My Kind of Fantasy
Every
now and then a site comes along which - while it may not be the
next Yahoo online - has a worthy off-site presence which merits
the web site a mention.
Blackgate - John O'Neill editing - is one such occasion, forming
the online presence for one of the few decent independent fantasy
magazines in print.
Unlike many other smaller magazines which bandy about the term
'fantasy' in their subtitle, Blackgate actually has focus on adventure-oriented
stories (our own taste of fiction) … rather than slipstream, edgestream,
slash and whatever other labels are floating around for the various
deviancies of current experimental literature.
For those not in the know, the latter is informed by much the same
instinct that drives an artist to pile bricks in the Tate Modern
and expect to be much admired for it. If you can't write genre material
and get it published, churn out plotless, characterless drivel and
label it art. Ah, the heady scent of 'Art' masks many a foul odour
from the rotting word-games flytipped across the small-press.
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Blackgate ... make them your first alternative.
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Luckily for us, with Blackgate you get a wholesome whiff of dear
old mom's meat and two veg wafting from the kitchen.
You get cracking courses like 'The Mourning Trees' by Peadar Ó
Guilín - "The deadly mourning trees were a remnant of
a sorcerous war, and now one clutched Moya’s only son".
Then there's 'The Dead Man ...' by S.C. Smith - "The Dead Man
awoke on the shores of the Styx, only to find Hell ain’t what it
used to be". Or 'La Desterrada' by Jennifer Busick - "It’s
a dangerous thing, to be a Fire Magus at sea - and far more so when
the ancient art is forbidden to your sex."
Bucking the trend by the corporate houses to make their short-fiction
magazines barren wastelands devoid of cover art, Blackgate actually
carries interior art by the likes of Chris Pepper, Bernie Mireault,
Denis Rodier, Greg Faillace, Chuck Lukacs, and Gregory Price.
Admittedly, you don't get much of the print edition online … but
then if pony up $9.95 you can get 208(ish) pages of 'Adventures
in Fantasy Literature' regularly plopping through your letterbox.
Trust us, if short fiction is going to remain a medium able to
attract young readers into the ageing SF&F genre, fighting off
the web, mobile texting, AOL chat, TV, PC gaming and every other
call on a teenager's time, magazines like Blackgate will play its
part in winning the war.
Visit them at:
http://www.blackgate.com/
Stephen Hunt

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