Featuring "Lost for Words" by Ramsey Campbell, this issue showcases a blend of original stories from both veteran and emerging writers. Darrell Schweitzer and Mark Samuels contribute unique narratives, while Curtis M. Lawson explores a science fiction/horror fusion. Katherine Kerestman delivers a compelling vampirism tale, and other authors like Scott J. Couturier and Geoffrey Reiter provide unsettling glimpses into the strange. Additionally, a classic reprint of Algernon Blackwood's inaugural weird tale enriches the collection.
John C. Tibbetts Books
John C. Tibbetts is an author who explores film history and theory with an artist's sensibility. His work delves into the aesthetic dimensions of cinema and media studies, offering readers a profound engagement with visual art. Tibbetts's multidisciplinary talents, spanning writing, illustration, and broadcasting, enable him to present complex subjects in an accessible and compelling manner. His academic and artistic approach enriches the understanding of the interplay between film, music, and broader cultural contexts.



This critical study delves into G.K. Chesterton's exploration of dark themes in his novels, stories, and essays. It examines his detective stories, science fiction, and paradoxical works, using the motif of "gargoyles" as a thematic framework. The book also features an interlude on Chesterton and Borges, plus an appendix with interviews.
Those Who Made It
- 235 pages
- 9 hours of reading
What was it like to work behind the scenes, away from the spotlight's glare, in Hollywood's so-called Golden Age? The interviews in this book provide eye-witness accounts from the likes of Steven Spielberg and Terry Gilliam, to explore the creative decisions that have shaped some of Classical Hollywood's most-loved films.