Magazines

FictionDaily

In my introduction the other day to this year's Million Writers Award, I mentioned how the award brings attention to worthy stories and new writers. With so many online magazines and journals out there, this goal--trying to cut through the clutter, so to speak--is vitally important for readers and writers.

So imagine my excitement when I discovered a new website attempting to do the same thing: FictionDaily. Selecting and aggregating content from the "independent" publishing world, FictionDaily presents three new stories each day--a short, a long, and a genre story. Excerpt of stories in each of these categories are presented without reference to the author's name, the title, or the story's publication. If you're interested, you click over to the original publisher to read the story.

I think this is an exciting way for readers to keep on top of online fiction, and I hope FictionDaily succeeds.

To get a sense of the site's goals, I asked FictionDaily's editor David Backer a few questions.
 

Why did you start FictionDaily?

I started FictionDaily after I read an article in Mother Jones by Ted Genoways, the editor of The Virginia Quarterly Review, called "The Death of Fiction." The entire thing--article and comments--reads like an informal, emergent dissertation on the state of contemporary fiction. In my mind, its grand thesis is that fiction isn't necessarily dead. It's just changing, existing in a myriad electronic formats as opposed to the old university journals.

Genoways's article appeared at a serendipitous moment for me. I've been trying to find a mainstream publisher for my first novel, and I actually found an agent that liked it and an editor at a major house that liked it, but both of them said that they couldn't sell it. They thought it was good literature, but that it wasn't marketable. This seemed incredible to me: that the market would dictate what gets read and what doesn't. Why should the market, that gasping monster, decide what's good literature? So I thought "screw them" and started looking at the world of publishing that exists now outside of Border's Books and the major houses. This is where I found contemporary literature, iterating itself in spite of the market, just as the MJ article had confirmed. But even as an avid reader and writer, I didn't know where to look for literature on the Internet. There's just so much of it--I had no way of knowing where to click or why.

Arts and Letters Daily provides a service for finding good essays and reviews on the Internet. Their set up is wonderful--simple, attractive, organized. I look at it every day and read essays I would've never found otherwise. So, given this content-abundance problem in literature, I thought to make FictionDaily, which is the same kind of resource--but for fiction.

In the end, I made the site to get a better idea of where literature is now, but also to help our culture have the kind of conversation with itself that literature affords. We need to read stories that our contemporaries write. It's a healthy thing, an ancient human thing. It's part of our progress as individuals. But we need to adapt to our own technological advancements if we're going to continue this healthy habit. FictionDaily is trying to make that whole process easier.
 

On your website, you mention that literature’s pulse is changing, and that the old places which once supported this pulse can no longer keep up. How do you see Fiction Daily's role in creating a new place for literature to thrive?

FictionDaily "aggregates" online fiction. This is a word that my great friend Chadwick Matlin at TheBigMoney.com taught me, as it relates to websites: "aggregate" means to collect together into one place. (And it's a groovy word too: the root 'grex' is Latin for "flock," like in "congregate" or "gregarious.") There are a lot of aggregation websites for news, science, business, etc. But there isn't a good, elegant one for fiction. That's where FD comes in.

The wonderful thing about the Internet is its plurality: it's like a huge room with thousands of voices, all talking at the same time. But this plurality presents us with a problem, at least in fiction: If all these voices are talking at once, who do I listen to? When? Why? How do I find someone whose voice I like a lot? And, at the group level, how do we give these voices an opportunity to communicate to people who want to listen? FD tries to provide this kind of service for stories.
 

I like that you provide daily links to compelling examples of short, long, and genre fiction. How do you select the stories you link to?

I surf. I read and let my eyes roam the first sentences of stories. If I like a voice, if I like the images, then I keep reading. The stories that I want to finish I select and put up. It's actually a lot like channel-surfing in that way, only with words. (A weird thing I'm finding: I get turned off by rhetorical questions in stories. Like: "He went to the bathtub. Was it a turtle? Why was he feeling so anxious?" I don't like that for some reason. But that's just me.)
 

What made you decide to highlight excerpts from the stories themselves instead of the author's name, the story title, or the original publication?

That, I'm both proud and embarrassed to say, is ALDaily's idea. I like this approach for two reasons, the first is pretentious and the second isn't. First, pretentiously, I like it because the link is about the words. That's what fiction is supposed to be about, at least primarily. It's about the feeling I get from the words I'm reading. It's not about who is writing it or where it's published. That's secondary. I feel like we get so lost in the ego of our writing: who wrote it, where it's published, etc. I think ego gets in the way of stuff (this comes from some Hindu sympathies I have, philosophically). Ego is a lot of noise. I just want to read something good. Second, and less pretentiously, this approach creates a certain mystery. When I go to ALDaily and I look at a link, I ask "I wonder where that's published? I wonder who wrote it?" By withholding the name of the author and the magazine, it creates more reader-momentum towards the magazines and the writers.
 

Do you accept recommendations from readers and writers?

Absolutely. Editors also. Send me links! I'm trying to compile a more thorough resource of magazines, blogs, journals, etc. david.backer@gmail.com. (The only rub is this: I'm more interested in finding stories myself in the magazines. So I might have a bias against writers who email me saying, "Hey, look at my story. It's real good." Let your writing speak for itself from the magazine where it's been published, or from your blog. If you don't think I'll find you in my surfing, then email me. I really enjoy email correspondence.) I'm also starting to do interviews with editors and writers whose stuff I like. Look for Amber Sparks's new interview underneath the masthead where it says, "Interviews." I'm going to try and update this weekly.

Interzone Readers' Poll Selections

The Interzone Readers' Poll is running now through March 31. Readers can see all the eligible works, and vote for or against the stories and art, over on the Interzone Readers' Poll page.

Last year I was honored to have my story "When Thorns Are the Tips of Trees" win the Readers' Poll. This year I have two stories eligible: My novella "Sublimation Angels" (available at that link as a PDF download) and the short story "Here We Are, Falling Through Shadows."

Obviously I won't be voting for my own stories in the award. My positive votes for stories are:

  • "Sinner, Baker, Fabulist, Priest; Red Mask, Black Mask, Gentleman, Beast" by Eugie Foster, which made the BSFA Award shortlist for best short fiction and is doing well in nominations in the Nebula Award's novelette category. (Note to Nebula and BSFA voters: Read this story and vote for it!). This was one of my favorite stories of 2009, for reasons explained in my original review. This is the story I expect to win the Readers' Poll.
  • "No Longer You" by Katherine Sparrow and Rachel Swirsky.
  • "The Festival of Tethselem" by Chris Butler.
  • "The Godfall's Chemsong" by Jeremiah Tolbert.
  • "The Killing Streets" by Colin Harvey.
  • "Memory Dust" by Gareth L. Powell.
  • "By Starlight" by Rebecca J. Payne.

My positive votes for the art are

I could have voted for more stories, but decided to limit myself to seven. I also decided not to cast any negative votes this year because none of the Interzone stories really rubbed me wrong. Interzone remains my favorite SF/F magazine, and 2009 will go down as one of their best years ever.

Circulation of Online Genre Magazines

A month ago, I posted Online Genre Magazines: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. At the time, I stated "Based on my experience with online magazines, a top publication like Strange Horizons likely has between 1,000 to 2,000 unique visitors per day. Most other top markets will have 400 to 1000 visitors a day, and obscure markets will have 10 to 100 visitors a day at most."

However, the one weak point with my estimate was I didn't have current access to the website statistics of many online magazines. In response to my call to examine web stats, I received a large number of emails from editors, and a good number of these gave me access to their statistics. While a few were fine with being named, most wanted to stay anonymous. In honor of this I am not naming either the editors or the magazines who provided me with this information.

It appears that my original estimates appear to be correct, aside from being somewhat optimistic. Here are my revised estimates:

  • Top publications like Strange Horizons likely have between 800 and 1,500 unique visitors per day.
  • Most other top markets will have 300 to 800 visitors a day.
  • The majority of obscure markets will have 10 to 80 visitors a day at most, although a few climb into the lower hundreds per day.

Please note that, as I previously mentioned, places like Tor.com receive far more traffic than this since they focus on being more than a simple online magazine. Basically, the creation of an online community tied in with a genre magazine or publishing company brings many more visitors to a site. But most of these visitors are still not reading the online fiction.

One surprising finding was that the submission guidelines were the most popular pages at almost every magazine whose stats I examined. This means that for the less popular online magazines, the number of visitors who actually read their fiction may be less than the number who visit the site merely to learn how to submit stories.

Finally, not every unique visitor to an online magazine is truly unique. While I was working on this analysis, one print editor contacted me and said many people make the mistake of considering every visitor to an online genre magazine to be a unique visitor who only shows up once a month.

This is absolutely correct. Many visitors to online magazines return multiple times per month, just as a reader of a print magazine like Analog returns to one issue a number of times. So while Strange Horizons may technically have an estimated 30,000 plus visitors per month, many of these visitors return time and again to the site. This means it is unlikely even the biggest online genre magazines have surpassed print genre magazines in readership.

The other surprising finding is that major podcasts like StarShipSofa and Escape Pod have truly astounding levels of listenership, with tens of thousands of downloads per month. This doesn't prove people are listening to an entire show when they download a podcast. But since the act of downloading is a more dedicated act than surfing to a website--and since it would be rare for someone to download the same podcast more than once--I'm inclined to believe many genre podcasts should actually rank among the biggest online genre magazines out there.

I'll leave the comments below open for a bit, so please let me know if you think my analysis is on the mark or not. And if any of the editors I've consulted wish to state their view on all this for the record, feel free to do so.

Interzone and Black Static stories eligible for the Nebula Awards!

As someone who regularly publishes in Interzone, and loves the other authors and stories they publish, it has been an irritation that Interzone stories weren't eligible for the Nebula Awards. I could understand this exclusion if the Nebula Awards focused solely on print publications from the United States. However, their rules state "Works first published in English on the Internet or in electronic formduring the calendar year shall be treated as though published in the United States." That has meant a story published in a minor British online magazine was eligible, while a story published in one of the top print SF magazines in the world wasn't.

However, the good news is that stories published in Interzone (and its sister publication Black Static, which I'm less familiar with) are now eligible. Since both are reprinted in an electronic edition through Fictionwise, their stories can now be nominated for the Nebulas. Aliette de Bodard checked and the SFWA Awards Rules Committee said yes, stories published in the Interzone and Black Static Fictionwise edition are eligible. This is great news!

It appears all 2009 issues of Interzone are eligible except for the current Nov./Dec. issue, which has yet to be uploaded to Fictionwise. This also means my novella "Sublimation Angels" (available at that link as a PDF download) is now eligible since the Sept./Oct. 2009 issue of Interzone is already available on Fictionwise.

I plan to soon add a few more selections to my 2009 Nebula nominations. And you can bet Interzone stories will figure in the mix!

My nominations for the 2009 Nebula Awards

At 4:30 am this morning the SFWA sent out the voting instructions for the Nebula Awards. Basically, until February 15th SFWA members can nominated eligible stories online through the SFWA website. Here's a direct link to the ballot, but you'll have to log in to see it. You can also see the running tally here.

Because the nominating rules were recently changed, there is a bit of a holdover in that stories "which received at least five (5) recommendations under the previous Nebula Awards rules and were published after July 1, 2008, but didn't make the 2008 Preliminary Ballot get to have those nominations added to their total for this year." This means "The Political Prisoner" by Charles Coleman Finlay now has 6 nominations for best novella (see note below) and "I Remember the Future" by Michael A Burstein has 5 for best short story.

For anyone interested in what other stories and books might be up for the Nebula awards, check out the Nebula Suggested Reading. Many thanks to the unknown people who suggested my short story "When Thorns Are The Tips Of Trees" (available at that link as a PDF download; originally published in Interzone, but eligible for the Nebula by being reprinted in Apex Magazine, May 2009).

Since I have several months to make my nominations, I will likely add to the following list. But until then, here are my nominations. And yes, I think everyone should vote for these stories and novels.

Short story

Novelette

Novella

  • "The Political Prisoner" by Charles Coleman Finlay, F&SF Aug. 2008. Please note that I nominated this novella last year; under the rules, I can't nominate it again since last year's nomination still counts. But I still urge others to consider it. Update: It turns out this novella was on last year's final ballot, so isn't eligible for this year's. SFWA is correcting this error.

Novel

  • The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi. See my review here.
  • Green by Jay Lake.
  • The Walls of the Universe by Paul Melko.

As you can see, I made no nominations for the Bradbury or Norton awards. I'll try to fix this in the coming months.

Interzone 225 table of contents (includes a story by me)

I'm still recovering from an eye injury, so extensive blogging will have to wait a few more days. Until then, the good news is Interzone issue 225's out and features my story "Here We Are, Falling Through Shadows."

Cover for Interzone 225

Inside you will also find:

  • "By Starlight" by Rebecca Payne (And please note that not only is this Rebecca's first publication, this was the first time she'd ever submitted a story to a magazine or publisher. Send a big congrats her way!)
  • "Funny Pages" by Lavie Tidhar
  • "The Killing Streets" by Colin Harvey
  • "Bone Island" by Shannon Page and Jay Lake
  • And the usual reviews and features, including an amazing wrap-around cover by Adam Tredowski.

More information on the issue is available here. In addition, you can read an interview with artist Adam Tredowski on the TTA website.

Interzone 225

Issue 225 of Interzone (Nov./Dec. 2009) will be out November 12. In addition to stories by me, Lavie Tidhar, Rebecca Payne, Colin Harvey, Shannon Page and Jay Lake, the issue features an amazing wrap-around cover by Adam Tredowski.

Cover for Interzone 225I mean, that cover is flat-out a work of art.

I can't remember the last time I saw a SF magazine with a wrap-around cover. For those who don't know, wrap-around covers used to be more common in books and magazine, but have largely disappeared due to the pressures of marketing information and advertising. And in a Twitter post, TTA Press admits (with a tongue-in-cheek comment) this wrap-around cover is "a treat that disguises a major failure by the Advertising Manager." But it's still beautiful, so pick up a copy next month.

BTW, the last issue of Interzone, which contains my novella "Sublimation Angels," is now available for download as a multi-format ebook at Fictionwise.

Online Genre Magazines: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

Note: Below is a slightly edited version of the handout from my recent Context presentation. Not sure why it took me so long to upload it. I blame chronic laziness.

For writers, online genre magazines are not only a great way to build readership and name recognition, they also tend to be more accessible than many print magazines, with most accepting electronic submissions, featuring rapid acceptance to publication turn-around times, and a willingness to work with new writers. However, all online magazines are not equal in the exposure they bring to a writer's story.

While several top online magazines rival or surpass Analog and Asimov's in readership and "look," many others have poor design, non-existent editorial work, and a very limited readership. There's also a high mortality rate among online magazines—think SCIFiction, Baen's Universe, Farrago's Wainscot, and the almost countless smaller magazines which came and went without a notice. Duotrope Digest lists several hundred online SF, fantasy, and horror magazines in its database. It is highly unlikely the vast majority of these magazines will bring significant attention to a writer's stories.

So when writers ponder submitting to online magazines, they should consider these important points:

  1. Who are the editors? Because online magazines are so easy to create, you want to make sure that your story is noticed if it is accepted. The surest indicator of this are the editors listed on the masthead. If they're connected and known to the genre you're writing in, there's a good chance their online magazine will be noticed and read, even if it is new.  They are also less likely to publish an issue or two and then disappear.  This doesn't mean new "unknown" editors can't create a great online magazine, or that a known editor won't create a flop. But when someone puts their reputation on the line, they have a vested interest in seeing their magazine succeed. If you've never heard of an online magazine's editors, observe their magazine's track record and see what kind of reception their magazine and stories are receiving.
     
  2. Does the magazine look professional?  Anyone can create a simple website these days, but it takes time and skill to create a professional looking online magazine. If the magazine looks like it was thrown together in a hurry, or created with the latest blog software, that will reflect on how people consider the magazine's fiction. In addition, sites which are overly designed with flash movies and animation can drive people away before they have a chance to read your story, while old programming tricks like frames and massive artwork shoving text to the side makes for poor readability (especially when accessed by new technologies like iPhones). Look for online magazines with a simple but clean look.
     
  3. What is the magazine's readership? It's difficult to determine the readership of online magazines. As in the world of high finance, online magazines often inflate their numbers, if they report them at all. Based on my experience with online magazines, a top publication like Strange Horizons likely has between 1,000 to 2,000 unique visitors per day. Most other top markets will have 400 to 1000 visitors a day, and obscure markets will have 10 to 100 visitors a day at most. If a magazine has included in their site the ability to support an active online community, these numbers could go much higher. But I'd still bet this is an accurate estimate of the people actually reading that magazine's fiction. And while we can all quibble about the readership of online magazines, equally important to writers is who reads the magazines. Do the magazine's stories show up frequently in the "year's best" anthologies? Check out the honorable mentions in Gardner Dozois' Year's Best series to see a good listing of online magazines anthology editors will be reading.

Anyone desiring to explore more of the world of online fiction magazine should check out the storySouth Million Writers Award at www.storysouth.com/millionwriters. To learn more about specific genre magazines, including hundreds not mentioned here, go to Duotrope Digest at www.duotrope.com or Ralan's at www.ralan.com.

Selection of widely read SF/F/H online magazines

  • Aberrant Dreams, www.hd-image.com, SF/F/H, $.03/word to $100 maximum
    Publishes some very good fiction and pays decent rates. But their web design feels like something from the late 1990s. Also occasionally prone to delays with their new issues.
  • Abyss & Apex, www.abyssandapex.com, SF/F, $.05/word
    Publish very good fiction, but crap, improve that site design! With a site redesign, they'd likely be at the top of everyone's online magazine list.
  • Apex Magazine, www.apexbookcompany.com/apex-online, SF/F/H, SFWA Prof. Market
    Apex recently updated their design, making the look of the site equal to the great content they publish. They also offer very nice Kindle and PDF editions of their magazine, which is something all online mags should do.
  • Beneath Ceaseless Skies, beneath-ceaseless-skies.com, "literary adventure fantasy," $.05/word
    A wonderful online magazine with great stories and great design. In my opinion, they deserve to be selected as a SFWA Professional Market in the next year or so.
  • ChiZine, chizine.com, dark SF/F/H, SFWA Prof. Market
    Great design—if a little dark, which is definitely intentional—with great fiction.
  • Clarkesword Magazine, www.clarkesworldmagazine.com, SF/F, SFWA Prof.
    A near perfect mix of great fiction and great design. Hugo and World Fantasy Award nominee, republishes stories as print chapbooks and anthologies.*
  • Eclectica Magazine, www.eclectica.org, literary, but open to genre fiction
    One of the older online fiction magazines. A simple but clean design which focuses on the great fiction they publish.
  • Electric Velocipede, www.electricvelocipede.com, SF/F, leans toward steampunk. $.01/word, $25 minimum
    Good fiction, poetry and nonfiction, but the site's design could be improved (although it should be noted EV is a print magazine that posts some of its content online). But it won the 2009 Hugo Award for Best Fanzine, so forget about the design and just read the great content.*
  • Fantasy Magazine, www.darkfantasy.org/fantasy, fantasy (duh!), SFWA Prof. Market
    Great fantasy, nice design.  The editors work really hard to promote the stories they publish and to create their own online community of readers and writers.
  • Grantville Gazette, www.grantvillegazette.com, shared world fanfic, SFWA Prof. Market
    Publishes fanfic tied in with Eric Flint's 1632 universe. Stories are decent fanfic, but site's poor design drives me up the wall with content-scatter overload. Very difficult to navigate, but the upside is stories published here have a shot at publication in the Grantville Gazetter anthology series.
  • Heliotrope Magazine, www.heliotropemag.com, SF/F/H, $.10/word up to 5,000 words
    Very good magazine with a very clean design—once you move past their hyper-annoying banner ad on every page. I wonder if the small ad money they raise with this is worth aggravating so many readers.
  • Ideomancer, www.ideomancer.com, idea-based SF/F/H
    I love the look of Ideomancer, and they have some good stories, but the links to find the stories and poetry are not intuitive. Don't make your readers search for the story they want.
  • Menda City Review, mendacitypress.com
    High quality literary journal which is also open to literary-style genre fiction.
  • OSC's Intergalactic Medicine Show, www.intergalacticmedicineshow.com, SF/F, SFWA Prof.
    Nice design, great stories, all available for a one-issue purchase of only $2.50, a simple price and concept which I love.  They also commission great story artwork.
  • Pedestal Magazine, www.thepedestalmagazine.com, literary fiction, but open to all genres, SFWA Prof.
    This magazine makes me want to scream. Good to great content, but the design is so bad you can barely read it. Who the hell designs sites so they compress your story into a space mere inches wide?
  • Strange Horizons, www.strangehorizons.com, SF/F/H, SFWA Prof. Market
    Founded in 2000, Strange Horizons proved that a non-profit magazine could succeed online. Very supportive of emerging writers. While site design is a bit dated, they aim to fix this in near future. I'd estimate Strange Horizons receives the most traffic of any online genre magazine (at least, until Tor.com came around).
  • Subterranean, www.subterraneanpress.com/magazine, SF/F/H, SFWA Prof. Market
    Great art and fiction plus a nice design, although the stories can be difficult to read at times due the small width of their display.  Very receptive to longer stories like novellas (which is unusual among online magazines).
  • Tor.com, www.tor.com, SF/F/H, SFWA Prof. (paying 25 cents/word to 5000 words, 15 cents next 5000, 10 after)
    The new standard by which all online magazines are judged. Also the highest paying online market. The only problem: They aren't open to submissions unless the editor invites you to submit.

* I've updated the post to reflect the fact that Clarkesworld is a Hugo and WFA nominee, not winner, and that Electric Velocipede is a print magazine that posts content online.

Sci Fiction Lives! (in that resurrected-zombie archived way)

Sci Fiction, the great online SF/F magazine edited by Ellen Datlow, was killed by the SciFi channel almost four years ago. Naturally, this foreshadowed the many stupid things the channel would do in the years that followed, culminating in their disease-sounding rebranding of Syfy.

For a while the Sci Fiction archives remained on the SciFi Channel's website, but the rebranding and new url killed that. The good news, though, is that thanks to the Wayback Machine internet archive, you can still read all that great Sci Fiction!

This includes the Nebula Award winning stories "What I Didn't See" by Karen Joy Fowler and "The Empire of Ice Cream" by Jeffrey Ford, the Theodore Sturgeon Award winning novella "Over Yonder" by Lucius Shepard, and the World Fantasy Award winning "The Pottawatomie Giant" by Andy Duncan. The archives also include such classic reprints as "Aye, and Gomorrah" by Samuel R. Delany and "Painwise" by James Tiptree, Jr.

Anyone needing a great fiction hit should check it out.

Seeking input on online SF/F/H magazines

In a few weeks I'll be leading a discussion titled "Online Genre Magazines: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly" at the Context SF Convention. As I prepare for this, I'd like to hear from editors and readers about their reactions to the different online genre magazines. In particular, if you want me to consider adding your online magazine to my analysis, let me know about it by dropping me an email.

A few points. First, I plan on reprinting this analysis online after the convention, so it will be seen by a number of people. Second, all of the genre magazines in the notable stories list for the Million Writers Award will be in my analysis b/c I'm familiar with them through my work running the award. Third, my analysis will focus on detailing three aspects of each genre magazine: quality of content, quality of editorial work, and quality of site design. I'll also mention which are SFWA professional markets and maybe one or two other items, but my main focus will be alerting writers to those online genre magazines which provide the best exposure for their work.

Email or tweet me your ideas and suggestions.

The Great "How Fast Does Jason Get Rejected by F&SF?" Contest

I have three copies to give away of David Hartwell and Kathryn Cramer's anthology Year's Best SF 14, which includes my Interzone story "The Ships Like Clouds, Risen by Their Rain." So let's do a little contest; the three winners all receive free copies of the book.

Here's the deal: In the next few days, I will be submitting a new story to Fantasy and Science Fiction. As most writers already know, F&SF processes submitted stories in a very fast manner. This isn't a complaint against the magazine--the simple truth is editor Gordon Van Gelder and assistant editor John Joseph Adams (aka Slushgod, who is the first reader for the slush pile) work extremely hard to respond to all submissions in a prompt manner. As a writer, I appreciate this.

So the contest will be guessing how many days it takes for my story to be rejected. For an idea on F&SF's submission response times, check out their Duotrope Digest listing. The date range will be based on how long it takes from mailing the submission to when the rejection arrives in my mailbox. My previous three submissions to F&SF had a rejection time of 7 days, 12 days, and 21 days, as listed in my Duotrope submission tracker.

The three people who guess closest each win a book. If by some unlikely chance the story is accepted, I'll throw all the entered names into a hat and draw the winners. And if more than three people pick the same winning day, the hat will also be used to pick the winners from among those people.

If you want to track the contest, you can follow my submission progress at twitter.com/jasonsanford. To enter, email me your name and rejection guess to lapthai (at sign) yahoo (dot) com. And please make sure you have a snail mail address I can send the book to. And yes, anyone anywhere in the world is welcome to enter.

Save the Semiprozine Hugo

Now here's a movement I can totally get behind--saving the Hugo Award for best semiprozine, which refers to "semiprofessional" magazines. While that term may sound strange, it basically covers the small magazines which publish professional-level work, publications like Interzone, Locus, The New York Review of Science Fiction, and so on. The problem certain people have with the award is that Locus ends up winning it most years, so these folks think the entire category should be done away with. I strongly disagree.

Neil Clarke, the publisher and editor of Clarkesworld Magazine, also hates the idea and has started a campaign to convince WorldCon attendees to save the award. Check out Neil's site to learn more about the award, and pass the word on saving this Hugo.

TTA Press has new website

I've been up most of the night with a sick kid, so I was awake when TTA Press launched their newly redesigned website. In addition to having specific sites for their core magazines Interzone, Crimewave, and Black Static, the site also features a lively forum and more. Kudos to the TTA staff for the excellent new website look!

Received final issue of Realms of Fantasy

I received the final issue of Realms of Fantasy in the mail today. First thought: They couldn't at least print something on the wrap-around mailing cover that says this is the final issue? Instead, we get the "Renew Early and Save!" message they always have. I understand they probably have a ton of these wrap-around covers at the mailing house, but it seems a bit dishonest to encourage people to renew when there are no more issues coming out.

Based on some of the complaints aired online about RoF since they announced the publication's demise, this is likely typical of their business-end practices. Everyone I heard from agreed with me that the editorial side of RoF was top-notch. But way too many people had complaints about how the magazine's business side was run. But I guess none of that matters at this point.

Apex Magazine goes PDF

Apex Magazine is switching to a PDF magazine format, with individual issues available for $2. Readers can also order a full-year subscription at a discounted price of $12.The PDF will be formatted like the print edition of Apex, which ceased publication last year. Since then, Apex has published stories on their website. Editor Jason Sizemore hopes using a PDF format will enable Apex to combine the best aspects of the print magazine with the advantages of online distribution.

Personally I think this is a great idea. I encourage people to purchase the PDF of the Feb. 2009 Apex, which features stories by Gord Sellar, Lavie Tidhar, Steven Francis Murphy, and Aaron Polson, along with an essay by Alethea Kontis and an interview with R. Thomas Riley.

Interzone Readers' Poll

The Interzone Readers' Poll is now up and I have two stories in contention: "When Thorns Are The Tips Of Trees" from issue 219 and "The Ships Like Clouds, Risen By Their Rain" from issue 217. As with all Interzone Readers' Polls, you can vote positively for stories you like and negatively for stories you dislike.

I voted in last year's poll, but because I have two stories under consideration I'm going to abstain this time to avoid any conflict of interest. But I urge people to take part and support this wonderful SF magazine.

F&SF goes for larger, bi-monthly, format

Over at SF Signal is the disturbing news that Fantasy and Science Fiction will be going to a larger format published on a bi-monthly schedule. I understand the reasoning behind this move. I also think the larger issues will be a bigger seller on newsstands. However, it's hard to see this as good news. As I've previously mentioned, NYRSF and Locus are both having circulation problems, and I wouldn't be surprised to see more SF/F magazines follow F&SF's lead in the coming year. After all, the economy is bad and when people cut back, they always cut back on the non-essentials first (with that statement being about essentials from a life-supporting view--I know many people including myself think of our SF/F reading as essential). As I mentioned in that earlier post, this next year will likely be critical for the survival of SF/F magazines. Unfortunately, this is turning out to be an accurate prediction.