#the magazine of fantasy and science fiction
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Tamsyn Muir's writing beyond The Locked Tomb
Y'all, turns out there's lots of imagery and themes in TLT that Muir was already playing with in her earlier fiction. A lot of it is easily available online, in which case I'll link to it. (The short stories that aren't can also be easily read if googled, to be quite honest—that's how I read The Deepwater Bride and Why the Mermaids Left Boralus). • The House That Made the Sixteen Loops of Time (2011)
5K. Short sort-of-cozy romance (?) with (you guessed it) a time travel loop. Explores a very queer potential relationship. CamPal enjoyers might find a similar sweetness.
• The Magician's Apprentice (2012, Lightspeed Magazine)
5K. This is the one that stopped me dead on my tracks. It features an older, male mentor figure called John (a “very ordinary man” with “dark eyes”) who introduces the young, female main character to magic that has a terrible cost—and to literature such as Lolita. This excellent post by @familyabolisher does an incredible job of analyzing the very deliberate intertextual links between TLT and Lolita.
• The Woman in the Hill (2015, Lightspeed Magazine, originally for Dreams From the Witch House anthology of Lovecraftian horror by women)
4K. Possibly my favorite! It's a straightforward Lovecraftian horror, centered on the image of the woman (is it human though?) trapped in an unnatural pool inside a cursed cave. Chain imagery too. It does something different from Alecto, mind, but you can see links, ways of playing with facets of a strong central image. It's fun to consider how reliable the two narrators are. Here's an analysis and afterthought from Reactor Mag.
• Chew (2013) 4K. Zombie abuse and cannibalistic revenge story ft. an uncanny woman revenant, told from the eyes of a traumatized German boy. I was strongly reminded of Harrow's conversations with the Body. Tamsyn gave an interview on the themes and her intentions. Interesting to read in light of Alecto, I think, although I don't think she's going the same route in TLT: “the idea of post-war rebuilding connecting to rebuilding the body of the zombie; a Frankenstein who once rebuilt doesn’t act as planned or desired. […] I love cannibalism […] it’s innately spiritual […] any afterlife she goes to, he’s going too.”
• Apothecia (2014, published on Tumblr and tapas.io)
Short webcomic where an alien monster tries to corrupt the ruthless human girl who holds it captive. Musings on responsibility and murder, mention of child abuse. The alien's speech patterns remind me of a Resurrection Beast. You get wonderful dialogue like “Murder is a profession. Job. Employment, you tiny leg dog. There you are, walking along. Walk walk walk. Now you are a walker. Good job. Special child. Murder is like this.” Art by Shelby Cragg.
• The Deepwater Bride (2015, Fantasy & Science Fiction Magazine)
The opening line is: “In the time of our crawling Night Lord's ascendancy, foretold by exodus of starlight into his sucking astral wounds, I turned sixteen and received Barbie's Dream Car.” Need I say more? Extremely fun. A novelette where a young queer girl from a clairvoyant family struggles with an apocalyptic event while being annoyed by another very plucky girl. Lots of descriptions with nerdy marine zoology terms. Close in tone to Gideon. In the background, someone dies EXACTLY like that one death at the end of Gideon, which makes me wonder what happened to make Tamsyn interested in this particular image. I also liked that Tamsyn is aware of Nightwish. No link, but you'll get a PDF immediately if you Google.
• Union (2015, Clarkesworld Magazine)
5.5K. Very weird, extremely Kiwi story about a town that gets sent lab-grown wives by the government, but they're not made the usual way so they're Weird and people have feelings about it. Fascinating and eerie description of non-human (in some people's eyes, sub-human) women (?) who cannot be observed to have recognizable feelings or thoughts, yet have some sort of inner life. Quite touching, very uncanny.
• Princess Floralinda and the Forty-Flight Tower (2020)
Short novel (~200 pages). Very funny. I was reminded of Coronabeth because the whole plot is “princess finds herself branching out into decidedly non-princess-like activities”, but other than that—this is a fairytale for adults about people who make eachother worse. No particular links to TLT but a very fun read with some gut punches. Extremely Tamsyn through and through, what with the dubious morality and all.
• Why the Mermaids Left Boralus (2021, in Folk & Fairy Tales of Azeroth by Blizzard Entertainment)
Set in the World of Warcraft universe. Haven't read this one yet, will report back lmao. As with The Deepwater Bride, no link but I easily found a PDF of the entire compilation. It's illustrated!
• Undercover (2022, from Into Shadow, Amazon Original Collection)
Haven't read it either. Will edit once I do.
#TLT#TLT meta#The Locked Tomb#Tamsyn Muir#TLT analysis#Chew#The Magician's Apprentice#The House That Made the Sixteen Loops of Time#Why the Mermaids Left Boralus#Union#Undercover#Princess Floralinda#Princess Floralinda and the Forty-Flight Tower#The Deepwater Bride#The Woman in the Hill#Alectopause#Tamsyn#tazmuir#Apothecia
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The Magazine of Fantasy And Science Fiction, August 1962 (Ed Emshwiller)
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Anthropological Note - art by Albert Nuetzell (1957)
#albert nuetzell#50s sci-fi art#the magazine of fantasy and science fiction#cover art#space art#space rockets#anthropological note#1950s#1957
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The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, March 1954.
Cover by Fred Kirberger. The cover was purchased by FASF and sent to Alfred Bester with a request to write a story that would fit it. "5,271,009" [sometimes later anthologized as "The Starcomber"] was the result.
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The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, November 1974 Cover by Robin Mazey and Roye Schell
#robin mazey#roy schell#the magazine of fantasy and science fiction#1974#1970s#vintage#fantasy#fantasy art#art#illustration#painting
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The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction
#my posts#hypnosis#hypnotism#science fiction#sci fi#vintage#pulp magazine#pulp science fiction#pulp sci fi#pulp magazines#fantasy#fantasy and science fiction#pulp magazine art#pulp fiction#the magazine of fantasy and science fiction#vintage science fiction#vintage sci fi#vintage fantasy
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The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, vol. 31, no. 6 (December 1966), with cover art by Howard Purcell (1918-1981).
#the magazine of fantasy and science fiction#howard purcell#illustration#illustration art#magazine covers
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https://archive.org/details/Fantasy_Science_Fiction_v023n03_1962-09_Hybr11
Theodore Sturgeon issue
#the magazine of fantasy and science fiction#theodore sturgeon#science fiction literature#science fiction#sf
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From a day about town: magazines from Barnes & Noble and vinyl from Block Street Records!
#magazines#pulp magazines#art magazines#music magazine#fiction#science fiction#fantasy#analog#alfred hitchcock's mystery magazine#asimov's science fiction#the magazine of fantasy and science fiction#Hi-Fructose#Juxtapose#classic rock presents prog#music#album#new albums#album update#rock#progressive rock#hard rock#eletronic music#psychedelic rock#yes#mountain#emerson lake and powell#blue cheer#badger#thin lizzy#synergy
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Cover by Ed "Emsh" Emshwiller
FANTASY AND SCIENCE FICTION Vol. 13 #4 (Fantasy House, 1957)
Art: "EMSH" (?)
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Art by Virgil Finlay
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Clyde Caldwell, 'Barsoom', ''Heavy Metal'', September 1982 Source
#clyde caldwell#american artists#barsoom#edgar rice burroughs#heavy metal magazine#john carter#Dejah Thoris#scifi art#science fiction art#fantasy art#color illustration
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Tom Barber, 1977.
#sci fi and fantasy#scifiart#scifi#galileo magazine#galileo#70s sci fi#70s science fiction#tom barber#1977#70s
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George Schelling's cover art for "Cosmos Science Fiction and Fantasy Magazine," May 1977
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The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April 1954.
Cover by Emsh
SpaceX: elon decided to turn a dial!
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