Category Archives: Fantasy and Science Fiction

Maybe It’s Not Dead After All: An Update on F&SF

I am glad to report that Fantasy & Science Fiction may not be dead after all. Locus Online is quoting publisher Gordan Van Gelder as saying, “Ongoing production problems have led us to skip the Spring issue and to switch to a quarterly schedule.” There is a link to the magazine’s page on Weightless Books, but there’s no quote from Van Gelder there.

I’m not sure where Gordan said this. Locus Online didn’t provide a source. Perhaps from an interview in an upcoming issue. He’s further quoted as saying that no subscribers will miss any issues.

This is good news. F&SF has been one of the mainstays of short fantasatic fiction for almost  three quarters of a century. I wish Gordan and the magazine all the best.

However, I have some thoughts.

First, to be nitpickiing,, because it’s been that kind of day, If they skipped the Spring issue, doesn’t that mean they’ve already gone to a quarterly schedule.  And by the way, does going to quarterly drop F&SF out of the professional market category, at least as far as SFWA and awards are concerned? (Not that I really care.)

Also, even though the temperature today was around ninety-four where I am, isn’t summemr over? What about fall?

Now, some more seriouis thoughts.

I’m glad subscriptions will be honored and no subscribers will miss any issues. I renewed my subscription for two years last spring. I should be good for a while.

The table of contents is posted on this issue’s page at Weightless Books. The only two names I recognize are Esther Friesner and Nina Kiriki Hoffman. Both are excellent writers. Their contributions are short stories. The remaining ten short stories and three novelettes are by people whose names I don’t recognize.

I’m all for publishing new authors. I’m not against publishing a wide array of writers from different backgrounds who might have unique voices. i get that.

But from a business perspective, in an industry in which margins are getting thinner and survival less of a certainty, shouldn’t there be more recognizable names on the cover, or at least on the table of contents?

I must admit I’ve been idsappointed in the issues I’ve managed to read in the last few years. I’m definitely going to try to read every story in this issue. I’m hoping to discover some new favorite authors (at least one). I’ll let you know what I think.

RIP The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction?

Version 1.0.0

Before I start this post, I want to point out that the title ends in a question mark. It is not intended to be a statement of fact.

But it is a valid question.  The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (F&SF) hasn’t had a new issue in over six months.  Questions aren’t being answered. Last year some authors claimed they hadn’t been paid for their stories.
The  question has come up over the last week.

I saw a post from Sean CW Korsgaard on Sunday saying his enjoyment of GenCon had been dampened a little when he saw the news about F&SF and SFWA. (There seems to be some drama going on behind the scenes at SFWA, but I’m not going to address that here. I’m not a member. Not my circus, not my monkeys.)

Sean didn’t elaborate or answer any questions about what was going on. Continue reading

Margaret St. Clair and Her Causes

“The Causes”
Margaret St. Clair
First published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 1952
Currently available in The Hole in the Moon and Other Tales

Margaret St. Clair (1911-1995) was born on this date, February 17. Although she wrote eight novels, she is best remembered for her short stories, both under her own name and the pseudonym Idris Seabright. “The Causes” was one of the Seabright stories, most of which were published in F&SF.

Bar stories and the closely related club stories, which are often some type of tall tale, have a long history in the science fiction and fantasy fields. “The Causes” falls into this subgenre. It’s a fun and clever little story. Continue reading

Three by Wellman

Manly Wade Wellman

Today, May 21, marks the birth of Manly Wade Wellman (1903-1986). Wellman is best remembered for his stories of the John the Balladeer, set in the Appalachian mountains. But he wrote a lot of other things, as well.

I first discovered Wellman’s short stories in the pages of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction.  He had a number of  stories published there in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s. Someone who had had a subscription had sold an almost complete run to the local second hand bookstore when I was in high school. Wellman’s stories were among the first I read when I picked up an issue with his name on the cover.

If you haven’t figured it out by now, Wellman is a favorite around these here parts, so in honor of his birth, in addition to raising a glass in his honor later this evening, I’m going to look at three of his stories that feature the same  character, Sergeant Jaeger. Continue reading

C. C. Finlay Named New Editor of F&SF

fsf-july-august-2014_med-2C. C. Finlay (who began his writing career under the name Charles Coleman Finlay) announced on his blog today that he is now the new editor of F&SF,  Gordon Van Gelder will continue in his role as publisher.  Gordon left a substantial inventory of stories.  There will be a period in which issues of the magazine will contain selections by both editors until the stories in the inventory are published.

Finlay guest edited two issues last year. The first was the July/August issue.  The second has yet to see print.  It’s the March/April issue, which is the next one out of the gate.  He was guest editing a third, when the position became permanent.  Which means I don’t have to rush to meet tomorrow’s deadline since there’s no way I’ll have something ready.

Adventures Fantastic would like to wish Mr. Finlay all the best.  I look forward to reading the stories he selects.

Long Looks at Short Fiction: "Maze of Shadows" by Fred Chappell

“Maze of Shadows”
Fred Chappell
Fantasy and Science Fiction, May/June 2012
258 pgs., $7.50

This story got the cover of the current issue of F&SF, which gives the impression that it’s a sword and sorcery tale.  Turns out it’s a high fantasy set in a Renaissance style world much like Italy.  It’s also part of a series.  I’ve not read the other installments, but since I have a complete run of the magazine going back to the early 70s, I’ll look them up.  Time constraints have kept me from reading every story in every issue for the last few years, something I’m trying to correct.

But I digress.  “Maze of Shadows” was not quite what I thought it was, but it was still an enjoyable tale, a complex mystery that should not be read near bedtime or when you’re tired.  You’ll need to be alert for this one.  That’s a good thing.

The story concerns one Falco, an apprentice shadow master.  He and his fellow apprentice Mutano had been set the task of creating an shadow maze in a small mansion owned by a nobleman.  The nobleman wants to protect something of great value, and the shadow maze is supposed to do just that.  The way it works is the shadows make things appear different than they are.  For instance, what appears to be a stairwell hides a precipitous drop.  In order to test the maze, Falco’s master, Maestro Astolfo, had him leave a ring on a table in one of the inner rooms.  The story opens with Maestro Astolfo giving Falco the ring and introducing him to a blind healer named Veuglio, who was the person who retrieved the ring with the aid of a young girl called by the name of his daughter, Sybilla.

Of course, there is more going on here than is visible on the surface, much more.  Relationships exist between Maestro Astolfo, Veuglio, Sybilla, and the nobleman that Falco is unaware of.  As he tries to piece things together, he realizes there are hidden depths to Maestro Astolfo.

One of the subplots, which will turn out to be intricately entwined with the main plot is that concerning Mutano’s voice.  It’s been stolen by a cat, so that the cat now speaks with Mutano’s voice, and he with the cat’s.  This may have happened in a previous installment of the series.  Like I said, I’ve not read any of them. 

Now I am not a fan of the subgenre of cat stories, wherein cats solve crimes, combat wizards, or take over the world (they’ve already done the latter).  So this part of the story was a bit of a challenge for me to buy into.  However, once I thought about the setting (a pseudo-medieval Italy or something very like it), and the types of stories and folktales that would have been common in the real medieval Italy, I found that it actually fit.  There could have been a little less emphasis on the cat subplot for my taste, but it did turn out to be crucial to the story.

This was a dense mystery, with much misdirection and seemingly unrelated details scattered throughout, key word being “seemingly”.  Falco says in the opening scene that “Shadow mazes are designed to deceive the eyes.”  Chappell has created a literary shadow maze, with much deception.  While it may not be for everyone, if you have the patience, it’s worth the read.