Pulphouse Fiction Magazine: Issue #3 by Dean Wesley Smith, Annie Reed, J. Steven York, Lee Allred, Kevin J. Anderson, Jerry Oltion, Kent Patterson, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, O'Neil De Noux, Robert Jeschonek, Mike Resnick, Mark Leslie, Valerie Brook, Ezekiel James Boston, Lisa Silverthorne & James C. Glass

Pulphouse Fiction Magazine: Issue #3

By

  • Genre Fiction & Literature
  • Publisher Wmg Publishing
  • Released
  • Size 2.33 MB
  • Length 196 Pages

Description

The Cutting Edge of Modern Short Fiction

A three-time Hugo Award nominated magazine, this issue Pulphouse Fiction Magazine offers up seventeen fantastic stories by some of the best writers working in modern short fiction. No genre limitations, no topic limitations, just great stories. Attitude, feel, and high quality fiction equals Pulphouse.

"This is definitely a strong start. All the stories have a lot of life to them, and are worthwhile reading."
—Tangent Online on Pulphouse Fiction Magazine, Issue #1

Including:
"Time, Expressed as an Entrée" by Robert Jeschonek

"The Four Thirty-Five" by Annie Reed

"The Clockwork Man's Canteen" by J. Steven York

"Red Carnation" by Lee Allred

"This Magic Moment" by Lisa Silverthorne

"Pinning the Rap" by O'Neil De Noux

"Daddy's Little Girls" by James C. Glass

"Catastrophe Baker and the Ship Who Purred" by Mike Resnick

"Active Reader" by Mark Leslie

"Collector's Curse: A Dan Shamble Zombie PI Adventure" by Kevin J. Anderson

"A Good Negro" by Ezekiel James Boston

"Fiction" by Jerry Oltion

"Alien Automotive" by Kent Patterson

"You Go Too Far" by Ray Vukcevich

"The One Left" by Valerie Brook

"Who's the Abomination?" by Johanna Rothman

"The Case of the Vanishing Boy: A Spade/Paladin Conundrum" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch

"Minions at Work 2.0: Snakes and Leaders" by J. Steven York

More Dean Wesley Smith, Annie Reed, J. Steven York, Lee Allred, Kevin J. Anderson, Jerry Oltion, Kent Patterson, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, O'Neil De Noux, Robert Jeschonek, Mike Resnick, Mark Leslie, Valerie Brook, Ezekiel James Boston, Lisa Silverthorne & James C. Glass Books