Department header
Bewildering Stories

The Readers’ Guide

What’s in Issue 422

Bewildering Stories News

Novel Fred the Rat is unable to take delivery of Jonas’ mystery parcel, but Frank pays Jonas anyway, considering the circumstances.
Ásgrímur Hartmannsson, Error, chapter 10
Serials Ladies Ada and Augusta, Lindy, and various Sam Clemens bid each other baroque adieux: Rob Hunter, Mark Twain in Milan, part 5; conclusion.

Prof. Majis Grimble sets out to Snaketown in search of Chebma Lorink. He must get past an old lady who seems to know an unexpected lot about Grimble himself: Harry Lang, The University of Dreams and Knowledge, part 1; part 2.
Short
Stories
New contributor David W. Landrum revives an old theatrical superstition. If a permanent backstage light goes out, ghosts may appear. A light is put out as an economy measure and the ghost that appears is perfect for a part in an upcoming production: The Understudy, part 1; part 2; part 3; conclusion.

A police station can become a rather strange place when a prisoner is required to remember how he got there: Bruce Memblatt, The Last Station.

An older sister gives a young artist his first inspiration: Ron Van Sweringen, Only Scratching the Surface.
Flash
Fiction
How many people in this family does it take not to change a light bulb? Do they really want to know? A. S. Andrews, Burned Out.

The editor of a local paper gets a better story than he expected — or dares to print: Arthur Mackeown, Deadlines.
Poetry Rebecca Lu Kiernan, Bent Arrow
Short
Poetry
Arnold Hollander, Star Trick
Oonah V. Joslin, Armchair Observatory, NASA December 5, 2010

Departments

Translation Carmen Ruggero, Aceptando la realidad
Welcome Bewildering Stories welcomes David W. Landrum.
Challenge Challenge 422 sees a Low-Light Sight.
The Reading
Room
Bill Bowler reviews Aidan Lucid, The Zargothian Tales
The Art
Gallery
A randomly rotating selection of Bewildering Stories’ art
NASA: Picture of the Day
Sky and Telescope, This Week’s Sky at a Glance

Bewildering Stories News

Backlog: Our Coordinating Editor, Bill Bowler, reports that the Special Agents of our new Prose Task Force have begun making a big dent in our backlog. Their help is invaluable, because Bewildering Stories was in danger of becoming a victim of its own success. A glance at the “long works pending” in our on-line schedule will give you a preliminary idea.

What the on-line schedule does not show is that there are more than 80 titles in the Short Stories line, and the total has sometimes reached 100. The backlog was about as long.

Our Associate Editors have been doing superb work with a promptness that we appreciate and admire. But we require at least two readings for every submission. As usual, the bottleneck is at the top; your Managing Editor and Coordinating Editor simply have not been able to keep up. Our new, highly qualified “special-ops” corps is already helping us clear the road.

In the end, much of the backlog will move to the official schedule. That won’t make much difference in terms of waiting time, but our contributors will know more promptly where their submissions stand. That will be good for their — and our — morale.

Don Webb
Managing Editor
Bewildering Stories


Randomly selected Bewildering motto:

Randomly selected classic rejection notice:

Bewildering Stories’ official mottoes:

“Poems are not made with ideas; they are made with words.” — Stéphane Mallarmé
Ars longa, vita brevis. Rough translation: “Proofreading never ends.”

To Bewildering Stories’ schedule: In Times to Come

Readers’ reactions are always welcome.
Please write!

Return to top

Return to the issue index

Copyright © March 7, 2011 by Bewildering Stories

Home Page