Plugs

Jason Erik Lundberg‘s fiction is forthcoming from Subterranean Magazine and Polyphony 7.

Susannah Mandel’s short story “The Monkey and the Butterfly” is in Shimmer #11. She also has poems in the current issues of Sybil’s Garage, Goblin Fruit, and Peter Parasol.

Sara Genge’s story “Godtouched” may be found in Strange Horizons.

Read Rudi’s story “Detail from a Painting by Hieronymus Bosch” at Behind the Wainscot.

Archive for the ‘Sara Genge’ Category

Kingdom In The Clouds

Friday, November 23rd, 2007

From the vantage point on the early rainbow, we saw them coming to the Kingdom-In-The-Clouds. The pirates climbed the cliff silently, hearts warmed with tequila, knives gripped firmly between their teeth.

We didn’t shout for fear of startling them and breaking the silent rhythm of their climb. Instead, we sent the children to greet them with instructions to choose a pirate each, grab him by the hand and take him home. The mothers were waiting in the houses with food on the fire and warm water for baths. The pirates ate hungrily, slobbering juices down their beards, eyes darting up as their mouths worked, all thoughts of violence startled out of them. They were so surprised, they even thanked us for the food.

We were patient with them, patient with their hunger and their need for warmth in the night. And in the morning, we’d completed our spells and took them to work in the fields with our other husbands, to suffer
a slavery without whip, a slavery enforced only by their pitiful devotion to us.

We set some of them free, like we always do. Your people have heard them, drinking their lives away in your taverns. After seeing our Kingdom, after falling in our thrall, how can their lives be happy? So they drink, and you hear them mutter to all who will hear: “There is a country past the Rainbow. It’s hard to reach and hard to conquer, but oh, lucky is the man who lives in the Kingdom-In-The-Clouds.

From the vantage point on the early rainbow, we wait for our new husbands to come to us. We instruct the children, butcher the lambs and warm the water.

We spring our trap.

Limb Enigma Disorder. An Introduction.

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

Limb-Reanimation Dysphoria, also known as Limb Enigma Disorder or LED is a recently described condition ailing those patients whose limbs have needed extensive reanimation techniques. It is obvious that limb-reanimation–usually due to heart failure to the limb–is a specially traumatic medical intervention, particularly for those patients who, except for their limbs, remain conscious during the affair. The majority of patients experience some sadness, heaviness and lack of joie de vivre in their limbs for a few days, but in a small percentage of cases, this condition becomes persistent and merits the diagnosis of LED.

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