Angela Slatter has been short listed for the Ditmars, The Australian SF Achievement Awards.
Congratulations, Angela!
Angela Slatter has been short listed for the Ditmars, The Australian SF Achievement Awards.
Congratulations, Angela!
Coming February 20th.
You can pre-order your copy today. Click here to view the table of contents.
For this issue, the art comes first. We selected art, and then invited some Shimmery favorites to write stories inspired by the images. Our cover image is Penny’s Grave, by award-winning artist John Picacio; we used it as the trigger for a contest at the Liberty Hall Writer’s Workshop. The winning story is Penny Wise, by Kurt Kirchmeier.
| Only $6.00 plus shipping for over 80 pages of new fiction, in a perfect-bound magazine with a glossy cover. Alternatively, you may also order the same stories in .pdf format for $4.00, saving production costs but still supporting our writers and artists. We also offer 4-issue subscriptions – save 15% off the cover price! For more information about this issue, check out the Table of Contents and Author Bios. |
Release Date: February 20, 2008. Order your copy today!
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In this issue, art director Mary Robinette Kowal first selected the art; then we approached some of our favorite authors to write stories inspired by the art.
John Piccacio’s “Penny’s Grave” inspired “Pennywise,” by Kurt Kirchmeier.
“Cherub,” by Sandro Castelli, lead to “A Very Young Boy With Largely Clipped Wings,” by Michael Livingston.
Fatima Azimova’s “Conception of the Mind” was the inspiration for “Within the City of the Swan” by Aliette de Bodard. (Best American Fantasy 3 Recommended Reading List)
Chrissy Ellsworth’s “My Career as a Fashion Designer” lead to “Dresses, Three” by Angela Slatter (honorable mention in Ellen Datlow’s Year’s Best Horror.)
Carrie Ann Baade’s amazing untitled image gave us “Flying and Falling” by Kuzhali Manickavel, which was reprinted in Best American Fantasy 3.
Buy your copy today!
Penny Wise by Kurt Kirchmeier
Ellsy Marcucci was a penny mage, or as some would say, a one-cent wonder child. She discovered her gift while making a wish that never came true. Into the fountain her penny had gone, but rather than sink to the bottom to join with the rest of the change, it instead sprouted copper-plated fins. It began swimming in widening circles, and Abraham Lincoln-shaped turds trailed out from behind it.
Interview with John Picacio
I don’t really commit to an idea until I believe it’s going to work. Sometimes I get that right idea in my initial sketch; sometimes it takes several sketches or several generations. I believe in my own design process though. Whatever it takes; whatever it entails…whether that means writing a short brief for myself; taking notes from the manuscript; gathering reference materials; making a model; I’ll do whatever it takes to get it right.
A Very Young Boy with Largely Clipped Wings by Michael Livingston
The spring rains of late September were so thick off the salty bay that Pelayo, walking home from the rabbit warrens, didn’t see the little boy in the mud until he’d very nearly stepped upon him. The child, naked but for the bony stumps protruding from his back, which had looked to Pelayo for all the world like the wind-bared stalks of thornweeds until he noticed the fact of their rooting upon the boy’s exposed skin, seemed to be asleep. Arms outstretched like a fallen mime of Christ, he lay face down in the gloppy muck, and Pelayo would have thought him dead were it not for the gurgling of the soupy earth around the sides of his head and the slow rise and fall—perceived once Pelayo stopped to examine him through the foggy downpour—of his rain-splattered back.
Within the City of the Swan by Aliette de Bodard
Jaya crouches in the darkness, watching the gates of Vareia. The fighting is still going on: by the light of torches, soldiers hack at each other with the ferocity of despair.
Jaya has the other sight and she knows it’s too late: at the heart of the maze, the Swan’s feathers are black with blood, and the invaders’ magic has removed his protection from Vareia.
But there is still a chance.
Even Songbirds Are Kept in Cages by Josh Vogt
I was nine when my dad brought home the mockingbird lady. He clipped her wings and then took her up to the attic, carrying several coils of barbed wire along with him. When he came downstairs, he dusted off his hands and glared at my brother and me.
“There,” he said. “Never let it be said your dad doesn’t provide for his family.”
Monologue with Birds and Burin by Daniel A. Rabuzzi
“Make way, make way,” she said. “Clear the way for today’s beauties!” She lifted up a great lamp, its oil expended, and put it down with a rattly bang on one of the lesser tables flanking the workbench. The lamp’s lemon-colored shade sat askew, but the deconstructor paid it no more mind than she did the insects that made tracks in the workshop dust.
“Crowbar,” she said. “Where is crowbar when you need him?” She rummaged in a pile, sending picks and screwdrivers onto the floor. A crowbar fell and bounced a neat parabola.
“Well,” she laughed. “Crowbar flies.”
Dresses, Three by Angela Slatter
I found, this morning, the last of the oddments to which my memories cling. From the upended envelope floated a peacock feather; a pair of butterfly wings; and a piece of paper, a list of words embedded into its onion-skin fineness with a calligraphy pen, traced in a very fine hand. Three things, three things upon which once hung life, freedom, and quite possibly a soul.
Flying and Falling by Kuzhali Manickavel
Muhil was born during a legendary thunderstorm that uprooted every banana tree in the village and sent a legion of white crabs to die on the highway. She was wrinkled, ordinary and unremarkable save for the fact that she had a spongy knob on each shoulder and she didn’t cry. Her father, Ilango, peered at her and had a premonition of dark, heavy things.
“What’s wrong with her?” he asked.
A Very Young Boy with Largely Clipped Wings—A native of Colorado, Michael Livingston holds degrees in History, Medieval Studies, and English. He is a winner of the Writers of the Future Contest and has published in a variety of genres and venues. He currently serves as an Assistant Professor of English at The Citadel. Visit www.michaellivingston.com. |
Flying and Falling—Kuzhali Manickavel lives in a small temple town on the coast of South India. Her work can be found at Caketrain, Smokelong Quarterly, Gambara, Ghoti and Opium. |
Monologue with Birds and Burin—Daniel A. Rabuzzi lived in Norway and Germany, earning degrees in folklore and history. An executive in an education non-profit by day, Daniel explores a world called Yount by night and on weekends. Having finished one novel about Yount, Daniel is working on a sequel and hopes to share Yount with other pilgrims soon. |
Our subscription drive is over at the end of today, January 10. It is the last day to get a four issue subscription at our old rates, and your last chance to get the Ken Scholes signed chapbook.
You have until midnight (mountain time), so subscribe now!
The Spoils of Springfield – Alex Wilson
Jaguar Woman – Silvia Moreno-Garcia
River Water – Becca De La Rosa
The Fox and the King’s Beard – Jessica Wick
A Painter, A sheep…” – Nir Yaniv
This holiday season, we’re offering a special bonus: What Child Is This I Asked the Midnight Clear, by Ken Scholes.
The Clockwork Jungle Book
Shimmer is pleased to announce The Clockwork Jungle Book. Think steampunk animal parables! It’s a special double-length issue, guest-edited by George Mann of Solaris Books, scheduled for Autumn 2008. Now accepting submissions. Read the guidelines for more details.
Now GET WRITING!
Check out our lovely collection of trailers!
Ahoy! The Pirate Issue, , guest-edited by John Joseph Adams, is a special double-length issue chock full of piratical yarns. Featuring stories by Mikal Trimm, James Cambias, Justine Graykin, Marissa Lingen, and more! Illustrated throughout by James Owen.
This issue features our interview with Cherie Priest, and fiction from n. a. bourke, Cat Rambo, Dario Ciriello, Michael Livingston, Amal El-Mohtar, Philip Lees, Mike Driver, and Stephen L. Moss. For more information, check out the table of contents, or watch the trailer below. Then buy a copy or subscribe!
The trailer:
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