Mel Anastasiou Book order
Mel Anastasiou crafts compelling mysteries, often featuring older sleuths who are gifted amateur detectives navigating unfamiliar territory. Her writing delights in the unexpected, bringing a unique charm and sharp wit to her stories. Anastasiou's dual perspective, shaped by her life in the UK and Canada, infuses her work with a distinctive literary voice.





- 2022
- 2021
Pulp Literature Summer 2021: Issue 31
- 226 pages
- 8 hours of reading
Beneath the coastal landscape of Tatjana Mirkov-Popovicki's Helby Island Afternoon, families navigate magic, migration, murder, and mayhem in short fiction from Brenda Carre, Elsa M Carruthers, Hajera Khaja, Graham Robert Scott, Janet Smith, and Colleen Anderson. Matthew Nielsen searches for belonging and the Bumblebee winner alights. Allaigna faces new adventures in Oburakor by JM Landels. And Frankie Ray returns for a final bow in the last installment of The Extra by Mel Anastasiou.
- 2018
Pulp Literature Summer 2018: Issue 19
- 218 pages
- 8 hours of reading
Beneath the eerie, arid cover by Tais Teng you'll find an exciting pre-release peek at Advent by Michael Kamakana; transformative short fiction from Sylvia Stopforth, Richard J O'Brien, and Susan Pieters; aliens and insects from Jasmin Nyack and Charity Tahmaseb; poetry from James Norcliffe and Maria Pascualy; Spencer Stevens in the age of steam; runaway-turned-fugitive Allaigna in Aria; a return visit to Nine Isles with Joseph Stilwell and Hugh Henderson; and the winner of the Bumblebee Flash Fiction Contest.
- 2017
Pulp Literature Summer 2017: Issue 15
- 222 pages
- 8 hours of reading
Meet Gret, the charmingly abrasive heroine of Brenda Carre's next novel; a knight to remember from Charity Tahmaseb; and a rebel heiress posing as a highwaywoman from Mel Anastasiou. Kris Sayer brings us goats and trolls, and AM Soto gives us aliens who are more like us than we think. We have two very different Californian tales from Susan Pieters and Adam Golub, plus the contest-winning stories from Ingrid Jendrzejewski, Jay Allisan, and Angela Post. There is poetry from Benjamin Hertwig, Jenny Black, and Nicholas Christian, and a brand-new chapter of Allaigna's Song - all beneath the stunning cover by S Ross Browne.
- 2017
Pulp Literature Autumn 2017: Issue 16
- 200 pages
- 7 hours of reading
In this issue: Take a ride down the river with kc dyer on Akem's Seabus. Stop along the way for haunting fiction from Patrick Bollivar, Brandon Crilly, and Erin Kirsh, with a ghost at the end of the bed for Mel Anastasiou's Stella Ryman, and a lighter side of hell from FJ Bergmann. Magpie poetry award winners Oak Morse, Leah Komar, and Glenn Pape take us to three different kinds of hell; Susan Pieters and Rina Piccolo carry us to the stars in the past and future; and Greg Brown brings us back to where the heart is, while the young hero of Allaigna's Song by JM Landels get ever farther from home.