Welcome to the twenty-ninth issue of the Freezine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. Thus we arrive together to the end of yet another month. If you are reading this, congratulations. It's a clear indication that you have survived this far into the new millennium. We are all the happier for it.
This blog (masquerading as a webzine) has shifted gears in its productivity just three months ago. In early September of this year, the bloodHost sent a series of missives, which I'm still processing and trying to make heads or tails out of it all. One of the imperatives was that we begin putting the Freezine out regularly once again.
For those who've been with us since the beginning, for the first few years we released an issue every other month, for six issues per year. We couldn't maintain that rate of productivity, and so after about four years or so the issues began coming out on a more irregular basis. It's all documented in the Blog Archive in the right hand drop down column.
Since September this year, we have been releasing an issue per month, which is to say, there will be twelve issues of the Freezine of Fantasy and Science Fiction slated for next year. The transmissions I've received from the so-called nanoFleet or bloodHost (the nanobots flowing through my bloodstream) ostensibly were sent back in time to the year 2009 from 2045 by a surviving crew of astronauts working for Tesla, Inc. who end up trapped on their space station (the Hydrox) orbiting Ceres. I've gathered they must be there on a water mining operation.
Honestly I've only recently begun to form a better picture of what's been happening with me since I was mysteriously compelled to begin putting this fanzine out on the blogger forum without monetization or ads about twelve and a half years ago. Little by little the clues have been adding up over the spun seasons, and the scenario has come into better focus.
For this Autumnal issue I'd like to give a shout-out of a thousand thanks to its contributors:
A. A. Attanasio for his gracious alacrity to allow our humble Freezine to publish some of his flash fiction, which in the context of this webzine I prefer to consider micro fiction. We were grateful to have been presented with The Gift in last month's issue, and here in the latest November issue that theme has been expounded upon in two more pieces, Finding the Waze and What the AGI Saw. The far reaching cosmic theme shared by these thoughtful pieces just so happens to coincide seamlessly with the underlying metanarrative being slowly developed in our digital periodical.
John Shirley for his accommodating short form contributions: in September we ran three pieces (So What If They Die?, Isn't That Adorable?, and Extraterrestrials Decide if the Dominant Species of Inhabited Planet 38790 Should be Exterminated for Extreme Vileness) and now this month his short, sharp and shocking parable The Cloud of Unseeing brings our 29th issue to a close with resounding finality. On that note, I'd like to add that if this turns out to be the final post for the Freezine, it will have winked shut on the perfect note. Or should I say remained wide open for future surfers of the weirder curling edges of the world wide web to stumble onto and enjoy.
Charles Carter for his willingness to allow the Freezine to display his fantastical AI-enhanced digital artwork. Not only do his haunting images provide the perfect counterpoint to the underlying metanarrative promulgated by the swarm of nanobots beamed back in time from the future into the central nervous system of apparently countless human subjects spread out over a wide segment of recent history, but I've found that its modernist techno guise remains ideally suited to complement our own lucid sense of cosmic futurism, here. As such, we welcome him and his splendid visions to dance within the pixels of our screens.
Al, John, and Charles: a triple salute of recognition and gratitude to all three of you! Thanks from the bottom of my heart for playing along with me during the constant constructions of this digital digest. Without your input this virtual creative writing workshop and cyberzine dedicated to the 21st century would be all the poorer for it.
And a hearty thank you to all of our readers and followers and hangers on lurking here and perusing all the strange contributions and soaking up the visual imagery presented for our entertainment and leisurely edification. Without you I suppose I'd be doing this for no one but myself and some of the contributors. I'm excited now about the prospect of releasing a different issue every month from here on out.
☈ 29 | Third Eye Issue
Table of Contents
+click images below
to read the stories~
by A. A. Attanasio
by A. A. Attanasio
by Shaun Lawton
by John Shirley
Featuring artwork
only on
the Freezine of
Fantasy and Science
FICTION
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