PEACE, LOVE, AND PURRS

Year’s Best Weird, Vol. 1

Issue 17 Cover by Sandro Castelli
Issue 17

I am super delighted to say that “Like Feather, Like Bone” by Kristi DeMeester will appear in Year’s Best Weird Volume 1, edited by Laird Barron. To check out the story with its original artwork, be sure to pick up Shimmer #17 in paper or digital formats.

You can find the full table of contents here, which includes three other Shimmery authors, if not for their Shimmery works: Damien Angelica Walters, A.C. Wise, and Karen Tidbeck.

Congrats to all authors — the collection looks to be amazing.

Shimmer 18 – Jeff VanderMeer

jeffvandermeer-smallJeff VanderMeer’s story in Shimmer #18 ties into the same universe from which his new novels spring! It’s beginning to look a lot like fungi…

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Tell us how “Fragments from the Notes of a Dead Mycologist” came about.

I was at San Luis park, took photos of lots of fungi then started to build a story around them. There are a couple of elements that echo little bits of ANNIHILATION although the stories are not connected.

Wonderbook recently published; tell us how this amazing book came to be.

THE STEAMPUNK BIBLE for Abrams Image was very successful. They had wanted to do a creative writing book for a while. When I pitched the project based on the Shared Worlds teen  writing camp, they asked if I would consider doing a general writing book instead.

I jumped at the opportunity because I knew it would be full color coffee table book. And they were willing to give me complete creative control over text , images and layout. The ability to realize the vision fully meant it could be a very layered book that you can dip into or read straight through. I am very happy with the reception of it.

What’s the best book you’ve read lately?

THE BOOK OF MIRACLES from Taschen books.

What’s in your iTunes/Spotify/8-track lately?

We Are Wolves. The latest Arcade Fire. I have also done a lot of listening to Three Mile Pilot and Lloyd Coles last two albums.

What’s your favorite Ray Bradbury book/story?

As a kid I remember SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES. Can’t really think of a single story that stands out as there are so many good ones.

Rachel Marston, Shimmer #18

rachelRachel Marston blows things up in Shimmer #18 with “The Birth of the Atomic Age.”

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Tell us how “The Birth of the Atomic Age” came about.

I was in a folklore narratives class and we were discussing urban legends and folktales.  I was living in Salt Lake City, where the conversations about Downwinders, those affected by fallout from nuclear testing in Nevada, is pretty prevalent. I realized that, though I was from Las Vegas, Nevada, I knew very little about the Test Site and the history of testing. I was also intrigued by the way comic books, particularly superhero stories, and B-movies had taken up the questions of radiation exposure. I began researching more about nuclear testing and reading eyewitness accounts. There were stories of people, particularly in Southern Utah, who had gone out to watch the tests.

My maternal grandfather had a winter wheat farm in Alton, Utah. He’d drive down every summer from Reno, Nevada to harvest the wheat. I decided to ask him if he’d ever seen any of the tests. When he told me he had, I pressed him for a little more information and he described the watching of the tests in such a nonchalant way, almost as if describing going on a picnic with your family. The story was born in many ways from that moment.

Tell us something about Minnesota. If we came to visit, where might you take us?

That is a hard question to answer in some ways since Minnesota is still so new to me. You would fly into Minneapolis, so I would definitely take you to the Mill Ruins Park on the Mississippi. Parts of former mills on the Mississippi have been excavated and revealed and another former mill has been turned into a museum discussing the history of milling in Minnesota.

Then we’d go to a deli, Rye, for delicious poutine (fries with cheese curds and gravy – trust me, it is delicious!). We would then drive about an hour and half northwest to St. Cloud, where I currently live, and then over to Collegeville to explore the arboretum and lakes on the campus where I teach. There are lakes everywhere in Minnesota (really!) and to be surrounded by so much water, especially living in the high desert my whole life, is pretty remarkable.

What’s the best book you’ve read lately?

Kathryn Davis’s Duplex, a novel out from Graywolf Press. Davis deftly balances formal experimentation and story in an intriguing way. The book is also full of magic and other strangenesses, but constructed so that these things, while remarked upon in the book, are also accepted by the reader as very much part of the world.

What is currently in your cd player/iTunes/Spotify/8 Track?

I’ve been listening to a lot of Nick Drake lately, as well as The Organ.

Check out Rachel’s story in Shimmer #18, now available!

Shimmer 18 – Rachel Marston

rachelRachel Marston blows things up in Shimmer #18 with “The Birth of the Atomic Age.”

#

Tell us how “The Birth of the Atomic Age” came about.

I was in a folklore narratives class and we were discussing urban legends and folktales.  I was living in Salt Lake City, where the conversations about Downwinders, those affected by fallout from nuclear testing in Nevada, is pretty prevalent. I realized that, though I was from Las Vegas, Nevada, I knew very little about the Test Site and the history of testing. I was also intrigued by the way comic books, particularly superhero stories, and B-movies had taken up the questions of radiation exposure. I began researching more about nuclear testing and reading eyewitness accounts. There were stories of people, particularly in Southern Utah, who had gone out to watch the tests.

My maternal grandfather had a winter wheat farm in Alton, Utah. He’d drive down every summer from Reno, Nevada to harvest the wheat. I decided to ask him if he’d ever seen any of the tests. When he told me he had, I pressed him for a little more information and he described the watching of the tests in such a nonchalant way, almost as if describing going on a picnic with your family. The story was born in many ways from that moment.

Tell us something about Minnesota. If we came to visit, where might you take us?

That is a hard question to answer in some ways since Minnesota is still so new to me. You would fly into Minneapolis, so I would definitely take you to the Mill Ruins Park on the Mississippi. Parts of former mills on the Mississippi have been excavated and revealed and another former mill has been turned into a museum discussing the history of milling in Minnesota.

Then we’d go to a deli, Rye, for delicious poutine (fries with cheese curds and gravy – trust me, it is delicious!). We would then drive about an hour and half northwest to St. Cloud, where I currently live, and then over to Collegeville to explore the arboretum and lakes on the campus where I teach. There are lakes everywhere in Minnesota (really!) and to be surrounded by so much water, especially living in the high desert my whole life, is pretty remarkable.

What’s the best book you’ve read lately?

Kathryn Davis’s Duplex, a novel out from Graywolf Press. Davis deftly balances formal experimentation and story in an intriguing way. The book is also full of magic and other strangenesses, but constructed so that these things, while remarked upon in the book, are also accepted by the reader as very much part of the world.

What is currently in your cd player/iTunes/Spotify/8 Track?

I’ve been listening to a lot of Nick Drake lately, as well as The Organ.

Check out Rachel’s story in Shimmer #18, now available!